Seymour Cassel
14 Films
Seymour Cassel
14 Included Films

Seymour Joseph Cassel (January 22, 1935 – April 7, 2019) was an American actor who appeared in over 200 films and television shows, with a career spanning over 50 years. He first came to prominence in the 1960s in the pioneering independent films of writer/director John Cassavetes. The first of these was Too Late Blues (1961), followed by Faces (1968), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award and won a National Society of Film Critics Award. Cassel went on to appear in Cassavetes's Minnie and Moskowitz (1971), The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976), Opening Night (1977), and Love Streams (1984). He also appeared in other notable films, including: Coogan's Bluff (1968), The Last Tycoon (1976), Valentino (1977), Convoy (1978), Johnny Be Good (1988), Mobsters (1991), In the Soup (1992), Honeymoon in Vegas (1992), Indecent Proposal (1993), The Sleepy Time Gal (2001), Imaginary Crimes (1994), Beer League (2006), and Fort McCoy (2011). Like Cassavetes, Wes Anderson frequently cast Cassel – first in Rushmore (1998), then in The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), and finally in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004).

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: Don Siegel

Director: Don Siegel

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: John Cassavetes



Director: John Cassavetes
Criterion is warmer and more lifelike than BFI. See DVDBeaver review for more capsBFI is brighter, but that's only because of a gamma bug, a common encoding issue that's easily corrected. After you do that, brightness is the same, though reds are different. Criterion has better encoding and doesn't have the bug so that's preferable.

Director: John Cassavetes
Criterion is warmer and more lifelike than BFI. See DVDBeaver review for more capsBFI is brighter, but that's only because of a gamma bug, a common encoding issue that's easily corrected. After you do that, brightness is the same, though reds are different. Criterion has better encoding and doesn't have the bug so that's preferable.

Director: Sam Peckinpah

Director: Sam Peckinpah

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: John Cassavetes

Director: Adrian Lyne

Director: Adrian Lyne

Director: Wes Anderson

Director: Wes Anderson

Director: Joel Coen
Criterion 4K Blu-Ray
Criterion 4K Blu-Ray
Universal Blu-Ray

Director: Joel Coen
Criterion 4K Blu-Ray
Criterion 4K Blu-Ray
Universal Blu-Ray

Director: Wes Anderson

Director: Wes Anderson

Criterion 4K Blu-ray is best, but has surrounds 3 dB too loud

14 films
