Most Wanted
Email here for additions & corrections.

Il Grido
(Antonioni, 1957)

The Fortune
(Nichols, 1975)

-30-
(Webb, 1959)

Betrayal
(Jones, 1983)

Play It As It Lays
(Perry, 1972)

The Outfit
(Flynn, 1973)

Alex in Wonderland
(Mazursky, 1969)

The Legend of Lylah Clare
(Aldrich, 1968)

In The Cool of the Day
(Stevens, 1963)

That Cold Day in the Park
(Altman, 1969)

The Fox
(Rydell, 1967)

Thumb Trippin'
(Masters, 1972)

Midas Run
(Kjellin, 1969)

At Long Last Love
(Bogdanovich, 1973)

Brewster McCloud
(Altman, 1972)

Outcast of the Islands
(Reed, 1951)

Mike's Murder
(Bridges, 1984)

Reader Submissions

1930's-1950's
The Moon's Our Home
(Seiter, 1936)
Sh! The Octopus
(McGann, 1937)
The Mating Season
(Leisen, 1951)
Bad for Each Other
(Rapper, 1953)
The Phenix City Story
(Karlson, 1955)
Run of the Arrow
(Fuller, 1956)
House of Secrets
(Green, 1956)
Saint Joan
(Preminger, 1957)
Macabre
(Castle, 1958)
The Fiend Who Walked the West
(G. Douglas, 1958
Five Gates to Hell
(Clavell, 1959)
1960's
Key Witness
(Karlson, 1960)
Summer and Smoke
(Glenville, 1961)
The Chapman Report
(Cukor,1962)
Bachelor Flat
(Tashlin, 1962) [on Hulu]
The L Shaped Room
(Forbes, 1963)
The Chalk Garden
(Neame, 1964)
A Thousand Clowns
(Coe, 1965)
You're a Big Boy Now
(Coppola, 1966)
The Whisperers
(Forbes, 1967)
Dark of the Sun
(Cardiff, 1968)
Skidoo
(Preminger, 1968)
Last Summer
(Perry, 1969)
The Comic
(C. Reiner, 1969)
1970-1974
The Revolutionary
(Williams, 1970)
The Landlord
(Ashby, 1970)
Diary of a Mad Housewife
(Perry, 1970)
Tropic of Cancer
(Strick, 1970)
I Never Sang for My Father
(Cates, 1970)
Sometimes a Great Notion
(Newman, 1971)
Marriage of a Young Stockbroker
(Turman, 1971)
'Doc'
(Perry, 1971)
The Music Lovers
(Russell, 1971)
Drive, He Said
(Nicholson, 1971)
The Steagle
(Sylbert, 1971)
The Last Movie
(Hopper, 1971)
Made For Each Other
(Bean, 1971)
The Day the Clown Cried
(Lewis, 1972)
Hickey & Boggs
(Culp, 1972)
The Carey Treatment
(Edwards, 1972)
Pete 'n' Tillie
(Ritt, 1972)
Slither
(Zieff, 1973)
Love and Pain and the Whole Damn Thing
(Pakula, 1973)
Man on a Swing
(Perry, 1974)
Open Season
(Collinson, 1974)
The Tamarind Seed
(Edwards, 1974)
Law and Disorder
(Passer, 1974)
Homebodies
(Yust, 1974)
Stardust
(Apted, 1974)
Celine and Julie Go Boating
(Rivette, 1974)
1975-1979
Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins
(Richards, 1975
At Long Last Love
(Bogdanovich, 1975)
Hearts of the West
(Zieff, 1975)
Welcome to L.A.
(Rudolph, 1976)
W.C. Fields and Me
(Hiller, 1976)
Citizens Band
(Demme, 1977)
Twilight's Last Gleaming
(Aldrich, 1977)
Looking for Mr. Goodbar
(Brooks, 1977)
Girlfriends
(Weill, 1978)
Movie Movie
(Donen, 1978)
The Medusa Touch
(Gold, 1978)
American Hot Wax
(Mutrux, 1978)
Hot Stuff
(DeLuise, 1979)
Scavenger Hunt
(Schultz , 1979)
Players
(Harvey, 1979)
Rich Kids
(Young, 1979)
Nightwing
(Hiller, 1979)
Screams of a Winter's Night
(Wilson, 1979
When You Comin' Back Red Ryder?
(Katselas, 1979
1980's
Resurrection
(Petrie, 1980)
The Awakening
(Newell, 1980)
Simon
(Brickman, 1980)
God's Angry Man
(Herzog, 1980)
Fast-Walking
(Harris, 1982)
Twice Upon a Time
(Korty & Swenson, 1983)
Trouble in Mind
(Rudolph, 1985)
When the Wind Blows
(Murikami, 1986)
Housekeeping
(Forsyth, 1987)
The Glass Menagerie
(Newman, 1987)
Patty Hearst
(Schrader, 1988)
Running on Empty
(Lumet, 1988)
Drowning by Numbers
(Greenaway, 1988)
Haunted Summer
(Passer, 1988)
The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years
(Spheeris, 1988)
1990's
Men Don't Leave
(Brickman, 1990)
Old Times
(Curtis, 1991)
Prospero's Books
(Greenaway, 1991)
City of Hope
(Sayles, 1991)
The Baby of Macon
(Greenaway, 1993)
King of the Hill
(Soderbergh, 1993)
Dadetown
(Hexter, 1995)
SubUrbia
(Linklater, 1997)

Upcoming

June 11

Tetro

June 12

Call of the Wild 3D

Food, Inc.

