![]() |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Legend.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
I could give you a fake name….but just call
me “X” a legendary actor. I’ll miss him. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
I’ll always have mad respect for him and his long and illustrious career.
Looks like his final project was the Taylor Sheridan Bass Reaves miniseries on Paramount + that he did last year. And he gave us the great Kiefer Sutherland too. May he RIP. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14440110)
Maybe JFK, but that cast was stacked and Tommy Lee Jones got the supporting nom there.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Never realized until the sequel was published, The Eagle Has Flown, that his Irish spy character in Eagle Has Landed is the primary/title character.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Really cool guy. Terrific voice and one of those actors you could tell really enjoyed his work.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14440110)
That's easy to say, but where do you think he would've/should've been nominated? The two big ones were MASH and Ordinary People. I haven't seen all of the nominated movies released in those two years, but there are a lot of big guns nominated in best actor.
Don't Look Now's reputation has grown considerably since release, but wasn't an Oscar player at the time. Maybe JFK, but that cast was stacked and Tommy Lee Jones got the supporting nom there. I also don't recall how much his part was expanded in the directors cut. I'm sure there's some other random supporting turn somewhere people will advocate for, but quickly glancing through his filmography, I didn't see much that jumps out. Sutherland played the title character FFS. Fonda WON Best Actress for it, and Sutherland didn't even get a nomination? I actually just had to check IMDb to verify, cuz it didn't track to me, but it is indeed true. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
As a Canadian, I was always impressed that he never turned his back on the Canadian industry the way some of our exports from his era did. He always came back for gigs up here. Side note: his second wife, actress Shirley Douglas (Kiefer’s mom), was the daughter of a politician named Tommy Douglas, the man who engineered Canada’s universal healthcare system.
Canada Post honored him with a stamp late last year, which occasionally got me to thinking about his age and health whenever I’d see it in the post office display. https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/dvdtalk...a2812b661f.png |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by Paff
(Post 14440235)
Klute.
Sutherland played the title character FFS. Fonda WON Best Actress for it, and Sutherland didn't even get a nomination? I actually just had to check IMDb to verify, cuz it didn't track to me, but it is indeed true. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
I can't think of one movie where he gave a less than great performance, even in movies that otherwise were mediocre or downright bad.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
I saw that he died in Florida, but apparently actually lived up here in Quebec. Good on him. :thumbsup:
Donald Sutherland on why Canadian actor never sought an American passport https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/mo...235928354/amp/ Legendary Canadian actor Donald Sutherland, who died on Thursday after a long illness and a celebrated Hollywood film and TV career, revealed why he never sought dual Canadian and U.S. citizenship by acquiring an American passport. “Because we don’t have the same sense of humor. It’s true. We don’t. I’m a Canadian through and through,” Sutherland told the CBC radio show Q with Tom Power in March during one of his last media interviews. Sutherland, who had been living in recent years in Quebec, around 12 miles from the U.S. border, recalled giving that answer to an American border guard who asked why the Canadian actor, who already had a green card to work stateside, didn’t get an American passport to more quickly cross the border to complete errands. “Anyway, I love the country. I’m very, very proud that they gave me a stamp,” Sutherland added during the radio interview that followed soon after Canada Post, the country’s mail service, in October 2023 unveiled a commemorative stamp to honor the actor’s seven-decade acting career. In fact, Sutherland, looking back on his life, said he was most proud of the stamp as his biggest achievement. “Do you know that that goes everywhere in this country and abroad? That puts me on letters that go everywhere. I love it. I am so touched by it,” he said. CBC’s Tom Power at one point asked Sutherland why his own postage stamp apparently mattered more to him than his film and TV career, at which point the Hollywood actor pointed to his own parents — father Frederick Sutherland and mother Dorothy McNichol. “Well, I hadn’t achieved something that I felt my mother and my father, you know,” he said, before breaking off and recalling a scene in M.A.S.H. where he and Elliot Gould were in a jeep in Tokyo and a female officer with the U.S. Army yelled out to ask whether they wanted to say hello on camera to their mothers. “And I said, well, my mother’s passed, but I would like to say hello to my dad if that’s OK. And she said OK. So I waved at the camera and said, ‘Hi, Dad,’” Sutherland recalled of his onscreen lines. It turned out Sutherland’s parents, then alive, watched M*A*S*H in a Las Vegas movie theater. ”And when I said ‘Hi Dad,’ my father stood up in the Las Vegas cinema and said, ‘Hi Donny.’ And my mother tried to drag him down into the seat and his suspenders were elasticized. I mean, she nearly slingshotted him through the air,” Sutherland recounted proudly. During the radio interview, Sutherland made it a point when asked what his children thought of his own Canadian postage stamp of recounting he had never been nominated for a competitive Oscar, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences made up for the oversight by giving him an honorary statuette in November 2017 at the Governors Awards. “They loved it,” Sutherland said of his children: Kiefer Sutherland, an occasional co-star, Rossif Sutherland, Roeg Sutherland, Rachel Sutherland and Angus Sutherland. “I mean, they gave me an honorary Academy Award because I have, I’ve never been nominated.” |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Incredibly sad news. A true gentleman and a legend here in Canada. He will be missed very much.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
What terrible news. He always seemed like such a cool guy, and fantastic in all his roles. I'm so glad he and Kiefer got to share the screen in Forsaken.
:rip: |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by mickey65
(Post 14440096)
My introduction to him was the pot smoking professor in Animal House...RIP.
Tbh, he had a solid career but was not one of my favorite actors. I never saw one of his movies because HE was in it. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by TomOpus
(Post 14440309)
You just liked the ass shot :D
Tbh, he had a solid career but was not one of my favorite actors. I never saw one of his movies because HE was in it. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
For me, nothing ever topped his role as the Clumsy Waiter in That's Armageddon!
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
RIP to a legend
I saw him play a judge in Miranda's Victim a couple of weeks ago on Hulu and never thought he would die a couple weeks later. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Donald Sutherland is a legendary actor. As a character actor in movies like JFK, Outbreak, Backdraft or A Time to Kill, as villain in The Hunger Games, Lock Up or Revolution or as a leading man in Invasion of the Body Snatchers, A Dry White Season, Ordinary People, MASH and a lot of more, he always delivered and he always had a special presence.
I told my wife it's Donald Sutherland week now, and I think we'll start with something fun like Bear Island. |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Twilight Time released a nice Blu-Ray back in the day of a lesser-known Canada-UK production called THE DISAPPEARANCE (1977) that he was quite good in, with his then third and still current wife Francine Racette in a key role and some nice views of wintry Montreal during the first half. It’s kind of a quiet psychological thriller, not perfect, but an interesting watch if you’re only familiar with his high-profile roles. The trailers were never very good for it but someone uploaded the entire film anyway.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
I always liked Donald Sutherland which started when I was a kid watching Kelly's Heroes and The Dirty Dozen whenever they came on TV. He never gave a bad performance.
RIP |
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Great actor. While I never went out of my way to watch a movie just because he was in it, I always liked what he brought to his roles.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
I was lucky to discover him in 1970 when I saw THE DIRTY DOZEN for the first time and then saw KELLY'S HEROES and M*A*S*H in their initial release. Pinkley, Oddball and Hawkeye Pierce all in the same year. And then KLUTE and LITTLE MURDERS the following year. Then DAY OF THE LOCUST in 1975. 1900 a couple of years later and leap a decade to JFK. What a career.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by rocket1312
(Post 14440259)
That's a good one. Forgot about Klute. Although I'm not sure what playing the title character has to do with anything.
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
Originally Posted by Paff
(Post 14440492)
I should have swapped the order of my sentences. Start with Fonda winning the Actress in a Leading Role award, then pointed out that Sutherland played the title role, meaning his role was just as big as Fonda's. And if Fonda was worthy of an award, it would only follow that her costar at least merited a nomination
|
Re: RIP: Donald Sutherland - Dead at 88
One of the greatest voices in acting, imo
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:51 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.