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#1 |
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Administrator
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The top ten movie psychopaths
Is that a bunny on the stove? The Times critic picks her top ten screen psychopaths. Wendy Ide 1. Eihi Shiina in Audition This Japanese shocker made grown men whimper. A lonely widower decides to hold fake auditions as a way to meet biddable young girls. He gets more than he bargains for with Asami, a doll-faced beauty who gets creative with acupuncture needles and cheese wire. 2. Jack Nicholson in The Shining Jack Torrance just wanted some peace and quiet so he could work on his novel. But, snowed in at the Overlook Hotel, he's getting a severe case of cabin fever. 3. Anthony Hopkins in The Silence of the Lambs Brilliant, urbane and totally insane, Dr Hannibal Lecter is a murderous gourmand who combines the twin pleasures of his life - killing and eating - with admirable efficiency. Hopkins is hypnotically evil and fascinatingly calculating. 4. Christian Bale in American Psycho The brilliance of Bale's Patrick Bateman is that, apart from all the maiming and torture, he's utterly shallow and banal. He smirks at his reflection as he works out in the gym; during an evening's entertainment with a prostitute he pauses, distracted by his own well-defined abs. He's a product of the cut-throat financial markets of the 1980s who takes the whole back-stabbing thing a little literally. 5. Glenn Close in Fatal Attraction Hell hath no fury like Glenn Close (below) scorned by family man Michael Douglas in this taut thriller. With her steely unwavering gaze and frazzled blonde tendrils of hair, Close makes the journey from seductive woman-about-town to very real threat seem all too convincing. 6. Robert Mitchum in Cape Fear A street fighter's countenance and overtly sexual menace made sure that Robert Mitchum played more than a few psychopaths. But it's in Cape Fear, as a released convict seeking revenge, that Mitchum's insouciant sneer and malevolent sex appeal are best used. 7. Kathy Bates in Misery Kathy Bates won an Oscar for her portrayal of Annie Wilkes, the obsessive fan of James Caan's novelist. The genius of Bates's performance is the delicate balance that can tip without warning between sweetly cheerful to demonic rage. 8. Joe Pesci in Goodfellas Pesci plays Tommy DeVito, a pint-sized mobster with a hair-trigger temper and a compulsion to be the biggest man in the room. His self-esteem is measured in bullets embedded in his enemies and perceived slights met with remorseless violence. 9. Bette Davis in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? Davis plays the demented former child star who exacts daily humiliations on her wheelchair- bound sister Blanche (Joan Crawford), unable to forgive the fact that Blanche's career as a matinee queen eclipsed her own. 10. Robert Carlyle in Trainspotting Fuelled by lager, Carlyle's psychotic Begbie would glass you as soon as look at you. A torrent of Glaswegian rage pours from his mouth; a broken snooker cue is held aloft like a sword. |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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The one glaryingly missing is Norman Bates all the more so because they actually include Patick Bateman whose name is a tip-of-hat to Alfred Hitchcock's 'Psycho'. Then another big miss is Michael Myers of 'Halloween' both of these characters were a massive influence on other films.
