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6/5/2014 4:57:17 PM EDT

A good short article about a hell of a director, himself the subject of recent documentary. Excerpted for COC.













The 70-year-old filmmaker is an authentic rebel and a true son of liberty.








"I’ve been blacklisted as much as anyone in the ’50s,” says John Milius in the absorbing new documentary "Milius,” an aptly blusterous teddy bear of a movie directed by Joey Figueroa and Zak Knutson.








Milius, a self-described "Zen anarchist,” scripted some of the best films of the 1970s: "Jeremiah Johnson” (adapted from a novel by the cranky Idaho Old Rightist Vardis Fisher), "Apocalypse Now” (its title taken, explains Milius, from a button he had minted in the 1960s to mock the hippies’ "Nirvana Now” slogan), and "Dillinger” (starring the "constitutional anarchist” Warren Oates). His uncredited work includes "Dirty Harry”’s "Do you feel lucky?” street interrogation and Robert Shaw’s selachian monologue on the fate of the U.S.S. Indianapolis in "Jaws.”








He completed the transition from colorful character to pariah, the documentary suggests, with "Red Dawn” (1984), which Milius cowrote and directed.








Despite the ludicrous premise, the film is filled with entertaining extended middle fingers (the occupiers use registration records to locate gun owners, among them the great Harry Dean Stanton, and throw them into re-education camps) that left conventional reviewers sputtering.








I despise Milius’s hero, Teddy Roosevelt, and I’ll bet we’ve never once cast a ballot for the same presidential candidate, but in our age of cringing yes-men and gutless herd-followers, who cannot admire a man who once explained himself to his fellow screenwriters: "I’ve suffered loss in my career for not being obedient. Believe me, the loss was little compared to the fear all you elite stomach every day. When the sun sets, I can sing ‘My Way’ with Elvis, Frank Sinatra, and Richard Nixon. What is your anthem?”








And hell, I haven’t even mentioned "Geronimo,” "The Wind and the Lion,” or "Conan the Barbarian.”













He's also the inspiration for this guy:












6/5/2014 4:58:08 PM EDT
[#1]
The documentary Milius is on Netflix, it's well worth watching.
6/5/2014 4:59:07 PM EDT
[#2]
There's a great documentary on Netflix about him.
Titled Milius.

Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile
6/5/2014 5:05:10 PM EDT
[#3]
Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
6/5/2014 5:07:30 PM EDT
[#4]

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Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
View Quote
And put it on Netflix.



 
6/5/2014 5:14:10 PM EDT
[#5]
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Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
View Quote

Guys, I have a great idea!  Put the documentary on Netflix! Whoever pulls that shit off will be a millionaire.
6/5/2014 5:14:41 PM EDT
[#6]
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And put it on Netflix.
 
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Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
And put it on Netflix.
 

Damn you.
6/5/2014 5:15:16 PM EDT
[#7]
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And put it on Netflix.  
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Quoted:
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Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
And put it on Netflix.  


And call it Milius.
6/5/2014 5:33:08 PM EDT
[#8]
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Quoted:


And call it Milius.
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Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
And put it on Netflix.  


And call it Milius.


Excellent Idea!
6/5/2014 5:40:09 PM EDT
[#9]
I saw the documentary. It's good. He suffered a stroke a few years back and doesn't speak much, though he keeps improving.
6/5/2014 5:54:45 PM EDT
[#10]
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Quoted:
The documentary Milius is on Netflix, it's well worth watching.
View Quote

Directed by 2 friends of mine....Zak and Joey....from The Chop Shop....  it's a good docu
6/5/2014 5:56:05 PM EDT
[#11]
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And put it on Netflix.
 
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Quoted:
Quoted:
Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
And put it on Netflix.
 

AKSIg, judging by your avatar, you should probably recognize the directors
6/5/2014 6:03:06 PM EDT
[#12]
Quote History
Quoted:

Directed by 2 friends of mine....Zak and Joey....from The Chop Shop....  it's a good docu
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
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Quoted:
Quoted:
The documentary Milius is on Netflix, it's well worth watching.

Directed by 2 friends of mine....Zak and Joey....from The Chop Shop....  it's a good docu


Serious? Very cool.
Let them know it's Arf-approved.
I'm sure they'll be very proud.

6/5/2014 6:12:28 PM EDT
[#13]
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Excellent Idea!
View Quote View All Quotes
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Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
And put it on Netflix.  


And call it Milius.


Excellent Idea!


Do you think if they did that anyone would know what it was about??
6/5/2014 6:18:59 PM EDT
[#14]


Watched it on amazon, and it's fabulous.


