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Peter Sellers (1 Viewer)

Hastur

Footballguy
The Pink Panther movies are what he is known for, but he has some spectacular comedies outside of those as well.

I just saw the movie "Being There". Brilliant comedy, with a sublime and subtle performance by Sellers.

"The Party" is also a great performance by Sellers.

What else do you have?

 
The Pink Panther movies are what he is known for, but he has some spectacular comedies outside of those as well.

I just saw the movie "Being There". Brilliant comedy, with a sublime and subtle performance by Sellers.

"The Party" is also a great performance by Sellers.

What else do you have?
Being There is great. Chance the Gardener.

 
Hastur said:
The Pink Panther movies are what he is known for, but he has some spectacular comedies outside of those as well.

I just saw the movie "Being There". Brilliant comedy, with a sublime and subtle performance by Sellers.

"The Party" is also a great performance by Sellers.

What else do you have?
To this day I can't resist saying "birdy num num" over and over whenever I encounter a caged bird. It's like a Pavlovian thing for me.

 
I've always loved After the Fox. In some respects, it's less than the sum of its parts: Sellers in prime mid-60s form, the great realist director Vittoria De Sica and a script by Neil Simon. But when it's funny, it's really funny. Sellers nails the character of a master thief impersonating a film director and the story's satirization of celebrity still holds true.

 
Jack White said:
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

Comic genius.
this and Being There are my favorites of his. But he was also great in Lolita.

always wished he had gone out with Being There instead of whatever drek it was that was his last movie... fu manchu or something.

 
Jack White said:
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

Comic genius.
this and Being There are my favorites of his. But he was also great in Lolita.

always wished he had gone out with Being There instead of whatever drek it was that was his last movie... fu manchu or something.
He was indeed great as Clare Quilty, especially when you compare it to Frank Langella's performance in Adrian Lyne's remake.

 
I've always loved After the Fox. In some respects, it's less than the sum of its parts: Sellers in prime mid-60s form, the great realist director Vittoria De Sica and a script by Neil Simon. But when it's funny, it's really funny. Sellers nails the character of a master thief impersonating a film director and the story's satirization of celebrity still holds true.
I haven't seen this one. Based on some quick Internet searching, it looks difficult to locate in the US. Going to have to try to watch at some point.

Jack White said:
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

Comic genius.
/thread
Bad use of "/thread." He was in a lot of movies worth watching.

 
I've always loved After the Fox. In some respects, it's less than the sum of its parts: Sellers in prime mid-60s form, the great realist director Vittoria De Sica and a script by Neil Simon. But when it's funny, it's really funny. Sellers nails the character of a master thief impersonating a film director and the story's satirization of celebrity still holds true.
I haven't seen this one. Based on some quick Internet searching, it looks difficult to locate in the US. Going to have to try to watch at some point.

Jack White said:
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

Comic genius.
/thread
Bad use of "/thread." He was in a lot of movies worth watching.
Nope, this was his best.

 
Jack White said:
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

Comic genius.
/thread
Bad use of "/thread." He was in a lot of movies worth watching.
Nope, this was his best.
Agree it is his best, but the OP was looking for some of Sellers' lesser-known movies to watch. It's like posting "/thread" to Stairway in a Led Zeppelin deep cuts thread.

 
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I love Sellers but the truth is he made a lot of crappy movies. His handful of great films have already been mentioned. Outside of that, there are a bunch of movies where he's the best or most interesting thing in them.

By most accounts, he was difficult to work with. His idiosyncrasies got more extreme as he aged which had an effect on his work. He also seemed to like getting paid as a leading man which influenced the roles he chose in the latter part of his career. I think his last decade as an actor would have been more memorable if he had transitioned into character parts. The 1970s were a great decade in film; there were lots of filmmakers who could have used Sellers effectively in supporting roles.

 
Didn't HBO do a biopic about Sellers? I remember seeing it, and being impressed about the film itself- not just learning more about Sellers.