Simon |
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#5 |
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Senior Member
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My top ten
1)Andy Robinson as Scorpio in Dirty Harry. Scorpio has scant regard for society and is almost a psychopathic child as he feeds on the weak and vulnerable.The scene at the end when he's singing "row your boat "with the school kids after having just threatened to decorate the bus with the brains of the unsuspecting female bus driver is as hilarious as it is alarming. Clint Eastwood saw something in the otherwise unknown Robinson for the part and it happened to be a great choice. 2)Tom Noonan as Francis Dolarhyde in Manhunter. Michael Mann's idea was to purposely introduce Noonan to the rest of the film cast only when they shot the scenes. It worked. Great direction and carefully chosen deep haunting songs- especially "This Big Hush" by Shriekback. Noonan's frighteningly alarming looks and powerful performance helped to reinforce this Thomas Harris novel quite rightly into a cult movie. 3)Christian Bale as Patrick Bateman in American Psycho. This novel by Brett Easton Ellis is NOT for the faint hearted. 4)Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter in SOTL. 5)Karlheinze Bohm as Mark Lewis in Peeping Tom 6)Robert De Niro as Max Cadey in Cape Fear 7)Hywell Bennett as Martin Durnley in Twisted Nerve 8)Robert Caryle as Franco Begbie in Trainspotting. 9) Michael Reilly Burke as Ted 'bun' Bundy in (surprisingly) Ted Bundy. 10) Dickie Attenborough as Reg Christie in 10 Rillington Place
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Adieu, adieu, to yieu and yieu and yieu. Last edited by scholes; 04-04-2008 at 12:01 PM. |
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#6 |
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Senior Member
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Patrick McGoohan Top Ten in no particular order Joss Merlyn - a wreck of a man Red - so psycho he even killed himself! Fred Wells - even the daughter must die! Number One - one glimpse and you knew... or not Jess - kidnap, murder, pimping, it was all one to him Roger Devereau - possibly the most debonair psycho Edward I - anyone who was not English was fair game John Connor - paid assassin - they don't come more psycho Doctor Kiviat - from frame one to final reel, completely psycho Sgt Musgrave - only heard about, never seen (just in case anyone has a copy?) ![]()
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http://theatrical-mcgoohan.mysite.orange.co.uk/ |
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#7 |
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Senior Member
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My top nomination must surely be Richard Widmark in Kiss of Death. It's all there, the giggles, blank looks and downright nastiness. I don't think us Brits could have made a film quite like this one.
Shaun |
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#8 |
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Senior Member
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Not a movie, but if you ever get the chance, check out Tom Bell's performance in The Protectors episode Shadbolt.
A real forgotten gem of a story, also featuring (IMHO) a career-best performance from series star Robert Vaughn. |
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#9 |
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Senior Member
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Javier Bardem in No Country For Old Men, is for me one of the scariest psycopaths of all time, he won an Oscar for the part and deserved it. The two killers in Truman Capote's, In Cold Blood, are also serious nutters.
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#10 |
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Member
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I don't think Mitchum's CAPE FEAR performance is close to his most terrifying psycho, and that's as the demented 'preacher' in NIGHT OF THE HUNTER. His CAPE FEAR character is just one mean person with a prison-term as a motivation. NIGHT OF THE HUNTER is a quantum leap beyond being a 'wronged' bad guy. These writers can't even find the Worst of Mitchum's bad-guys! How can this list be serious?
And where's William Talman as the sleeps-with-one-eye-open psycho in THE HITCH-HIKER (1953 d-Ida Lupino)? Widmark's KISS OF DEATH should be up there, too. Or Arthur Franz's crazed woman-hater in THE SNIPER (1952 d-Edward Dmytryk), the first incarnation of the DIRTY HARRY psycho (which Andrew Robinson does SO well, all on his own). The failure to list 'Norman Bates' is another immediate disqualification for this list's value. Obviously, their range of film-education is based on the glitziness of home-video packaging. They should stick to judging their vast collection of Girls Gone Wild box sets. |
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#11 |
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Chief Member OBME
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In no particular order ....
#1 Francis Dollarhyde - Manhunter #2 Red Grant - From Russia With Love #3 Tom Ripley - Plein Soleil and Talented Mr Ripley #4 Max Cady - Cape Fear (original version) #5 Stephen Lake - Bunny Lake Is Missing #6 Robert Rusk - Frenzy #7 Norman Bates - Psycho and Psycho 2 #8 Harry Powell - Night of the Hunter #9 Michael Myers - Halloween #10 Narcy - They Made Me A Fugitive Dishonourable mentions to ... John Christie - 10 Rillington Place Danny - Night Must Fall (remake) Reinhard Heydrich - Conspiracy Amon Goeth - Schindler's List Pinkie Brown - Brighton Rock
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Bats. Can we be robots again? Last edited by batman; 04-04-2008 at 01:05 PM. |
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#13 |
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Senior Member
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Klaus Kinski in... well anything really, but the hunchback in For a Few Dollars More will do.
Michael Rooker in Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer for his mundanity. Dennis Hopper in Blue Velvet (although Dean Stockwell was even scarier, but I'm not sure he was a psycho). Frank Silva in Twin Peaks. Still the scariest character I've ever seen. |
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#14 | |
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Chief Member OBME
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Quote:
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Bats. Can we be robots again? |
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#15 | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
" I usually smoke after I've Eaten. If you care to come back in ten minutes."
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Adieu, adieu, to yieu and yieu and yieu. |
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