Thank you for your warm wishes here... Meanwhile, Theresa Russell never did get the big career, but she was always interesting. I was quite taken with another film she did called Cold Heaven in 1991. It's an odd story, not for everyone, but she plays an errant wife whose life turns upside down when her husband is badly injured, right on the threshold of life and death, and her dilemmas take on a very religious dimension. I thought it was kind of hypnotic, and the finale is a very moral one (adultery doesn't win out in this one....)TikiSoo wrote: ↑November 24th, 2023, 7:15 amIt's so good to know there's someone else who appreciates Theresa Russell. She's been in a lot of different types of movies & I always respond strongly to her performances.CinemaInternational wrote: ↑November 22nd, 2023, 1:05 pm Someone brought up the 1985 film Insignificance. Very hard view for me, especially the nuclear bomb nightmare sequence near the end, but Theresa Russell gave a fine performance.
CinemaInternational- your absence was noticed, you are very missed here. Sending best wishes for you & your family.
By the way, you probably remember that I tried to help you see the director's cut of 1990's Texasville, the sequel to The Last Picture Show, but wasn't able to. I don't know if you have a Blu-Ray player, but if you don't have one, you might want to get one. The Criterion Collection just issued a new Blu-Ray (but no DVD) of The Last Picture Show that comes with Texasville on its second disc, both in the color theatrical cut and the black and white directors cut. Being a huge fan of the original film, you will prefer the director's cut which has many more references to the original than the cut originally released in 1990.