6/5/2014 6:27:22 PM EDT
[#15]
Quote History
Though personally close to the Midasian trio of Spielberg, Lucas, and Coppola, his firearm-based antics (such as bringing a loaded .45 to a meeting with a studio executive), as much as the masculine rite-of-passage motifs in his films, seemed to place him in that unpledged fraternity of directors with decidedly non-liberal politics: Michael Cimino, Walter Hill, Ron Maxwell, Clint Eastwood, Mel Gibson, Oliver Stone.
View Quote


Wat
6/5/2014 6:33:14 PM EDT
[#16]
Any place I can find a documentary about him?
6/5/2014 6:41:29 PM EDT
[#17]
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Any place I can find a documentary about him?
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Have you tried Netflix?
6/5/2014 6:49:18 PM EDT
[#18]
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Have you tried Netflix?
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Any place I can find a documentary about him?


Have you tried Netflix?


I think it is called "Milius." But I could be wrong.
6/5/2014 6:50:30 PM EDT
[#19]


Directed 'Flight of the Intruder' -- Possibly the best Vietnam movie made.  I have never grown tired of watching it.

Milius shipped two 'Spads' to Hawaii onboard a Matson liner to film in his air extraction scene, and the flight footage was later reworked for the movie 'We Were Soldiers Once', and others.  

"Don't ask a man if he's a fighter pilot!  If he is -- He'll tell you.  If he's not, you'll just embarass him!"

6/6/2014 4:09:56 AM EDT
[#20]
What a fantastic documentary.



The guy is a certified badass.
6/8/2014 3:58:38 AM EDT
[#21]
I never knew he suffered a stroke. Amazing how skeet and trap shooting is helping him. I see him as a man of passion. Something many in our society don't have. He is a man of times gone by and I'm proud to say that I am somewhat like him on that very issue. That morals and personality come from story and it is what shapes you. He was shaped by stories of TR and cowboys. I was shaped by similar stories. Some told by him.
6/8/2014 4:01:45 AM EDT
[#22]
Quoted:
A good short article about a hell of a director, himself the subject of recent documentary. Excerpted for COC.






[div style='margin-left: 40px;'][div style='margin-left: 40px;']

The 70-year-old filmmaker is an authentic rebel and a true son of liberty.



[div style='margin-left: 40px;']


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']"I’ve been blacklisted as much as anyone in the ’50s,” says John Milius in the absorbing new documentary "Milius,” an aptly blusterous teddy bear of a movie directed by Joey Figueroa and Zak Knutson.


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']



[div style='margin-left: 40px;']Milius, a self-described "Zen anarchist,” scripted some of the best films of the 1970s: "Jeremiah Johnson” (adapted from a novel by the cranky Idaho Old Rightist Vardis Fisher), "Apocalypse Now” (its title taken, explains Milius, from a button he had minted in the 1960s to mock the hippies’ "Nirvana Now” slogan), and "Dillinger” (starring the "constitutional anarchist” Warren Oates). His uncredited work includes "Dirty Harry”’s "Do you feel lucky?” street interrogation and Robert Shaw’s selachian monologue on the fate of the U.S.S. Indianapolis in "Jaws.”


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']



[div style='margin-left: 40px;']He completed the transition from colorful character to pariah, the documentary suggests, with "Red Dawn” (1984), which Milius cowrote and directed.


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']



[div style='margin-left: 40px;']Despite the ludicrous premise, the film is filled with entertaining extended middle fingers (the occupiers use registration records to locate gun owners, among them the great Harry Dean Stanton, and throw them into re-education camps) that left conventional reviewers sputtering.


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']



[div style='margin-left: 40px;']I despise Milius’s hero, Teddy Roosevelt, and I’ll bet we’ve never once cast a ballot for the same presidential candidate, but in our age of cringing yes-men and gutless herd-followers, who cannot admire a man who once explained himself to his fellow screenwriters: "I’ve suffered loss in my career for not being obedient. Believe me, the loss was little compared to the fear all you elite stomach every day. When the sun sets, I can sing ‘My Way’ with Elvis, Frank Sinatra, and Richard Nixon. What is your anthem?”


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']



[div style='margin-left: 40px;']And hell, I haven’t even mentioned "Geronimo,” "The Wind and the Lion,” or "Conan the Barbarian.”


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']


[div style='margin-left: 40px;']http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/john-milius-a-real-wolverine/






He's also the inspiration for this guy:


http://rossclurman.com/images/blog/walter_sobchak.jpg




View Quote


why dont you like TR?

also, what movie is that guy with the gun from/?
6/8/2014 4:16:29 AM EDT
[#23]

Quote History
Quoted:
why dont you like TR?



also, what movie is that guy with the gun from/?

