Sad news came across the news wire this morning as it was confirmed that one of the most esteemed filmmaker in America has passed away at the age of 86. Sidney Lumet was considered by many as one of the best filmmakers of all-time. He definitely is one of the best, if not the best, American filmmaker of all-time.
Lumet was quite prolific as a filmmaker since he began to work behind the camera starting in 1957 with the classic drama 12 Angry Men and ending with his most recent work in 2007 with Before the Devil Knows Your Dead. In between these two films he would direct another 43 films with all of them received positively by critics and audiences everywhere. He was the consummate professional and never waited for the perfect project to come along. He always went into a film project because he either liked the script or, barring being in one which didn’t have a script he liked, it had actors he wanted to work with or he wanted to test his abilities as a filmmaker with new techniques.
Sidney Lumet began his career directing Off-Broadway plays and summer stock productions. He would soon move into directing tv shows in 1950. It would be his time as a tv director where turn-arounds between episodes were so short that a director had to work quite fast that he would earn the reputation as a filmmaker who didn’t spend too much time shooting too many takes of a scene. Lumet became known as a filmmaker who would shoot one to two takes of a scene and move onto the next. Another tool he learned as a tv director that served him well once he moved into film was to rehearse for several weeks with his actors the script before starting up actual production behind the camera.
It was in 1957 when he finally moved into filmmaking with 12 Angry Men (itself previously a teleplay for a TV drama) which would catapult him into prominence in the film community. The film was well-received and still considered by many as one of the most influential films of its kind as it highlighted social injustice in a time when such themes were not considered profitable by studios and the people who ran them. This was the film which would help build the foundation of Lumet’s filmmaking-style as he would continue to use filmmaking as a way to tell the audience about social injustices not just in his preferred film location of New York, but in America and the world, in general. Some of the best films in American history were done by him during the 1970’s when he would take the chaos and public distrust of long-standing public institutions in the US and crafted three of the finest films of the 70’s and America as it was during that decade with Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon and Network.
Sidney Lumet’s legacy as a filmmaker will continue to inspire young filmmakers long after his passing. He was a man who looked at filmmaking as an artform and not just a way to entertain the audience. His films never talked down or pandered to the very general public who watched them unlike some of the filmmakers working in the industry today. His legacy as being the consummate “actor’s director” meant that one didn’t need to be dictatorial with his cast and crew to create a great piece of filmmaking. That there were other ways to make a film and do it in such a way that everyone were still able to give their best without being alienated to do so.
My very first experience when it came to Sidney Lumet had to have been watching his Cold War classic, Fail-Safe, in high school history and it was one of those films which got me looking at film as something more than a form of entertainment. Here was a film that was entertaining but also one so well-made and acted that it’s ideas and themes were not lost. It opened up my eyes to the possibility of film as a medium that could be used to teach, raise issues to debate in society and highlight both the good and the bad of the human experience.
Sidney Lumet has made such an impact not just on those who were fans of films and grow up to become players in the industry, but also those people who would work in other fields of life whether they were lawyers, judges, police officers or politicians (professionals he would use over and over in his films throughout his career). Even Supreme Court Justice SOnia Sotomayor would look at Lumet as an inspiring figure in convincing her that she made the correct choice in choosing law as the path for her professional life.
I find it one of the most fitting tribute for Sidney Lumet that his time as a filmmaker and doing what he enjoyed doing the most became inspirational for people of all color, stripe and creed. This was a man who didn’t just take from the public but gave back just as much in the end. America has truly lost one of its best artists.
Serpico
The Hill
Dog Day Afternoon
Network
The Verdict
Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead

A tragic loss. What a career Lumet had. “12 Angry Men” is the best film you’ll ever see that consists almost soelely of people sitting around a table talking. Unlike a lot of filmmakers, he never lost his touch and never mellowed with age. The world is a poorer place for his passing.
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The world is not just poorer for his passing, but the entire entertainment industry has lost one of it’s most creative social champions and commentators. The film industry do not have anyone right now who can take up the torch that Sidney Lumet carried since 12 Angry Men and right up to his final work.
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And for anyone who needs proof of just how silly it is to take the Academy Awards seriously, just consider that Sidney Lumet never won an Oscar. I’ve already reviewed Dog Day Afternoon on this site but I’m going to echo you guys and say that 12 Angry Men is a great film and it’s responsible for my overwhelming desire to someday serve on a jury.
For proof of how good a director Lumet was, just try to imagine sitting through Network if anyone other than Lumet had directed Paddy Chayefsky’s shrill, sexist script? Seriously, it takes a really great director to make a watchable movie out of an unreadable script. Actually, just typing those words is making me want to watch and review Network now.
Before the Devil Knows Your Dead — what an excellent film that was. Most of the time, it’s kinda hard to watch these movies made by the veteran directors because they always seem to reveal just how out-of-touch the direcotr has become. But that film proved that 80-something Lumet stll knew how to tell an exciting crime story.
Plus, let’s not forget that Lumet’s daughter, Jenny, wrote the script for one of my favorite films ever — Rachel Getting Married.
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So, you have a connection to the Lumet family for them having made a film about you? 🙂
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Oui!
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Great tribute to a great director.
Lumet directed so many great films that its hard to narrow them down to one favorite but, personally, my favorite Lumet film remains Prince of the City. Sidney Lumet was a master of moral ambiguity and you don’t so much watch his best films as much as you accept the challenge of trying to keep up with them. He was an artist who left us a truly impressive body of work to remember him by.
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Moral ambiguity were the words I was grasping at but couldn’t catch a hold on. His characters’ moral compass were never truly black and white. Never good or bad. His films actually made one actually think about the ideas and questions he was bringing up instead of asking the audience to pick sides.
I like the choice of Prince of the City. I always thought that belonged with his trio of classic 70’s films, but not many critics fell in love with it the way they did with Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon and Network. I will say that Treat Williams never had a better role than as Daniel Ciello.
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