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He began a partime acting career in 1963, with Otto Preminger's The Cardinal, for which he received his first acting nomination. As for his directorial efforts, Huston seemed to produce failure after failure. His most notorious flop, The Bible (1966), has been criticised by many. Leonard Maltin rated the movie as "Definitely one time you should read the book instead". Fat City (1972) was Huston's first step back into critical success. The Man who Would be King (1975) is considered one of the finest of his later years as director. After the failures of the WWII P.O.W. story Victory (1981) and the musical Annie (1982), Huston bounced back with Prizzi's Honor (1985), Huston's first major critical and financial success in over thirty years. Once again, one of his own relatives won an Oscar in a movie he directed. This time, it was his daughter Anjelica, who won for her impressive performance as the sly mafia ex-fiancee of assassin Jack Nichols on. Huston's last film The Dead was also a critical hit, but not as big a success as Prizzi. By the time of his death on August 28, 1987, Huston, with his craggy face and rich baritone voice, was one of the few directors to be recognizable to the public as most of the actors he worked with. His amazingly crafty cold-blooded role in Chinatown probably helped a bit.
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