View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:



Quoted:

A good short article about a hell of a director, himself the subject of recent documentary. Excerpted for COC.













[div style='margin-left: 40px;'][div style='margin-left: 40px;']

The 70-year-old filmmaker is an authentic rebel and a true son of liberty.





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']"I’ve been blacklisted as much as anyone in the ’50s,” says John Milius in the absorbing new documentary "Milius,” an aptly blusterous teddy bear of a movie directed by Joey Figueroa and Zak Knutson.





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']







[div style='margin-left: 40px;']Milius, a self-described "Zen anarchist,” scripted some of the best films of the 1970s: "Jeremiah Johnson” (adapted from a novel by the cranky Idaho Old Rightist Vardis Fisher), "Apocalypse Now” (its title taken, explains Milius, from a button he had minted in the 1960s to mock the hippies’ "Nirvana Now” slogan), and "Dillinger” (starring the "constitutional anarchist” Warren Oates). His uncredited work includes "Dirty Harry”’s "Do you feel lucky?” street interrogation and Robert Shaw’s selachian monologue on the fate of the U.S.S. Indianapolis in "Jaws.”





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']







[div style='margin-left: 40px;']He completed the transition from colorful character to pariah, the documentary suggests, with "Red Dawn” (1984), which Milius cowrote and directed.





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']







[div style='margin-left: 40px;']Despite the ludicrous premise, the film is filled with entertaining extended middle fingers (the occupiers use registration records to locate gun owners, among them the great Harry Dean Stanton, and throw them into re-education camps) that left conventional reviewers sputtering.





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']







[div style='margin-left: 40px;']I despise Milius’s hero, Teddy Roosevelt, and I’ll bet we’ve never once cast a ballot for the same presidential candidate, but in our age of cringing yes-men and gutless herd-followers, who cannot admire a man who once explained himself to his fellow screenwriters: "I’ve suffered loss in my career for not being obedient. Believe me, the loss was little compared to the fear all you elite stomach every day. When the sun sets, I can sing ‘My Way’ with Elvis, Frank Sinatra, and Richard Nixon. What is your anthem?”





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']







[div style='margin-left: 40px;']And hell, I haven’t even mentioned "Geronimo,” "The Wind and the Lion,” or "Conan the Barbarian.”





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']





[div style='margin-left: 40px;']http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/john-milius-a-real-wolverine/













He's also the inspiration for this guy:





http://rossclurman.com/images/blog/walter_sobchak.jpg













why dont you like TR?



also, what movie is that guy with the gun from/?

Many claim TR was the birth of the modern liberal progressive.

 
6/8/2014 4:45:05 AM EDT
[#24]

Quote History
Quoted:





AKSIg, judging by your avatar, you should probably recognize the directors
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:



Quoted:


Quoted:

Somebody should make a documentary about this guy.
And put it on Netflix.

 


AKSIg, judging by your avatar, you should probably recognize the directors
I'm familiar with them. Hard to forget a "Donkey Fucker".



 
6/8/2014 1:46:57 PM EDT
[#25]

Quote History
Quoted:





why dont you like TR?



also, what movie is that guy with the gun from/?

View Quote




 
I didn't write the article.




The picture is from The Big Lebowski.
7/18/2014 11:38:50 PM EDT
[#26]
Just watched the documentary with my wife, via Netflix.



She was skeptical, but really enjoyed it.






7/18/2014 11:43:01 PM EDT
[#27]

7/18/2014 11:45:16 PM EDT
[#28]
Documentary? What's it called?
7/18/2014 11:51:53 PM EDT
[#29]
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Documentary? What's it called?
View Quote


I think its called "John"
7/19/2014 12:03:04 AM EDT
[#30]
He is my absolute fav....


Sam Elliott ..... "John doesn't write stories for pussies or women. He writes them for men because he's a man's man"
View Quote
7/19/2014 12:04:11 AM EDT
[#31]
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I think its called "John"
View Quote View All Quotes
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Quoted:
Quoted:
Documentary? What's it called?


I think its called "John"


Cool, any idea where I can watch it?
7/19/2014 12:05:12 AM EDT
[#32]
I've heard there is something on Netflix about him that's pretty good.  I could be wrong though.
7/19/2014 12:05:36 AM EDT
[#33]
Am I the only one, upon reading that title, mentally sang it to the tune of College's A Real Human Being?

You know from that movie Drive?
7/19/2014 12:54:36 AM EDT
[#34]

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Quoted:
Cool, any idea where I can watch it?
View Quote View All Quotes
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Quoted:



Quoted:


Quoted:

Documentary? What's it called?




I think its called "John"




Cool, any idea where I can watch it?




 
Maybe amazon or blockbuster.