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Tag Archives: Roger Ebert
M Emmet Walsh and Blood Simple
“Well Ma’am if I see him, I’ll sure give him the message.”
The late Roger Ebert called it the “Stanton-Walsh Rule”. Any movie “featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M.Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can’t be altogether bad”.
I’ve always liked Walsh as a character actor. But it was only when I recently re-watched the Cohen Bother’s Blood Simple after many year, that I realised just how on the money Ebert was.
Walsh plays a seedy PI called Loren Visser. Visser hired by a rich Texan bar owner, Julian (Dan Hedaya), to kill his wife, Abby (a very young Francis McDormand), who is cheating with one of Julian’s employees, Ray (John Getz).
If you haven’t seen Blood Simple, it won’t spoil your viewing pleasure too much if I tell you Visser kills Julian, tries to frame Abbey for the murder, and all manner of hell is unleashed.
On one level, Blood Simple comes across as a fairly standard small town film noir. Characters chase their own shadows and do very bad things in an effort to extract themselves from an increasingly fraught and dangerous situation.
What really raises it about the pack of similar films is the Cohen brother’s signature brand of dark weirdness, which managers to be both restrained and shocking. … Read more
Posted in 70s American crime films, 80s American crime films, Film Noir, James Woods, M Emmet Walsh
Tagged Blade Runner (1982), Blood Simple (1984), Dan Hedaya, Dashiell Hammett, Edward Bunker, Fast Walking (1982), Francis McDormand, Harry Dean Stanton, James Woods, M Emmet Walsh, No Beast So Fierce, Red Harvest, Roger Ebert, Straight Time (1978)