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"He's the marker. There was Before Brando and After Brando. I think it's time, especially for younger people, to go back and understand that, to see the pictures in the order in which they were made, mainly because I think that they're too hip to feel those emotions that were up there just exploding on the screen. It's about being human." - Martin Scorcese
Marlon Brando was truly one of a kind, an iconoclast who forever changed the craft of acting, especially in film. He blazed a trail for all the greats that followed in his wake, from his contemporaries Montgomery Clift and James Dean to several generations of actors, including Paul Newman, Al Pacino, Robert DeNiro, and Johnny Depp. Even Elvis.
The follwing list, unlike most of my other Top Ten Lists, is ranked in reverse chronological order rather than from the "best" or "greatest" on down. He gave so many great performances in so many great movies that it was hard to pick the ten best. The "Honorable Mentions" list some very good performances, some of them in films that were not great commercial or artistic triumphs, but which are nonetheless worth seeing.
1. Apocalypse Now (1979): As Colonel Walter E. Kurtz, the pivotal figure in Francis Ford Coppola's retelling of Joseph Conrad's The Heart of Darkness, Brando's performance was hampered by the fact that he hadn't read the novel or the script, and showed up weighing 300 pounds. Still, he gives an idiosyncratic performance that, if not exactly what Coppola had in mind, is still pretty epic. "The horror...the horror." Paramount Home Video.
2. The Missouri Breaks (1976): A truly gonzo performance by Brando as Robert E. Lee Clayton, a "regulator" hired by a wealthy rancher to execute a gang of whoring horse-thieves led by Jack Nicholson. Sporting an Irish brogue, dressing in drag and other outlandish costumes, while delivering crazy monologues, serendaing his horse, and systematically killing off Nicholson's buddies, Marlon is a hoot. Directed by Arthur Penn. MGM Home Video.
3. Last Tango in Paris a/k/a Ultimo Tango a Parigi (1972): Brando at his most nakedly emotional in Bernardo Bertolucci's story of a man who enters into a sexual relationship with a stranger, played by twenty-something Maria Schneider. Marlon improvised several autobiographical monologues in the film, and is mesmerizing. Available on DVD from MGM Home Video.
4. The Godfather (1972): As Don Vito Corleone, Brando won (and refused) the Academy Award for Best Actor, even though he's on screen for less than half of the film. But that's indicative of the impact of his performance in this epic drama about a Mafia family in postwar America. After years of less than stellar performances in not-so-great movies, this film put him back on top. He would send up his role in 1990's The Freshman. Paramount Home Video.
5. Queimada a/k/a Burn! (1969): A tireless activist for civil rights, Brando chose to play the part of William Walker, who ignites a revolution on behalf of the British, only to return ten years later when the rebels turn on their colonialist opressors. MGM Home Video.
6. One-Eyed Jacks (1961): As a first-time director, Marlon shot over a milion feet of film, turned in a five-hour cut, then lost interest while the studio edited his Oepidal Western masterpiece down to two and a half hours. Karl Malden's character, the sadistic "Dad" Longworth, was modeled on Brando's father, Marlon Sr. On the set of Dr. Strangelove, Terry Southern introduced Slim Pickens to James Earl Jones, who asked Slim what it was like working with Brando on One-Eyed Jacks, to which Pickens replied, "There ain't nothing about Bud Brando that ain't all-man and all-white." Now in the public domain, it is available on DVD from various budget labels. Look for it in th dollar bin.
7. On the Waterfront (1954): As Terry Malloy, washed-up boxer turned strongarm man for the mob, Brando won his first Oscar for this incredible performance. When he falls for the sister of a man whose murder he was an accessory to, he suffers a crisis of conscience and turns informer. Writer Budd Schulberg and director Elia Kazan had both named names in front of the House Un-American Activities commission, and this film is a metaphor for that. Sony Home Entertainment.
8. The Wild One (1953): The original biker movie stars Brando as Johnny Strabler, the leader of the Black Rebels Motorcycle Club. A girl asks him, "What are you rebelling against, Johnny?" To which he replies, "Whaddya got?" Although looking a little pudgier than he had in previous films, he's still the epitome of cool. Based in part on real incidents much tamer than those portrayed in the movie. Sony Home Entertainment.
9. Julius Caesar (1953): As Marc Antony, Brando proved he could declaim with the best of them, stealing the show from his esteemed British co-stars. His "Friends, Romans, Countrymen" speech is electrifying. MGM Home Video.
10. A Streetcar Named Desire (1951): Brando reprised his Broadway triumph as Stanley Kowalski in Elia Kazan's film adaptation of Tennessee Williams' play. His performance was unlike anything ever seen in an American movie, raw, brutal, sensual, and utterly real. "Stella!!!" Warner Home Video.
Honorable Mention:
The Score (2001)
The Brave (1997)
Don Juan DeMarco (1994)
The Formula (1980)
Superman (1978)
The Nightcomers (1972)
The Night of the Following Day (1969)
Candy (1968)
Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967)
The Chase (1966)
The Ugly American (1963)
Mutiny on the Bounty (1962)
The Fugitive Kind (1959)
The Young Lions (1958)
Guys and Dolls (1955)
Viva Zapata (1952)
The Men (1950)
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Last edited on Sep 27, 2008
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