riffraff
Striker
Marriage to who?Burton was between marriages to Elizabeth Taylor, and I don't think he'd have been capable. He spent two years drunk. Sophia was famously loyal to her husband, Carlo Ponti. Plenty of stars had a crack at her (including Peter Sellers, who ended his marriage in order to be with her - and got comprehensively rebuffed), and I don't think any succeeded.
I worked in the house in Hampstead he had built for Britt Eckland when they got married. It looked like a 60s-70s new build suburban library or medical centre. Central courtyard with a water feature surrounded by full height windows all round. She hated it apparently.
The kids sister reckoned he turned up at her house a couple of times for quick visits decades after he was supposed to have been killed.I've decided to do a Robert Redford deep dive. The ones I can find anyway.
Started with...
Tall Story (1960)
Redford's only a non-speaking basketball player in this early Anthony Perkins movie. Enjoyable film though! 7.3/10
The Chase (1966)
Slightly bigger role for Redford this time as an escaped convict in a movie that sees Marlon Brando as the main lead as the sheriff. Fairly confusing start with multiple plotlines seemingly unrelated, but they tie together quickly as the film turns unsettling and then utterly brutal. Great film. 8.5/10
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Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid (1969)
Weird. I expected this to be better. Haven't seen it since I was very young but for a movie considered a classic it was very disappointing. A handful of iconic scenes interspersed with a lot of filler, a bizarre slideshow in the middle that went on for way too long, and more musical montages than a movie this long should really have. If it had've been 30 minutes long it probably would have made a really great mini-story.
All in all, the good bits were worth watching but for all the filler I can't give it more than a 6.7/10.
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