6. Ian Bannen in The Hill - Well this was in no way a pleasure to even place the seventh spot in my ranking since I love all of these performances. Bannen merely gives another great performance of one man's own clever ways of survival as military prison guard while never losing his frustrations underneath.
Best Scene: The final confrontation.
5. Ian Hendry in The Hill - Hendry is also great in his uncompromising depiction of his character's sadism. What makes him standout though are the very human weaknesses he also brings to the character particularly in his portrayal of his character's attempt to be the proper military man.
Best Scene: The final confrontation as well.
4. Oskar Werner in A Spy Who Came In From The Cold - Werner actually does not have too much material but has to make a whole lot of it. Well he does so giving so much life and genuine passion to his character Fiedler that he makes it heartbreaking when it turns out that Fielder has been used all along.
Best Scene: Fiedler realizes he's been had.
3. Toshiro Mifune in Red Beard - The last great performance to be found from the collaboration between Akira Kurosawa and Toshiro Mifune. Mifune takes a rather unorthodox somewhat colder approach with the character of the wise mentor but succeeds wholly in earning the palatable emotions of every scene he is in, and effortlessly becoming a personification of compassion.
Best Scene: Red Beard goes to retrieve the patient from the Brothel.
2. Rod Steiger in Doctor Zhivago - Steiger has a great character and brilliantly realizes his complexity. He's a perfect smiling devil yet Steiger importantly shows that there still a bit of humanity to be found.
Best Scene: Komoravosky tells Zhivago what happened to Pasha.
1. Harry Andrews in The Hill - Andrews gives an outstanding performance as he carefully differs himself from the other two men playing guards by showing a man utterly devoted to the mindset of the military. Andrews never allows himself to be one note though using every moment to fully realize his character as man who tries to conduct things as a machine. It's hard enough ranking these six but becomes even harder having to consider Tom Courtenay's work in Doctor Zhivago as well, which only improved all the more on re-watch. I really hate to have to leave the Ians out of the top five. Now I do feel I could give any one of these men the win and they would be more than deserving. My choice goes to Courtenay as it's a performance that only gets better the more I think about it, plus if I want to cheat in my reasoning he was also great in King Rat.
Best Scene: Wilson deals with the potential riot.
- Tom Courtenay in Doctor Zhivago
- Harry Andrews in The Hill
- Robert Shaw in Battle of the Bulge
- Rod Steiger in Doctor Zhivago
- Richard Harris in Major Dundee
- Toshiro Mifune in Red Beard
- Oskar Werner in The Spy Who Came in From The Cold
- Ian Hendry in The Hill
- Ian Bannen in The Hill
- Tsutomu Yamazaki in Red Beard
- Ossie Davis in The Hill
- Gian Maria Volonté in For A Few Dollars More
- Charlton Heston in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Claude Rains in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Donald Pleasence in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Tom Courtenay in King Rat
- Roy Kinnear in The Hill
- Cyril Cusack in The Spy Who Came in From the Cold
- Michael Redgrave in The Hill
- Junzaburō Ban in A Fugitive From the Past
- Tom Courtenay in Operation Crossbow
- John Gielgud in Chimes at Midnight
- Hans Christian Blech in Battle of the Bulge
- James Mason in Lord Jim
- Edward G. Robinson in The Cincinnati Kid
- Trevor Howard in Von Ryan's Express
- Klaus Kinski in Doctor Zhivago
- Noel Coward in Bunny Lake is Missing
- Telly Savalas in Battle of the Bulge
- Alec Guinness in Doctor Zhivago
- Leo McKern in Help!
- Nigel Green in The Ipcress File
- Richard Attenborough in The Flight of the Phoenix
- Jack Watson in The Hill
- Terry Thomas in Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
- Roy Kinnear in Help!
- Peter van Eyck in The Spy Who Came in From the Cold
- Warren Oates in Major Dundee
- Burgess Meredith in In Harm's Way
- Hardy Kruger in The Flight of the Phoenix
- Alfred Lynch in The Hill
- Charles Bronson in Battle of the Bulge
- Van Heflin in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- James Coburn in Major Dundee
- Dean Martin in The Sons of Katie Elder
- Eijiro Tono in Samurai Assassin
- Alberto Sordi in Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
- Wallace Ford in A Patch of Blue
- Richard Harris in The Heroes of Telemark
- Christopher Lee in in Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
- Jose Ferrer in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Michael Hordern in The Spy Who Came in From the Cold
- Anthony Quayle in Operation Crossbow
- Ralph Richardson in Doctor Zhivago
- Peter Sellers in What's New Pussycat?
- Eli Wallach in Lord Jim
- Dirk Bogarde in Darling
- Keenan Wynn in The Great Race
- Ronald Fraser in The Flight of the Phoenix
- Victor Spinetti in Help!
