Were Tony Scott still with us, had he not taken his own life in August, the time would still be right for a retrospective of his work.
While the younger Scott was a less influential filmmaker than his brother Ridley, he left a strong imprint on the action and crime genres with megahits such as "Top Gun" and the critically-acclaimed, Quentin Tarantino-scripted "True Romance." And he never really quite got his due.
This Friday and Saturday, 92YTribeca pays tribute to the late director with "The Great Scott," a series featuring three of his films, showing with select companion pieces: avant-garde shorts and the 1946 B noir "So Dark the Night."
Here's the schedule:
Friday
7 p.m.
Feature: "Crimson Tide"; Short: "Night Music"
Set onboard a nuclear sub, the tense "Crimson Tide" features a standoff between its hard-boiled captain played by Gene Hackman and its second-in-command, embodied by Scott's favorite star Denzel Washington. It's a gripping test of wills, a classic morality play and a fine reminder that the director offered more than one-note pizzazz. "Night Music" is a short from experimental master Stan Brakhage.
9:30 p.m.
Feature: "Top Gun"; Short: "Schwechater"
"Top Gun" is Scott's biggest hit and one of the iconic Hollywood movies. It virtually introduced the jingoistic, Michael Bay-style of sleek, muscular filmmaking, turned Tom Cruise into a full-on sensation and produced endless amusement for fans of blatant homoeroticism. 92YTribeca describes "Schwechater" as " a commissioned and subsequently radically subverted television advertisement for beer."
Saturday
6 p.m.
Feature: "So Dark the Night"
This 1946 noir from Joseph H. Lewis is a France-set detective story that 92YTribeca deems "a ghostly whodunit maze" prefiguring many of the themes in Scott's own work.
7:45 p.m.
Feature: "Déjà Vu"; Short: "The Wold Shadow"
A time-warp love story/investigative thriller, "Déjà Vu" is one of Scott's best movies. Starring Washington, it's a compelling mystery and a tender romance, a film about the blurry line between past and present that's centered on intricate emotions. You can continue your Brakhage education with "The Wold Shadow."
If you go: The Great Scott: The Films of Tony Scott is at 92YTribeca Friday and Saturday. $12 for each screening. 200 Hudson St., 212-601-1000
Heuermann admits to being Gilgo serial killer ... Victims' families react to guilty plea ... Suffolk DA promises families closure ... Building the LIE
Heuermann admits to being Gilgo serial killer ... Victims' families react to guilty plea ... Suffolk DA promises families closure ... Building the LIE



