I saw the pilot of TCO and kind of liked it. I was borderline on keeping it on my list of things to watch, but there is so much good TV these days, it’s a very tough competition. I had intended on checking back into it later to see if it improved as many comedies do; but then it was cancelled.
ETA: BBT has some of the most advanced vocabulary on TV, and everyone I know who likes it has at least a masters degree, so I hardly think that’s a good example of a “paradise for halfwits”.
Again: do not make your arguments personal. This is the wrong forum for that.nevadaexile, if you want to argue about other projects or something, start a different thread. What you’re saying appears to be way off-base and off-topic.
I like Toys; Robin Williams was very touching in that role. I liked him in The Birdcage, too–he was so generous to Nathan Lane in that one, giving the quieter performance so as to let Lane shine.
I was particularly sad to hear this news because of the message it is probably sending to some depressed people. I hate to think that some may be concluding ‘if he couldn’t make it through, why should I try?’ For that reason, I am hoping that the family will be willing to be open about Williams’ treatment situation. There are so many medications that DO help the chemical imbalance at the base of depression. I would hope that the message to others struggling with the physical (not moral!) debility that is depression, would be “don’t struggle alone; do work with a doctor to find treatment that may give you more relief than you can even imagine, now.”
This is not intended as a criticism of Robin Williams or of his right to make his own choices. But I do hope that his family will supplement his immortal legacy as an entertainer–something that nothing can erase–with an additional legacy of helpful information for others who struggle.
Robin Williams is an actor I always respected but never thought too much about. I would love his awesome films individually but if you asked who my favorite actor was, I would not say Robin Williams.
However, now that he is dead every article about him makes some attempt to encapsulate his life’s work. But the thing is, they can’t. I am only now realizing this, but he was in so many goddamn amazing movies (including my favorite, Goodwill Hunting) that every time I think I’m remembering them all, someone mentions another one.
Good Morning Vietnam
Goodwill Hunting
Dead Poet’s Society
What Dreams May Come
Aladdin
The Birdcage
We lost a fucking legend.
And I am really happy this has gotten people to start talking about suicide and depression. I think that is the best possible thing that could come out of this tragedy.
I’ll lift a quote I heard when Philip Seymour Hoffman passed away… “Many celebrity deaths feel like tragedies, but this one feels like a robbery.”
I will totally cop to a selfishly personal sense of loss. When you consider the full spectrum of his work, there were equal possibilities that he was either the most exuberant clown to mock the joyful silliness of life, or the most heroic warrior against what can seem like the dark absurdity of it all. It feels like the question has resolved, and the answer is deeply unsettling.
By this logic, everyone should watch every single program on every single channel at all times, because if you don’t watch something an actor in them might kill themselves.
And its a chicken and the egg sort of thing - people become addicts because they are depressed and self medicate through alcohol or drugs. And addicts become depressed because drugs and alcohol addiction are mind altering. When someone becomes an addict young and hasn’t had mental health care, it can be hard to tell when they clean up if the depression is a result of addiction or the addiction was a result of depression (or anxiety or some other mental health issue).
NPR replayed a Terry Gross interview with Robin Williams today in which she asked him directly if he suffered from, or was ever treated for, clinical depression. His answer was a rather emphatic NO.
I loved him in Good Morning Vietnam, and plan to watch it again soon. Also The Birdcage. I also loved his manic stand up routines and brilliant impressions, he was one hell of a mimic.
Posting from my mobile device and cannot figure out links, but search YouTube for Robin Williams on alcoholism. Pure gold. I hope he is making people laugh in the afterlife, as he wished for.
I think my favorite Robin Williams role was in Good Will Hunting. The “It’s not your fault” scene. Man, that one moves me to tears every time.
I also loved him in The Birdcage, which is the only example that I can think of where a French farce film was actually improved by an American remake. A damn shame that they never filmed any of the existing sequels to that, because they were all pretty funny.
Mrs. Doubtfire was pretty good fare, but I’m glad they didn’t try to make a sequel to that!