joegoda: (Default)
joegoda ([personal profile] joegoda) wrote2005-05-18 02:04 pm

Riddle me this:

Frank Gorshin, who shall always be the Riddler to me has passed into that great Enigma. He finally knows the answers.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050518/ap_en_ot/obit_gorshin

When I was a child, doing childish things, I was a member of a gang in my home town. We truely did run around and terrorize other folks and even had a few rumbles. and all of this pre teen, true and true.

The gang I was in called itself the Riddlers, because we had decided to not be sane, and easy task for me. And yes, we wore green.

Frank, I'll miss you. When you weren't being devilish, you were a man of impeccable taste, gentlemanly and quiet. Though I think you were far under-rated and under used, you have remained in my mind in the same calibre as Lemmon, Matheau, Cagney, and Stewart.

Hats off to you, Gent. I sing you up.

[identity profile] tapestry01.livejournal.com 2005-05-18 07:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I always saw Frank Gorshin's Riddler as a milestone in television drama. Up until then, bad guys in the movies and TV committed crimes... but sort of felt bad about it later. Movie directors were hesitant to show villians in a completely bad light, and the characters either decided the law didn't apply to them, or they justified their actions with rationalizations. The Riddler was different. Decades before amoral characters like in "Natural Born Killers," the Riddler was a person without any morals or conscience. Here was a bad guy who knew he was a bad guy and enjoyed it-- he had fun stealing things and hurting people.

As far as movie villians go, I would compare Gorshin's Riddler with Jimmy Cagney's character in "White Heat" or Powers Boothe's Jim Jones in "The Guyana Tragedy." They set the standard for movie bad guys that was hard to top.