Imagine That

Moon

Sex Positive

The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3

Youssou N'Dour: I Bring What I Love

June 16

Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg

June 19

$9.99

Dead Snow

The Proposal

Whatever Works

Year One

June 24

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

June 26

Cheri

Fireflies in the Garden

The Hurt Locker

My Sister's Keeper

The Stoning of Soraya M. 

Surveillance 

July 1

Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs

Public Enemies

July 3

The Girl from Monaco

I Hate Valentine's Day

July 10

Bruno

I Love You, Beth Cooper

Soul Power

July 15

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

July 17

(500) Days of Summer

All the Boys Love Mandy Lane

July 24

All Good Things

The Answer Man

G-Force

In the Loop

Orphan

The Ugly Truth

July 29

Adam

July 31

The Cove

Funny People

Lorna's Silence

They Came from Upstairs

August 7

G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra

Julie & Julia

Paper Heart

Shorts

When in Rome

August 14

A Perfect Getaway

Bandslam

District 9

The Goods: The Don Ready Story

I Sell the Dead

Ponyo

Pool Boys

Spread

Taking Woodstock

The Time Traveler's Wife

August 21

Five Minutes of Heaven

Goose on the Loose!

Inglorious Bastards

It Might Get Loud

Post Grad

World's Greatest Dad

August 28

The Boat that Rocked

Final Destination: Death Trip

H2

September 4

All About Steve

Amreeka

Black Dynamite

Carriers

Citizen Game

Extract

Pandorum

Shanghai

September 9

9

September 11

The Red Canvas

Tyler Perrys: I Can Do It All Myself

Whiteout

September 17

The Burning Plain

September 18

Armored

Brand New Day

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs

Jennifer's Body

Splice

September 25

Fame

The Invention of Lying

Surrogates

October 2

A Serious Man

More Than a Game

Sorority Row

Toy Story/Toy Story 2

Another Brave Guy

Philippe Petit's high-wire walk between the World Trade Center towers, the subject of the brilliant Man on Wire, happened on August 7, 1974. It was obviously quite the event, but for whatever reason I didn't recall there being much news coverage of it. And yet I do remember an enormous amount of news coverage of George Willig's single-handed scaling of the south tower on May 25, 1977.

A toymaker and rock-climber from Queens, the 27 year-old Willig had built a special climbing device that utilized the vertical window-washing channels in the corner of the south tower. He began his climb at 6:30 am that morning, and made it to the top three and a half hours later. When he was a little more than halfway up the cops came down on a window-washing scaffold and tried to get him to abandon the climb, but Willig refused. He was arrested when he finished, but public acclaim was so enthusiastic -- the N.Y. Daily News headline hailed the "Human Fly!" -- that authorities only fined him $1.10, or one cent for every floor.

I was in the midst of producing a Save the Whales benefit concert in Wilton, Connecticut. I was as blown away by Willig's stunt as everyone else, and so I decided to contact him and invite him to make an appearance at the concert, which was held in a large amphitheatre-like area on property owned by David and Linda Black, the parents of my ex-girlfriend, Sophie Black (who later became a respected poet). Willig didn't say yes or no, but I announced in the Whale concert posters that "the Human Fly" would attend anyway. If he didn't show I figured I'd just get on the mike and say "them's the breaks."

To my surprise, Willig and a couple of friends turned up on the day of the concert -- a warm sunny day sometime in mid to late July of '77 -- and took a bow before a totally cheering crowd. It was quite a moment. David Black introduced him by saying Willig "believed in something -- he believed in himself."

Flash forward 31 years and everything that's going on now including my huge enthusiasm for Man on Wire, which naturally reminded me of Willig. I read on his Wikipedia page that he lived in Los Angeles in the '90s. It turns out he's still living here, in either Woodland Hills or Canoga Park (according to online listings), and working as a commercial remodeller or something.

A week ago I thought it might be a cool thing to chat with Willig for old time's sake. Maybe meet him for coffee, or maybe see Man on Wire with him, or maybe lend him a screener of it and talk to him about his reaction. Something like that. But I called three times (speaking at one point to a woman who answered the phone) and he didn't respond. Presumably he wants to be left alone, doesn't want to go there again, whatever...fine.

