How Gene Hackmanâs Final Great Acting Performance Epitomized His Cinema Legend
The New Hollywood legend's swansong.
Gene Hackman’s death marks the passing of a New Hollywood great, primarily remembered for his neo-noir detective characters. Yet his final landmark performance was a very different affair – though no less weighty – in a modern alt-comedy classic. Hackman’s portrayal of the titular family patriarch in The Royal Tenenbaums was the single performance that epitomized his greatness as an actor perhaps more than any other.
Hackman was iconic as Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle in The French Connection, brilliantly understated in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Conversation, and stirring in Gilbert Cates’ I Never Sang for My Father. Any one of these three roles may have been Hackman’s best overall. But for one that portrayed the full range of his acting talent, encapsulating the extraordinary breadth and depth of his career in a single movie, The Royal Tenenbaums is difficult to top.
Hackman Retired From Film Acting Three Years After The Movie’s Release
Not long after The Royal Tenenbaums came out in 2001, Hackman retired from acting. His final film roles in Runaway Jury and Welcome to Mooseport were relatively insignificant by comparison. It’s almost as though he and Anderson had agreed beforehand that his lead role as the self-important father of a deeply dysfunctional family would be his swansong, a medley of all his greatest hits from yesteryear.
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Playing Royal Tenenbaum was the perfect way for Gene Hackman to bow out of the limelight. What’s more, his character’s death at the end of a tumultuous sequence of events in the movie feels is made all the more poignant by the knowledge that it was the star's Hollywood swan song.
The Character Features The Full Range Of Hackman’s Acting Abilities
Gene Hackman was often typecast, rightly or wrongly, as a hard-boiled detective, taking after his most famous role as “Popeye” Doyle. But there was so much more to him as an actor, and Royal Tenenbaum showcases virtually all of it. The gruff temperament of Hackman’s hard-boiled noir persona comes through in parts, but Royal is also funny, charming, domineering, hard-edged and soft-centered. He’s a sympathetically selfish character who’s hero, antihero and villain all rolled into one.
Hackman’s character is the only one who’s impossible to pin down. He’s everything and nothing at once, and, fundamentally, intensely, human.
With Anderson’s trademark artifice often breaking down the inner workings of the Tenenbaum family as though they were mechanical parts in a machine, Hackman’s character is the only one who’s impossible to pin down. He’s everything and nothing at once, and, fundamentally, intensely, human. The Royal Tenenbaums may not have been the pinnacle of Gene Hackman’s career, but it demonstrates everything that he was, and more.
Your RatingThe Royal Tenenbaums
Release Date
October 5, 2001
Runtime
110 Minutes
Director
Wes Anderson
Writers
Wes Anderson, Owen Wilson
Gene Hackman
Anjelica Huston