My opinion the remake doesn't hold a candle to the original.
De Niro is more psychotic and violent, but not nearly as
menacing. Endings are not the same. My favorite menacing role
for Mitchum was "Night of the Hunter". "Night of the Hunter"
is also the answer to the trivia question, "What is the only
movie Charles Laughton directed?"
-Dave
-----Original Message----- From:
owner-rara-avis@icomm.ca [mailto:
owner-rara-avis@icomm.ca] On Behalf Of William Denton
Sent: Thursday, June 12, 2003 11:40 PM To: RARA-AVIS Subject:
RARA-AVIS: The Executioners/Cape Fear
John D. MacDonald's THE EXECUTIONERS (1958) was twice adapted
for the movies: CAPE FEAR (1962), and CAPE FEAR (1991). The
first version had Robert Mitchum as the villain, Max Cady,
and it's one of his best performances. He can just stand
around looking at you with those droopy eyes and you know
he's ready to kill. The late Gregory Peck plays the hero, the
lawyer whose wife and daughter are threatened. It's a good
movie, with some very tense sections, especially at the end.
(And the score is by Bernard Herrmann.)
I've never read the original book, nor seen the 1991 remake
that had Robert De Niro as Cady and Nick Nolte as the lawyer.
I understand Mitchum and Peck have cameos. How is it? Is De
Niro as menacing as Mitchum? Are the endings the same? In the
1962 version, the lawyer beats Cady in the climactic fight,
but doesn't shoot him: he saves him for the police and for
justice.
Bill
-- William Denton : Toronto, Canada : http://www.miskatonic.org/ : Caveat lector.
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