Monday, February 16, 2026

Robert Duvall Had a Quiet Gravitas

Actor Robert Duvall passed away yesterday at the age of 95.

In a career which spanned seven decades, Duvall earned himself a place among the heavyweights of American actors in the late 20th and earliest 21st centuries. His credits are simply staggering:

To Kill a Mockingbird

Bullitt

True Grit

M*A*S*H

The Godfather

The Godfather, Part II

Network

Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Apocalypse Now

The Great Santini

Tender Mercies

The Natural

Rambling Rose

Falling Down

The Apostle

Deep Impact

A Civil Action

Gone in 60 Seconds

Secondhand Lions

The Judge

Hustle

In recent months, I saw Duvall in The Natural in tribute to Robert Redford where he portrayed the conniving, cynical sports reporter Max Mercy. Last summer, I saw Duvall's Academy Award nominated performance in Apocalypse Now which I described as "a manic intensity but is unaffected by chaos and explosions going on around him". Well, I suppose a high surf and the smell of napalm can do that. 

Yet when I think of Duvall, I think of his performances in some lesser-known movie from the 1990s namely Falling Down, Wrestling Ernest Hemingway and Phenomenon. 

In Falling Down starring Michael Douglas and Barbara Hershey, Duvall plays a cop who is on his last day on the job. He is disrespected by nearly all of his colleagues at work and has to deal with a mentally ill wife at home. Yet he manages to stay two steps ahead of everyone as it becomes clear to him who it is that snapped and wreaking havoc on the city while he must break the news to Douglas' character D-Fens that he is the bad guy.

In Wrestling Ernest Hemingway, he co-starred with Richard Harris as a lonely widower who develops a crush on a waitress played by a young Sandra Bullock and wishes to dance with her. I should mention that Duvall's character is Cuban. In this day in age, a white actor playing a Latino would be verboten. But Duvall played his role with the greatest care, dignity and restraint. As with a great many of his characters, you forget that it is Duvall as he subsumed himself into the role. I particularly remember how his character, in the hope of dancing with Sandra Bullock, would practice tangoing alone in front of the mirror. Duvall did the little things which made you remember him.

In Phenomenon, Duvall portrays a kindly local doctor alongside John Travolta, who after seeing a flashing light, suddenly becomes full of infinite powers. When the townspeople turn against the Travolta character, it is Duvall who rushes to his defense and publicly shames those who forsake their friend who had never asked anything of them.

I also remember some of Duvall's early TV work on The Fugitive and on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, the latter of which he played an undersea alien who temporarily takes over the Seaview. Then again who didn't temporarily take over the Seaview?

Whether Duvall was playing the hero or the heavy, a small role or a big one, he always carried himself with a quiet gravitas even as he retreated into his character. Robert Duvall may be gone but his quiet gravitas will carry on for decades to come. R.I.P.

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