RIP 2025
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
Arguably one of the best 5 films I've seen.
Always thought Mississippi Burning was his best role. Played a really complex character superbly.
French Connection for me, will be going back through his library and rewatching most of them though
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
Arguably one of the best 5 films I've seen.
Always thought Mississippi Burning was his best role. Played a really complex character superbly.
French Connection for me, will be going back through his library and rewatching most of them though
I rewatched French Connection a few weeks ago. Still a bloody good movie.
I can't think of a bad movie I've seen with Gene Hackman in it. Either I've not seen much of his catalogue, he was incredibly lucky to not to work on donkeys, or he added to everything. I'm inclined to think the latter given how many of his movies I enjoy.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
Never heard of him but by golly do these guys need to be celebrated and remembered. RIP
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Oleg Gordievsky. KGB colonel who was a British double agent during the Cold War. His info on Soviet nuclear thinking did much to avoid WWIII and improve the West's understanding of Soviet thinking.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
Oleg Gordievsky. KGB colonel who was a British double agent during the Cold War. His info on Soviet nuclear thinking did much to avoid WWIII and improve the West's understanding of Soviet thinking.
Never heard of the guy. But it sounds like he was an invaluable asset and surely took crazy risks to leak intel
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
Oleg Gordievsky. KGB colonel who was a British double agent during the Cold War. His info on Soviet nuclear thinking did much to avoid WWIII and improve the West's understanding of Soviet thinking.
Never heard of the guy. But it sounds like he was an invaluable asset and surely took crazy risks to leak intel
Yeah, he warned the West the Soviets were convinced they were going to pre-emptively attack the USSR. NATO changed their exercises as a result to reassure the Soviets. Def. one of the good guys on either side.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
Oleg Gordievsky. KGB colonel who was a British double agent during the Cold War. His info on Soviet nuclear thinking did much to avoid WWIII and improve the West's understanding of Soviet thinking.
Never heard of the guy. But it sounds like he was an invaluable asset and surely took crazy risks to leak intel
Yeah, he warned the West the Soviets were convinced they were going to pre-emptively attack the USSR. NATO changed their exercises as a result to reassure the Soviets. Def. one of the good guys on either side.
After everything that's happened it is crazy that Putin still thinks the West wants to invade Russia. Otherwise why does he need buffer states. The guy sounds like a friend to both sides, almost singlehandedly de-escalated the Cold war
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@Victor-Meldrew said in RIP 2025:
How the Brits smuggled him out of the USSR reads like the plot of a Le Carre novel. Well worth a read.
How has this not been made into a movie?
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I've read the Gordievsky book by SAS Rogue Heroes author, in fact I just finished it yesterday. It's well written and interesting, but not as good as SAS as not that much happens. However what did happen was pretty bloody impressive! Very much Craig Thomas, not real life. The extraction was so out of the ordinary, normally they were left to their fate or given the cyanide capsule.
Gordievsky himself was an impressive bloke and inspired by personally seeing the Berlin wall go up, and the invasion of Czechoslovakia. He did it all because he had values, RIP Sir
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Wow.
An icon of the sport and the last of the "big three" of the 70s.
Massive, intimidating, chin like granite, hit like a mule and had surprising skill too. Unbeatable until Ali did the impossible.
The only man who looked more intimidating WITH hair than without.
Funny humble guy too, the loss to Ali made him a much better person.
.....sold a shitloads of grills.
Named all his sons George. Brilliant.
and this fight here, amazing.
What a toll that sport takes on a person. Sad that none of Ali, Frazier, Norton, Shavers, Quarry, Lyle, Berbick, Spinks, Young and now Foreman saw 80.
RIP champ
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Amazing that he has three public lives. The champ #1, George Foreman grill George TV personality, and George Foreman boxer #2. And still died quite young
You forgot ordained minister.......
Being punched by anyone isn't pleasant. Being punched by elite heavyweights repeatedly fucks a person up like nothing else.
It's no coincidence that Frazier, Norton and Ali had issues later in life from their epic trilogies ( Ali doing a trilogy against each of these guys is mind boggling ) and much more recently Fury and Wilder have both declined hugely after their three fights.
Foreman did it a bit different as he essentially "retired" pretty young the first time and with much less damage ( one could argue as he himself did that the knockout vs Ali was more down to exhaustion ) before making his huge comeback later on. Granite chin as I mentioned earlier but he took A LOT of shots as an older, slower man.
For what it's worth prime Foreman beats prime Tyson reasonably comfortably. KO in the 4th.
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( one could argue as he himself did that the knockout vs Ali was more down to exhaustion )
That's the universal consensus isn't it? Ali knew big George had never had to go far in any of his wins and would be pretty much punched out by the end of the fourth in the heat of a Kinshasha night.
One of the few true redemption arcs in boxing.