George Kennedy's Scary Work as Willard
In the 60's, George Kennedy was on call as a "big guy villain" for several studios, but he settled in nicely for a few memorable movies at Universal:
Lonely are the Brave 1962: He's a New Mexico desert town jailer who beats up star Kirk Douglas(whom he sneeringly calls "John W. Burns")...and is later beaten up by Douglas in return.
Charade 1963: Of a trio of crooks menacing heroine Audrey Hepburn, he's the MOST menacing, a big guy named Herman Scobie who has a hook for a hand and an alternating scary-buffoonish air about him. He has a memorable rooftop fight with star Cary Grant.
Mirage 1965: A mysterious mogul called "The Major" sends various henchmen after hero Gregory Peck, but the biggest and toughest and meanest and most merciless of them all is "Willard," played by George Kennedy. As he fought with stars Kirk Douglas and Cary Grant before, Kennedy fights with Gregory Peck here, too -- and loses.
The first time.
George Kennedy is good and mean and memorable in "Lonely are the Brave," "Charade" and "Mirage,"(and co-starred with Walter Matthau in all three, which furthers the "linkage")...but his "Mirage" villain is particularly scary and intense, very good at making sure that "Mirage" stays scary and nightmarish all the way through.
Willard has no last name. His trademark is the pair of tight wirerim glasses he wears on his head, which seem to squeeze it and only makes him more irritable. He has no hook for hand like Herman Scobie. And he's never to be taken lightly as Scobie sometimes in in "Charade."
Interesting: when first we meet Willard, he is in a uniform and working in the noisy basement of the skyscraper. Here, "playing a regular employee," Kennedy's pissed-off tone makes sure that Willard is barely civil to Gregory Peck as Peck asks questions. Given how murderous we will learn that Willard will be later, its amazing Willard can hold his temper at all while facing a man he will later be sent to capture or kill. Still, he can't hold it for long, and pretty much tells Peck to get the hell out and stop bothering him.
As the movie moves on and Willard becomes a lethal force, we see him do the following things:
1. Willard confronts Gregory Peck and Peck's new "pal," detective Walter Matthau. Willard starts shooting...exclusively at Matthau. It is clear: his orders are to capture Peck, but kill the troublesome and unnecessary private eye Peck has hired. Doesn't work out. Peck uses a combination of wooden board and fist to put Kennedy down...and Kennedy quite nicely acts the "slow reality" of losing consciousness, trying to rise(like a fallen boxer), collapsing. Very realistic fight...and obviously painful for Kennedy, who will seek vengeful reciprocation in the pain department from Peck later.
2. Willard holds a gun on Peck from in front of him while chubby co-henchmanLester( Jack Weston )holds a gun on Peck from behind.
First Willard offers a nasty joke(but maybe's he's not kidding):
Willard: Hey, Lester. Why don't we tell the Major he tried to escape and just kill him anyway?
Then, when Peck gets the jump and a stranglehold on Lester(Weston), this:
Peck: Drop your gun or I'll kill him(Weston)
Kennedy: I'll save you the trouble.
And Kennedy shoots WESTON.
(I always figured taht the Major told Willard if Lester bumbled the job again -- and Lester did bumble a capture of Peck earlier -- that Willard could fire Lester on the spot with a bullet.)
3. Willard, while shooting at Peck in a Central Park tunnel, almost hits his colleague Josephson(Kevin McCarthy). This exchange, as Kennedy races past McCarthy:
McCarthy: You almost shot ME!
Kennedy(running by): So?
4. The Big Kahuna: In a really nicely choreographed scene of "small movements," Gregory Peck invades the penthouse of the Major and is confronted by a very scared looking Kevin McCarthy:
McCarthy: You shouldn't have come here. A big mistake.
And then Kennedy appears from the nocturnal penthouse balcony and slowly approaches:
Kennedy: And then some.
It is nifty to watch how McCarthy strokes Pecks sleeve in fright of what Kennedy is about to do to Peck, and scary as Kennedy takes off his wire-rimmed glasses, and unnerving as even Gregory Peck slowly turns and backs away in some despair, and realizes he HAS made a big mistake as Kennedy says:
Kennedy: I owe you some pain, mister.
The beating that Kennedy administers to Peck is quite brutal and realistic for 1965, and sickeningly continuous...all the better to start "knocking the flashback memories" out of Peck's head that solve the mystery. And Kennedy keeps beating him in a possessed mania, knocking away the ineffectual McCarthy and only stopping when the Major(stolid All-American looking Leif Erickson, quite good) fires a shot as if trying to whip a rabid dog.
---
I collected all these moments because in watching "Mirage" recently, I was struck by how, in this movie, George Kennedy pretty much threw out any "buffoonery" or sympathy, or humanity, and pretty much gave us a killing machine stuck on the "rage" button. Kennedy's mean and monstrous performance keeps the suspense in "Mirage" very suspenseful.
It even got me to wondering about Willard. Was he a military guy under the Major's command? A killer solder? A psycho? Beaten continuously by a drunken father as a kid? In any event, the Major depends on Willard to deliver beatings and death with a certain confidence in just how mean this guy will be. (I like how, as Willard holds a gun to Stillwell's head, the Major says: "Nobody's bluffing here. Not you. Not me....and certainly not Willard.")
---
Two years after "Mirage," George Kennedy would earn an Oscar for playing "the usual George Kennedy meanie,"...but with a changable heart. "Cool Hand Luke." The chain gang big guy who goes from hating Paul Newman to loving him. And from then on, Kennedy was a utility player. Good guys or bad guys, he did 'em all. He was the ultra-dependable and efficient airline mechanic-executive Joe Patroni in 1970's "Airport"(and the only cast member of that original film to appear in all three sequels). But he was willing to keep playing villains versus John Wayne(Cahill US Marshall) and Clint Eastwood(Thunderbolt and Lightfoot.)
And he is still with us today.
But that gallery of sixties villains is quite a rogue's gallery...and Willard in "Mirage" may just be the scariest rogue of them all.