Planes, Trains And Automobiles is one of my all-time favorite movies, and I try to watch it every year. It's also one of the few Thanksgiving movies out there, as that particular holiday doesn't seem to get much love from Hollywood.
As much as I love the film though, it's definitely become a period piece over the years. 98% of the problems Neal Page faces in his struggle to get home for Thanksgiving could be solved today with a simple cell phone! It was a different time in 1987.
Anyway, what better way to commemorate the movie's anniversary than by re-running a post that originally appeared back in 2012? Enjoy!
----------------------------------------------------------------------
During this year's viewing I picked up on something I never noticed before. In one of my favorite scenes, Gus' son Owen comes to pick up Neal Page and Del Griffith (Steve Martin and John Candy) and drive them to Wichita to catch a train.
Owen is a semi-sentient tobacco chewing hillbilly who can barely string two words together.
He also has a bizarre and rasping sinus condition that punctuates (and sometimes interrupts) his sentences. Owen's only onscreen for little more than a minute, but he makes a memorable impression, especially when he regales the pair about his wife who didn't scream when her first baby "came out sideways."
He cleans up real nice, doesn't he? Amazingly, Planes, Trains And Automobiles was Baker's feature film debut. I've watched that Owen scene dozens of times and it never once occurred to me that he was played by Baker. I just assumed they found some real life local redneck to play the part. I surely never suspected he was played by an actual Hollywood actor.
I say this without any sarcasm or irony— it's a remarkable piece of acting and Dylan Baker deserved some kind of award for throwing himself into the role and making himself completely unrecognizable.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.