 
I love Sellers but the truth is he made a lot of crappy movies. His handful of great films have already been mentioned. Outside of that, there are a bunch of movies where he's the best or most interesting thing in them.

By most accounts, he was difficult to work with. His idiosyncrasies got more extreme as he aged which had an effect on his work. He also seemed to like getting paid as a leading man which influenced the roles he chose in the latter part of his career. I think his last decade as an actor would have been more memorable if he had transitioned into character parts. The 1970s were a great decade in film; there were lots of filmmakers who could have used Sellers effectively in supporting roles.
Roles turned down by Peter Sellers:

10
Turned down the leading role again and again, then filmed a cameo that was eventually cut.
Actor who got the part: Dudley Moore
Dr. Strangelove
Unable to play a fourth role in the film, Major T.J. Kong, due to a broken leg.
Actor who got the part: Slim Pickens
Kiss Me, Stupid
Director Billy Wilder was forced to replace the ill Peter Sellers as the show biz lowlife stranded in a small Nevada town.
Actor who got the part: Ray Walston
Oliver!
Considered a prime candidate to star as Fagin in the Sir Carol Reed-directed movie version of the hit musical play.
Actor who got the part: Ron Moody
The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes
Sellers was originally director Billy Wilder's top choice to play Dr, John Watson, but Wilder ultimately chose a lesser-known and less costly actor.
Actor who got the part: Colin Blakely
The Producers (1968)
Director Mel Brooks says he first offered Sellers the role of scheming, down-on-his-luck Broadway producer "Max Bialystock."
Actor who got the part: Zero Mostel
The Twelve Chairs
Mel Brooks wanted Peter Sellers for a role in The Twelve Chairs.
 
About to buy a house in a town of about 13,000. Of course it's in King County and 10 minutes from downtown Seattle...

 
I love Sellers but the truth is he made a lot of crappy movies.
Can't you say that about most actors? I have gotten hours and hours of enjoyment out of De Niro films but I just avoid any movies with "analyze" or "####ers" in the title. "Showtime" and "Bullwinkle" weren't high points either.

 
I love Sellers but the truth is he made a lot of crappy movies.
Can't you say that about most actors? I have gotten hours and hours of enjoyment out of De Niro films but I just avoid any movies with "analyze" or "####ers" in the title. "Showtime" and "Bullwinkle" weren't high points either.
True but De Niro is 71 years old and his career has been on its glide path for a long time. All the movies you mentioned were made when he was older than Sellers was when he died at age 54. De Niro was still making films like Casino and Heat in his early 50s.

A lot of Sellers movies from the 1970s are nearly lost and forgotten. He was a genius but like other geniuses, the movie industry and he didn't always know what to do with one another.

 
I love Sellers but the truth is he made a lot of crappy movies.
Can't you say that about most actors? I have gotten hours and hours of enjoyment out of De Niro films but I just avoid any movies with "analyze" or "####ers" in the title. "Showtime" and "Bullwinkle" weren't high points either.
True but De Niro is 71 years old and his career has been on its glide path for a long time. All the movies you mentioned were made when he was older than Sellers was when he died at age 54. De Niro was still making films like Casino and Heat in his early 50s.

A lot of Sellers movies from the 1970s are nearly lost and forgotten. He was a genius but like other geniuses, the movie industry and he didn't always know what to do with one another.
Yeah, I buy that. Solid point.

 
I've always loved After the Fox. In some respects, it's less than the sum of its parts: Sellers in prime mid-60s form, the great realist director Vittoria De Sica and a script by Neil Simon. But when it's funny, it's really funny. Sellers nails the character of a master thief impersonating a film director and the story's satirization of celebrity still holds true.
I also enjoyed AtF. Sellers seems to bring life to every character he played. His multiple roles in Dr. Strangelove was great. Loved that goofy wheelchair action.

 

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