সন্ধ্যাতারা ফুল এপিসোড 10 জুলাই। সন্ধ্যাতারা আজকের পর্ব
Julian Sands, a flexible English entertainer whose film jobs incorporated the writer Percy Bysshe Shelley, Louis XIV, a warlock, Superman's dad and a Latvian pimp, was articulated dead on Tuesday, over five months subsequent to vanishing while at the same time climbing alone on a path on Mount Baldy in the San Gabriel Mountains in Southern California. He was 65.
On Sunday, specialists recuperated human remaining parts close to the mountain where search teams had been searching for Mr. Sands. The San Bernardino Province Sheriff's Specialization said it had been reached by explorers who had tracked down human remaining parts in the Mount Baldy wild. Perilous circumstances, including a progression of serious tempests, had convoluted search endeavors.
The coroner's office distinguished the remaining parts as Mr. Sands on Tuesday. It added that the reason for his passing stayed being scrutinized.
With his shock of light hair and his at times frosty disposition, Mr. Sands was immediately unmistakable. He could slip effectively from an ensemble show as ivory James' "A Room With a View" (1985), in which he played a hopeful heartfelt around the turn of the twentieth 100 years, to a mysterious film like "Warlock" (1989), in which, as the title character, he escapes a seventeenth century witch tracker to twentieth century Los Angeles.
"He was in every case great, consistently chivalrous and stately," Janet Maslin, a previous New York Times film pundit, said in a telephone interview. "I don't recollect a bogus move from him."
Mr. Sands played Shelley in Ken Russell's blood and gore movie "Gothic" (1987), which reproduces a genuine story: a social event on a turbulent night in 1816 in a Swiss manor where Shelley; his future spouse, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, who might before long state "Frankenstein"; her stepsister, Claire Clairmont; Ruler Byron; and Byron's PCP, John William Polidori, composed phantom stories.
Mr. Sands' Shelley experienced drug-powered pipedreams and was tortured by fears and fallen angels. Gabriel Byrne's Byron was almost evil.
"I think these representations are established in all actuality," Mr. Sands told The Times in 1987. "Assuming individuals suspect something, this is a direct result of the later Victorian whitewash of them. These were not just lovely Heartfelt writers. They were rebellious, anarchic epicureans seeking after a specific line of amorality.Within two years, Mr. Sands had worked with Mr. Ivory and Mr. Russell, two chiefs with stunningly various styles.
"James Ivory resembles an Indian miniaturist, and Ken Russell is a spray painting craftsman," Mr. Sands told The Times. "James Ivory resembles an ornithologist watching his subjects from a far distance, while Ken Russell is a major event tracker shooting in a rhino charge."
Mr. Sands likewise dealt with a few movies with the English chief Mike Figgis, among them "Leaving Las Vegas" (1996), in which he played a pimp, and "The Deficiency of Sexual Guiltlessness" (1999), in which Mr. Figgis melded the narrative of Adam and Eve with that of a producer (Mr. Sands) floating all through his sexual recollections.