Alcoholic? Messiah?
- He was a brilliant filmmaker. I once got to talk with Frederick Elmes about shooting “The Killing of a Chinese Bookie”. He said, “I’d shoot it very differently today. I was so young then that I hadn’t yet developed a style.” 
- Here is an alternative Piped link(s): - What’s your take on… What’s you’re take on?.. - Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube. - I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub. 
 
- Genius. When paired with his wife Gena Rowlands, responsible for some of the greatest films of the era. Check out Love Streams, A Woman Under The Influence, and Opening Night, among others. - These movies are heavy, rich like red wine, but very good. 
 
- Wow. I’m glad you asked and look forward to people’s opinions. - I just watched Mikey and Nickey (after reading about Elaine May’s role in the start of improv). The treatment of women was terrible to see but the acting was incredible. 
- He was definitely an alcoholic, maybe a messiah of art outside of the even-more-predominant-today “industry.” Definitely a misogynist, not sure about genius. Probs? - Not a huge fan, but I think his Columbo episode “Etude in Black” is genius. HIS genius? Not sure. - I’d love to hear others’ thoughts about this auteur. Yes, this is not an original question, but I’ve never been able to ask anyone else about the subject. - Edit: clarified my take on Cassavetes 
- I’ve seen Shadows, Faces and The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie. 
 The man nearly single-handedly invented independent highbrow cinema in the United States, a gritty and bare urban realism that is as artistically important as the French Nouvelle Vague.- To put it in an oversimplified way, without Cassavettes there is no Scorsese as we know him. - Yes, thank you! 
 
- Never heard of the name. Or I guess I might have read it in credits, but never associated brain space to it and also never noticed a commonality between movies based on him. 🤷 - So to quote from Futurama: I have no strong opinion one way or the other. 