3:05 pm Update: Willig just called. He hasn't yet seen Man on Wire but is hoping to, he says -- perhaps this weekend. He actually knows Philippe Petit, who sent Willig "a congratulatory telegram or card or something the day after I climbed the tower." And then they met at a dinner that night or the night after, at the invitation of ABC News. Willig speaks to Petit "every seven to ten years," he says. "We're on different tracks although we have this bonding thing...I feel fortunate to have a brother in a sense."

Willig gave me the number of Michael Cardacino, a childhood friend who was there taking pictures as Willig made his ascent. Cardacino picked up the phone after I spoke to Willig and said he'd send me a scanned photo or two tomorrow.

Willig told me there's actually another World Trade Center stunt guy "whom nobody remembers...Owen Quinn, who jumped off the top of one of the towers in '75 and parachuted down and got away." He lives in Moriches, New York.

Willig is a general contractor, and is currently working on building a house -- his own -- in Topanga Canyon.

Bernie's Out<< previous | next >>Political Nerd Data

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on August 9, 2008 at 12:46 PM

comment #1

Mgmax says ...

Maybe because Richard Nixon resigned the exact same day. That would tend to push you below the fold, no matter what you did. Do they really not mention that fact in the documentary?

I remember it happening, but just as part of the big strange blur that was that time period.

Posted by Mgmax at August 9, 2008 2:08 PM

comment #2

George Prager says ...

This is weird: "Her younger brother, actor Jeremy Black, appeared as the boy Hitler clones in Boys from Brazil."

Anyway, George Willig. I remember the cover of the Daily News. I do remember seeing photos of Philippe Petit as well. Just thinking about what he had done and then looking at the photos in the Daily News gave me a chill.

Posted by George Prager at August 9, 2008 2:18 PM

comment #3

btwnproductions says ...

Petit's wire-walk was Aug. 7, 1974. Nixon's resignation speech was Aug. 8. My nine-year-old self remembers blanket coverage of the event that day on TV and in the papers the next in the tri-state area; I'm sure the president chased Petit off the front pages, however.

I assume Willig's stunt inspired a gag in SUPERMAN: THE MOVIE, just as the film co-opted the Pan Am Bldg. helicopter crash nine days earlier in 1977.

Posted by btwnproductions at August 9, 2008 3:34 PM

comment #4

Edward says ...

I remember Petit's feat, even though I was living in the KC, MO area at the time.

Posted by Edward at August 9, 2008 3:37 PM

comment #5

Gnome de Guerre says ...

Thanks for this posting Jeffrey. I had no idea about Willig. Before my time. The NY Press article mentions a fascinating fact as well: Willig's feelings of guilt re: 9/11, that somehow perhaps he helped make the towers a target.

Posted by Gnome de Guerre at August 9, 2008 3:59 PM

comment #6

George Prager says ...

Time to break out the scene from THE HOT ROCK when the boys fly a helicopter right past the still-under-construction World Trade Center.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTgnH2Pw0io

Posted by George Prager at August 9, 2008 4:05 PM

comment #7

frankbooth says ...

Was this the same Human Fly who briefly had his own Marvel comic?

And how do you parachute off something that tall in such a densely constructed area? Wouldn't you run the risk of being slammed into another building by the wind, or getting hung up on any number of obstructions? The parachute guy sounds craziest of them all.

Posted by frankbooth at August 9, 2008 5:07 PM

comment #8

frankbooth says ...

Nope, that guy was a stuntman named Rick Rojatt, who also went by Human Fly and did death-defying, Evel Kneivel-type stuff.

Marvel tried to make him into a superhero, but it didn't, um...you know.

Posted by frankbooth at August 9, 2008 5:37 PM

comment #9

supertaster says ...

A "Save the whales benefit concert in Whilton, Connecticut."

Think about that.

What a window into the soul of Jeff Wells. Poets. Whales. Unicorns. It all makes sense...

At tleast this Willig guy seems to be trying to forget the 70s and get on with his life.

You should have put out an open call to the .44 Caliber killer, too. He probably wouldn't have revealed himself, but them's the breaks.

I'm just teasing, Wells. I'm a product of the 70s, so I'm not really one to speak...

Posted by supertaster at August 9, 2008 9:29 PM

comment #10

George Prager says ...

I buttfucked supertaster last night. Not that fun. He's getting very loose down there.

Posted by George Prager at August 10, 2008 11:07 AM

comment #11

gruver1 says ...

Wells to Supertaster: Teasing? You're a creep. Do us all a favor and go to the kitchen right now and eat an entire jar of mayonnaise.

Posted by gruver1 at August 10, 2008 1:50 PM

comment #12

K. Bowen says ...

Very cool idea, Jeff. Good work. Thank you for the info on WIllig.

Posted by K. Bowen at August 10, 2008 3:05 PM

comment #13

K. Bowen says ...

I'm not old enough to remember Petit's walk, but I do know the first time I came across the story was in a PBS documentary on the World Trade Center post-9/11. Don't remember anything on Willig. So I'm guessing Petit's walk was fairly prominent. And I think I remember a TV interview with Petit in the eighties.

Posted by K. Bowen at August 10, 2008 3:10 PM

comment #14

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