
Died at 95
male
Robert Selden Duvall (January 5, 1931 – February 15, 2026) was an American actor and filmmaker. He is the recipient of an Academy Award, four Golden Globe Awards, a BAFTA Award, two Primetime Emmy Awards and a Screen Actors Guild Award. Duvall began appearing in theater in the late 1950s, moving into television and film roles during the early 1960s, playing Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) and appearing in Captain Newman, M.D. (1963), as Major Frank Burns in the blockbuster comedy M*A*S*H (1970) and the lead role in THX 1138 (1971), as well as Horton Foote's adaptation of William Faulkner's Tomorrow (1972), which was developed at The Actors Studio and is his personal favorite. This was followed by a series of critically lauded performances in commercially successful films. He has starred in numerous films and television series, including The Twilight Zone (1963), Bullitt (1968), True Grit (1969), The Godfather (1972), The Godfather Part II (1974), The Conversation (1974), Network (1976), Apocalypse Now (1979), Tender Mercies (1983) (which earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor), The Natural (1984), The Handmaid's Tale (1990), Days of Thunder (1990), Falling Down (1993), Secondhand Lions (2003), The Judge (2014), and Widows (2018). His final role was in The Pale Blue Eye (2022).

WHOLE STORY IS IN COMMENTS. In a sun-scorched America where crime, law enforcement, and intelligence agencies are quietly entangled, a brutal pawn shop robbery exposes a hidden criminal empire laundering billions through cartels, mafia families, and government-backed operations. As a serial killer begins targeting the untouchable figures at the center of the system, a burned-out detective, a relentless FBI profiler, and a master con man are pulled into a widening conspiracy where no one is innocent and every alliance is temporary. When cops, cartel enforcers, mob hitmen, thieves, and a killer with a ledger all converge on the same night, the entire system turns on itself in a violent collision of greed, power, and survival. Stylish, darkly funny, and brutally tense, Seven Minutes to Heaven is a crime epic about corruption, control, and the dangerous illusion that anyone is really in charge.



