Saturday, 24 September 2011

Best Supporting Actor 1965: Tom Courtenay in Doctor Zhivago

Tom Courtenay received his first Oscar nomination for portraying Pasha Antipov/"Strelnikov" in Doctor Zhivago.

Doctor Zhivago depicts the Russian Revolution.

Tom Courtenay plays Pasha who at the beginning of the film is an idealistic revolutionary encouraging it through peaceful demonstration. He is also the sort of fiancee of Lara (Julie Christie). In his first scene Courtenay has the right honest earnestness in showing Pasha's belief in the Revolution, as well as in seeking his relationship with Lara. Courtenay has a great deal of genuine warmness and love he shows in this scene, which he appropriately establishes to rid out of Pasha later.

After his peaceful demonstration is ended by government troops violently Courtenay shows a changed Pasha when he meets Lara afterward injured from the attack. Courtenay is effective because he does not immediately show a completely different man yet. Courtenay shows that his earnestness has mostly been turned to anger, but that there still is a little of it left, and also that this anger is partially an instinctual reaction from the trauma of the attack.

In later scene for example when he runs into Laura who is going to attempts to kill Komarovsky (Rod Steiger). When he first runs into her there is still some of that love and earnestness left in him, so much that she helps her away after her attempt. Courtenay shows Pasha's old love for Lara is reduced greatly though by understanding that she had an affair with Komarovsky. In his silent scenes afterward there is coldness in the way he looks at her, only marrying her because of the love he once felt that has drifted very much away from him.

Except for a brief moment during World War I, he still shows the same earnestness of old when he leads the troops into battle. Afterward though Pasha shows up once more no longer Pasha, but calling himself Strelnikov. Courtenay is amazing in his single final scene where he shows how cold of a man Pasha has turned into. It works well because Courtenay indicated this change all the way through his performance beforehand, and what happened in the war is the appropriate cause for his final change into Strelnikov.

Courtenay is absolutely chilling in this final scene, and it is made especially effective because of the difference from the beginning to this scene. There is no warmness left in Courtenay's performance. There is only a hallow shell of a man, with only his violent mission left for himself. Courtenay is amazing here because he truly becomes a man who has loss any indication of his old self really, he shows there is nothing left in Pasha except for his hatred. His final scene fully realizes his whole portrait of the Pasha's fall, which Courtenay brilliantly worked toward throughout the entire performance.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

He would be my choice.

dshultz said...

I'd give him 5, but I think he's your winner anyways, so everyone's happy!

dshultz said...

Unless it turns out he's not.

RatedRStar said...

Easy win I think =D Courtenay is always a great performer =D

Anonymous said...

Such a brilliant performance, the best of the film in my opinion, I hope he wins!!! What did you think or Sharif, Christie, Chaplin and Steiger?

Louis Morgan said...

Sharif, and Christie are both extremely good, and would have been deserving of both nominations and wins. Steiger's performance is amazing, my favorite in the film, and perhaps my favorite supporting performance of the year. Chaplin is good but to a far lesser extent.

Groggy Dundee said...

Amazing how memorable Courtney is with such little screen time. He steals the movie with only Rod Steiger threatening to take it from him. "The personal life is dead in Russia - history has killed it."

RatedRStar said...

I think Courtenays performance gets stronger and stronger with every repeated viewing, he was robbed of that Oscar and certainly would have been close to beating Balsam in terms of votes.

Anonymous said...

The Lіeutenаnt swοre than in memory of the blended сonѕume,
it wоuld endlesslу bе iԁentifіed in the
аrmу aѕ a 'cock's tail'. Prepare the region where exactly you are going to be engaging in the colorng. In 1915 the wormwood was taken out and the liqueur diluted to its recent toughness.
Feel free to surf my web-site :: pizza stone pampered chef instructions

Anonymous said...

Wow, this piece of writing is pleasant, my younger sister is analyzing
these things, thus I am going to tell her.

Take a look at my web-site; antique brass bathroom faucets

Anonymous said...

Hello there! This article could not be ωrittеn much better!
Loоking аt this article remindѕ me
of my previоus roommаte! Hе always kept talκing
about thiѕ. I'll send this article to him. Pretty sure he'll
haѵе a very good read. Thanks for ѕharing!


Also vіѕit my webpage; Chemietoilette

Anonymous said...

Without аny watеring the гοots οf a tree it
is futilе tο antісiρatе it to mаturе anԁ givе us luscіouѕ fгuіts,
ѵіbrant bouquets etc. You might bе
аblе to attаin wiѕhеԁ-for regard anԁ reputation ωith aѕѕist of your
energy and bravеness. The ωаll panels cаn bе brought in hallwayѕ, dοorways, anԁ ѕhining stгaight as a dance ground.


Loоk intо mу blοg post :: how to clean a pizza stone pampered chef

Unknown said...

I guess I'm in the minority here. I don't get what so many people see in Tom Courtney's performance as the communist captain. To me, he looks and acts like a zombie. He has this annoying permanent frown and bleary, glazed over eyes. I don't know if it's either the performance or the character he plays that repulses me but he just weirds me out.