Quentin Tarantino's
second film cemented itself into pop culture history when it came out in 1994, and for good reason.
Not exact matches
The first few years of his career following the departure from the show were somewhat lackluster, but Smits eventually landed the role of Senator Bail Organa in the
second and third Star Wars prequels, a move that would permanently
cement him in
film history in the minds of at least one very large fanbase.In addition to his work with the Star Wars franchise, Smits also made an inevitable return to the small - screen mid-decade with a prominent role on NBC's The West Wing during the show's 2004 - 2005 season.
The inclusion of several extraordinarily melodramatic sequences within the
film's
second act only
cements this feeling, to the extent that one can't help but wish that such moments had been excised from the final product.
After his first
film, the seminal science fiction comedy Dark Star (1974) and his
second, the legendary action thriller Assault On Precinct 13 (1976), Carpenter
cemented his place in pop culture with the terrifying Halloween (1978), the
film widely credited with bringing the slasher sub-genre into the mainstream.