In Memoriam
A great actor who wanted "I Will Remember You" played at his funeral to make people cry.
One of the ways I amuse myself when writing about people is by seeing how many letters I have to type into IMDb and Wikipedia before their names pop up. And I am here to tell you, I am sorely disappointed this morning. Especially with IMDb. Sure, Wikipedia has a lot of things that start with “sam” that are important and not even names. That’s reasonable; I think even Neill would understand why “same-sex marriage” comes up before he does. But why in the name of Gods would the first Sam IMDb thinks I am interested in today of all days is Sam Worthington?
Though technically, Sam Neill wasn’t a Sam. He was a Nigel. He was, in fact, Sir Nigel John Dermot Neill, though he felt the title of “sir” was “too grand by far.” Still, New Zealand rightly considered him one of their greatest actors, and he acquired several major honours through both New Zealand and the British Empire. He made films in multiple countries—Australia, New Zealand, Germany, and of course and famously the US. He’s probably one of the most recognizable Kiwis in the world.
In fact, this is the day I actually learn the plot of Until the End of the World, a movie I’ve never managed to get around to that I’ve loved the soundtrack of for decades; it was quite recently in regular rotation in my car. His breakout role was in My Brilliant Career—though I’m sure “Telephone Etiquette” is perfectly charming—and from there, he made well over a hundred movies and probably close to two hundred episodes of assorted TV shows and miniseries, and he produced the web series Cinema Quarantine.
And, yes, he was Dr. Grant. Everyone knows he was Alan Grant, paleontologist and rescuer of small children from the T. rex. (Trust me, that’s the proper way to write it.) The movie has aged . . . interestingly. The performances remain first-rate, including Neill’s, even if the science itself is iffy at best in places. I’ll freely admit the last movie in the series I’ve seen is The Lost World, because it appeared to be diminishing returns from there, but there’s a reason we all remain awed that Spielberg released it and Schindler’s List in the same year. It’s old enough for me to be firm that it is a damn classic.
But if we are talking favourite Sam Neill movies, let us spare a moment for The Dish, the movie he made about the Apollo 11 mission and the importance of Australia to it. It’s a charming movie. One of his best, and not just because he was in a fair few turkeys. (Children of the Revolution is an interesting idea poorly carried out, at least.) Most of the performers are unknown to Americans, though it includes a delightful turn from Patrick Warburton. But Sam Neill carries the movie, and he does so with grace and goodwill. There are worse tributes to the man that watching that movie.
About the writer
Gillian Nelson
Gillian Nelson is a forty-something bipolar woman living in the Pacific Northwest after growing up in Los Angeles County. She and her boyfriend have one son and one daughter, and she gave a child up for adoption. She fills her days by chasing around her kids, watching a lot of movies, and reading. She particularly enjoys pre-Code films, blaxploitation, and live-action Disney movies of the '60s and '70s. She has a Patreon account.
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Conversation
Time to track down Reilly: Ace of Spies, the British miniseries about a spy who served King and country during and around WWI, and who is said to be a inspiration for James Bond. This was my first encounter with Sam Neill. RIP.
I remain very pleased by Sam Neill insisting on the Aboriginal flag in Event Horizon: hoping for a better and more just future, even in a movie about a mission that would literally go to hell. From what I’ve seen and heard of him, he was a true class act, as well as a magnificent actor. He’s also unforgettable in Possession, and he was the perfect pick for In the Mouth of Madness, and he had a late-career highlight in Hunt for the Wilderpeople, and and and. I was so sad to wake up to this news.
For years I have tried an old, old (like, 2000?) AV Club feature that included a snarky dig at Event Horizon and its premise that Sam Neill is the devil. “Sam Neill is not the devil,” it states, and something about the exasperated dismissal there struck me as hilarious. Anyway, toward the end of Possession there is a shot of Neill leaning in a doorway, angled just so and with a look, a leer, on his face, and Sam Neill is the fucking devil. He’s fantastic in Jurassic Park and the gruff glue of Hunt For The Wilderpeople but he could also go to some truly freaky places (and while I am not a huge fan of Event Horizon he is pretty damn good there too). RIP to a real one.
I dislike Event Horizon, but he’s damn good in it, and he’s incredible in Possession. It takes something special to stand up to Isabelle Adjani’s tour de force.