New York Times
Lumet made one of the most successful directorial debuts in history with 12 Angry Men in 1957, and continued making movies until 2007, though 1982's The Verdict is the last of his really big ones. Along the way we got Long Day's Journey Into Night, The Pawnbroker, Serpico, Murder on the Orient Express, Dog Day Afternoon, and Network.
He was nominated for Best Director four times, and Best Adapted Screenplay once, and was given the Honourary Oscar in 2005 to make up for it. When I did my poll of Oscar-winning performance directors, he was tied with Hal Ashby, James L. Brooks, Jonathan Demme, and John Huston for fifth place.
Lumet made one of the most successful directorial debuts in history with 12 Angry Men in 1957, and continued making movies until 2007, though 1982's The Verdict is the last of his really big ones. Along the way we got Long Day's Journey Into Night, The Pawnbroker, Serpico, Murder on the Orient Express, Dog Day Afternoon, and Network.
He was nominated for Best Director four times, and Best Adapted Screenplay once, and was given the Honourary Oscar in 2005 to make up for it. When I did my poll of Oscar-winning performance directors, he was tied with Hal Ashby, James L. Brooks, Jonathan Demme, and John Huston for fifth place.