Woyyuzzzz...come out to playeeee....Woyyuzz z
His psycho role in 'The Warriors' is a classic.
"Where's your spark now?"
His psycho role in 'The Warriors' is a classic.
"Where's your spark now?"
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shareA chilling, magnetic performance. Luther is quite possibly my favorite movie villain of all time (in the non Nazi category).
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I thought Luther was so damn cute.
shareoooohhhh I know ..I agree. you know what even at his time now I still think he is cute.. I guess I love the person too.. I love his voice.. take care
shareThe best. Used to quote this all the time from the movie.
shareI read somewhere else that David Patrick Kelly was 5'4" or 5'5", not the 5'6" that is written in imdb.com. No matter, even though I'm taller that him, I'd still be afraid to take on real-life, psycho-homicidal maniac that like. One, crazy people are stronger and two, they fight ferociously and differently than sane people, which is harder to defend against. What I understand is that insane people can revert back to a primal, ape-like physical attack that uses both hands to claw and grasp, while attempting to bite or head-butt, and sometimes even kicking. Typically sane guys fight with the one-two strike pattern with fists and sometimes kicks. An insane person is attacking with anywhere from three to four simultaneous strikes against you. Whereas a sane guy is trying to crush you with his fists and feet, an insane person is trying to rip and maim your flesh, as if he/she was an enraged chimpanzee. In the old days at insane asylums, before the advent of sedative drugs, institution attendants and guards were known to wear a protective, bird-cage-like apparatus around their heads. Also, tall, strong, beefy men were normally hired. This protected them from flesh-tearing, maiming, disfiguring or even blinding assaults from crazed and psychotic inmates who could attack with the element of surprise.
I'm not saying the Luther-character would actually fight this way, but it might be close. As it turns out in the movie, Luther was actually more of a vicious bully. When challenged by Swan, Luther declines and pulls out a revolver. For this his character was labelled, cowardly. I'll be the lone voice that supports Luther's declining Swan's one-on-one duel. Swan was bigger and obviously the better fighter. Luther knew he'd get his a@@ kicked in a one-on-one street fight with Swan. On the other hand, Luther did not bring his gang all the way to Coney Island for a gang fight. He was there to commit murder, so personal honor was not on his mind. Soldiers, commandos, fighters, and even professional assassins all understand this. When your mission and intent are to kill, honor plays no part. The most expeditious and efficient means of killing are priority. That's why Luther pulled the pistol. I never could quite understand why both gangs didn't go at it after Swan embedded the switchblade into Luther's forearm. Both gangs stood back, waiting to see what their leaders did next.
Luther was the man. He was the only worthy rouge. Two of the rouges get wasted by the furies in the game and one was scared of luther. Luther was a true villian
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