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Robert Forster, Resurgent Oscar Nominee From 'Jackie Brown,' Dies at 78

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    Robert Forster, Resurgent Oscar Nominee From 'Jackie Brown,' Dies at 78

    RIP

    The 'Medium Cool' actor also starred for David Lynch in 'Mulholland Drive' and 'Twin Peaks' after Tarantino resuscitated his career.
    Robert Forster, the stalwart leading man whose Oscar-nominated performance as a nefarious bail bondsman in Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown made for one of Hollywood's most heartwarming comeback stories, has died. He was 78.

    Forster died Friday at his Los Angeles home of brain cancer, his publicist told The Hollywood Reporter.

    With his chiseled good looks, steely chin and earnest gaze, Forster exuded a raw truthfulness. He made his film debut opposite Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor in John Huston's Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967), then sparkled as an ethically challenged cameraman in Haskell Wexler's ultra-realistic Medium Cool (1969).

    Forster then took on no-nonsense, heroic title characters on television to build on his stardom, portraying a dogged 1930s detective on NBC's Banyon, which premiered in 1971, and a Native American police deputy in New Mexico on ABC's Nakia, which bowed in 1974. However, the shows lasted just 15 and 14 episodes, respectively, before being canceled.

    Forster captained a spaceship in Disney's ambitious sci-fi thriller The Black Hole (1979), but it proved to be a box office disappointment. Other lowlights soon followed, including Alligator (1980), The Kinky Coaches and the Pom-Pom *****cats (1981), Vigilante (1982), Hollywood Harry (1986) and Satan's Princess (1989).

    By the early '90s, the actor was down to supporting roles in such low-budget efforts as Maniac Cop 3: Badge of Silence, Body Chemistry 3: Point of Seduction and Scanner Cop II and supplementing his income with speaking engagements.

    "I went 21 months without a job. I had four kids, I took any job I could get," Forster told the Chicago Tribune in 2018, raising and then lowering his hand to indicate his fortunes. "My career went like this for five years and then like that for 27. Every time it reached a lower level I thought I could tolerate, it dropped some more, and then some more. Near the end I had no agent, no manager, no lawyer, no nothing. I was taking whatever fell through the cracks."

    A fan of Forster since he was a kid, Tarantino had brought the actor in to audition for the part of aging gangster Joe Cabot in 1992's Reservoir Dogs, but he had his heart set on casting Lawrence Tierney. Tarantino never forgot Forster, however, and as he was crafting the screenplay for Jackie Brown (1997) ?an adaptation of Elmore Leonard's 1992 novel Rum Punch ?he wrote Max Cherry with him in mind.

    "Years had gone by and I ran into him in a coffee shop. By then my career was really, really dead," Forster recalled in a 2018 interview with Fandor. "And we blah-blah'd for a few minutes, and then six months later he showed up at the same coffee shop with a script in his hands and handed it to me.

    "When I read it I could hardly believe that he had me in mind for Max Cherry, except that nothing else made any sense. So when I asked him about it, he said, 'Yes, it's Max Cherry that I wrote for you.' That's when I said to him, 'I'm sure they're not going to let you hire me.' He said, 'I hire anybody I want.' And that's when I realized I was going to get another shot at a career."

    After Jackie Brown, Forster was inundated with offers and worked in such films as Psycho (1998), Me, Myself and Irene (2000), Mulholland Drive (2001), Human Nature (2001), Like Mike (2002), Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003), Firewall (2006), Lucky Number Slevin (2006) and The Descendants (2011).

    In 2013, Forster was cast as the key Breaking Bad character The Disappearer in the AMC series' penultimate episode, with the show's team citing Max Cherry as an inspiration. Forster reprised the role in El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, which opened in theaters and hit Netflix on Friday.

    #2
    I'm surprised the article didn't mention Forster's recurring character as Tim Allen's dad Bud on the ABC and later Fox sitcom Last Man Standing. He was great on that show too. His character was rough around the edges, but you could see that there was a mutual respect and later even love between the father and son as the series went on. Last season they even did an episode where Allen's character talks to his spirit before saying goodbye. With the show being renewed, I imagine they'll do a dedication to him now.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Anthony342 View Post
      I'm surprised the article didn't mention Forster's recurring character as Tim Allen's dad Bud on the ABC and later Fox sitcom Last Man Standing. He was great on that show too. His character was rough around the edges, but you could see that there was a mutual respect and later even love between the father and son as the series went on. Last season they even did an episode where Allen's character talks to his spirit before saying goodbye. With the show being renewed, I imagine they'll do a dedication to him now.
      Yes! He was very funny on LMS. I really liked him on BB and El Camino as well. A very believable actor. He didn't seem like he was acting at all. Just being the character. R.I.P.

      Comment


        #4
        He has been in a ton of stuff including Breaking Bad and Heroes. May he Rest in Peace.

        Comment


          #5
          He died of brain cancer at his home in Los Angeles, surrounded by family. RIP

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Anthony342 View Post
            I'm surprised the article didn't mention Forster's recurring character as Tim Allen's dad Bud on the ABC and later Fox sitcom Last Man Standing. He was great on that show too. His character was rough around the edges, but you could see that there was a mutual respect and later even love between the father and son as the series went on. Last season they even did an episode where Allen's character talks to his spirit before saying goodbye. With the show being renewed, I imagine they'll do a dedication to him now.
            tim allen is ****ing snitch you lose xcredibility on a reg basis..

            you aint chit

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by jaded View Post
              He died of brain cancer at his home in Los Angeles, surrounded by family. RIP
              he was a ****ing snitch.. a pos... **** him.. funny yeah. but if he is telling or snitching.. yeah he's funny.. **** him

              he is a pos white puto.. ban me.. i can dig up paper work on him betraying good men...

              he is a fvcing piece of chit..

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Zaroku View Post
                he was a ****ing snitch.. a pos... **** him.. funny yeah. but if he is telling or snitching.. yeah he's funny.. **** him

                he is a pos white puto.. ban me.. i can dig up paper work on him betraying good men...

                he is a fvcing piece of chit..
                Settle down...Robert Foster not Tim Allen.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by jaded View Post
                  Settle down...Robert Foster not Tim Allen.
                  ok... if anyone other than you said it....

                  ok.. but tim allen is a piece of chit.

                  now.. i sleeep...

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Rest in Peace.

                    I remember him as max cherry, the only calm, cool level, headed dude in this world of chaos in Jackie Brown.

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