Director Irvin Kershner helmed this dramedy starring Barbra Streisand as a woman who tries to spice up her somewhat mundane life via little fantasies—like what it would be like to join a plot to blow up the Statue of Liberty or picturing Fidel Castro as a cross-dresser. You know, the usual stuff.
Richard Harris reprised the role he originated in 1970's A Man Called Horse in this Kershner-directed sequel that follows one man's efforts to protect the Sioux tribe he once was a part of.
In this Kershner flick, Faye Dunaway plays a fashion photographer whose ability to see murders before they happen inadvertently spills over into her work. Something that eventually catches the, um, eye of Detective Tommy Lee Jones.
Some would say Kershner managed to do the unimaginable by actually making a sequel that surpassed the original, not to mention all the ones that came after it, too. And for that, he earned a Saturn award for Best Director in 1981.
Sean Connery dusted off his license to kill for Kershner, taking on the role of Agent 007 one last time in what is essentially a lackluster remake of 1965's Thunderball. But, hey, at least it gave us Kim Basinger as a Bond girl.
Yet another sequel fell into Kershner's hands with this follow-up to the popular sci-fi/action flick about a crime-fighting superhuman cyborg. This was one of the last films he directed before passing away Nov. 27.
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