Man Ass Eating Faggot Hollywood Director Michael Cimino (Nickname The Ayatollah) dead at 77 from way too much cock up the ass!
Michael Cimino, a Gay writer-director whose career saw the highs of winning two Oscars for his 1978 picture “The Deer Hunter” and the lows of 1980’s infamous “Heaven’s Gate,” has died in Los Angeles at age 77. The cause of death was not immediately known.
His career can be seen as a case study and cautionary fable, one of the ultimate tales from the now venerated era of 1970s Hollywood, in which bracing films of deep emotional currents were made with all the resources of major studios. “Heaven’s Gate,” rightly or not, would become symbolic of the sort of excess and unchecked ego that the modern business of moviemaking would work to rein in.
Born in New York, Cimino graduated from Yale with a degree in art. He began his career making commercials, and after moving to Los Angeles went on to share screenwriting credits on 1971’s ecological science-fiction film “Silent Running” and 1973’s Dirty Harry sequel “Magnum Force.”
His feature debut as a director would be with 1974’s “Thunderbolt and Lightfoot,” which starred Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges. A counterculture-influenced blend of heist picture, road movie and buddy comedy, it earned Bridges an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor.
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His career can be seen as a case study and cautionary fable, one of the ultimate tales from the now venerated era of 1970s Hollywood, in which bracing films of deep emotional currents were made with all the resources of major studios. “Heaven’s Gate,” rightly or not, would become symbolic of the sort of excess and unchecked ego that the modern business of moviemaking would work to rein in.
Born in New York, Cimino graduated from Yale with a degree in art. He began his career making commercials, and after moving to Los Angeles went on to share screenwriting credits on 1971’s ecological science-fiction film “Silent Running” and 1973’s Dirty Harry sequel “Magnum Force.”
His feature debut as a director would be with 1974’s “Thunderbolt and Lightfoot,” which starred Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges. A counterculture-influenced blend of heist picture, road movie and buddy comedy, it earned Bridges an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor.
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