- Peter Falk in The Great Race
- Sergio Fantoni in Von Ryan's Express
- Geoffrey Keen in Doctor Zhivago
- Vladimir Mensik in Loves a Blonde
- Woody Allen in What's New Pussycat?
- Michael Craig in Sandra
- Karl Malden in The Cincinnati Kid
- Denholm Elliot in King Rat
- Michael Redgrave in The Heroes of Telemark
- Robert Morley in Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
- James Donald in King Rat
- Ken Takakura in A Fugitive From the Past
- David McCallum in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Peter Finch in The Flight of the Phoenix
- Patrick Cargill in Help!
- John Mills in King Rat
- Jean-Claude Brialy in I Knew Her Well
- Marino Mase in Fists in the Pocket
- Sal Mineo in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Patrick Wymark in Repulsion
- Jack Weston in The Cincinnati Kid
- Joseph Schildkraut in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Paul Lukas in Lord Jim
- Arthur O'Connell in The Great Race
- Telly Savalas in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Norman Bird in The Hill
- Ben Johnson in Major Dundee
- Donald Sutherland in Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
- Ed Wynn in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Jaime Sanchez in The Pawnbroker
- Klaus Kinski in For A Few Dollars More
- Bernard Lee in The Spy Who Came in From the Cold
- Derek Jacobi in Othello
- Ernest Borgnine in The Flight of the Phoenix
- Richard Haydn in The Sound of Music
- Mario Adorf in I Knew Her Well
- Williams Daniels in A Thousand Clowns
- Mario Brega in For A Few Dollars More
- Brandon De Wilde in In Harm's Way
- Henry Fonda in Battle of the Bulge
- Dennis Hopper in The Sons of Katie Elder
- Michael Gough in Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
- Desmond Llewelyn in Thunderball
- Jeremy Kemp in Operation Crossbow
- Finlay Currie in Bunny Lake is Missing
- Peter Cushing in Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
- Laurence Harvey in Darling
- Trevor Howard in Operation Crossbow
- Robert Ryan in Battle of the Bulge
- Guy Doleman in The Ipcress File
- Dana Andrews in Battle of the Bulge
- Jim Hutton in Major Dundee
- Kirk Douglas in In Harm's Way
- Harry Andrews in The Agony and the Ecstasy
- Christopher Plummer in Inside Daisy Clover
- Adolfi Celi in Thunderball
- Gene Saks in A Thousand Clowns
- James Gregory in The Sons of Katie Elder
- Tom Tryon in In Harm's Way
- James Fox in Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
- Bernard Lee in Thunderball
- Rip Torn in The Cincinnati Kid
- Hardy Kruger in Lord Jim
- Maurice Dallimore in The Collector
- Martin Landau in The Greatest Story Ever Told
- Charles Bronson in The Sandpiper
- Michael Anderson Jr. in Major Dundee
- Martin Balsam in A Thousand Clowns
- Michael Dunn in Ship of Fools
- George Segal in Ship of Fools
- Robert Redford in Inside Daisy Clover
- Lee Marvin in Ship of Fools
- Ian Bannen in Flight of the Phoenix
- Brock Peters in The Pawnbroker
- José Ferrer in Ship of Fools
- Barry Gordon in A Thousand Clowns
17 comments:
I am very happy Courtenay won I think you made the right decision Louis =D.
Burt Lancaster - Sweet Smell Of Success
Lee J Cobb - 12 Angry Men
Jack Hawkins - Bridge On The River Kwai
Ralph Meeker - Paths Of Glory
Bengt Ekerot - The Seventh Seal
Lee J. Cobb, 12 Angry Men
Joseph Sweeney, 12 Angry Men
Bengt Ekerot, The Seventh Seal
George Macready, Paths of Glory
Lee J. Cobb, Three Faces of Eve
Louis even though these aren't actors films I highly recommend you watch some of these films from 1957 that are well, quite fun lol.
Night Of The Demon
The Incredible Shrinking Man
Shit my original predictions were right!!!! Gahhh why did I switch...
I actually think, that the most powerful scene in Doctor Zhivago is in fact the scene when Steiger tells Sharif that Courtenay is dead, because it is a massive WHAT moment that I didnt see coming.
Gunnar Bjornstrand in The Seventh Seal (YOU MUST REVIEW HIM DAMMIT)
Bengt Ekerot in The Seventh Seal
You really don't need anyone other than those two.
Louis: Your ratings & thoughts on Courtenay in King Rat.
Jack Hawkins in Bridge of the River Kwai
Ralph Meeker in Paths of Glory
Kerot & Bjornstrand in The Seventh Seal
Lee J. Cobb in 12 Angry Men
I've seen The Imitation Game & Selma,
Cumberbatch is a 4.5, but might get a 5 on rewatch and Oyelowo is a 5.
I can basically promise you, Louis, Bjornstand is RGHT up your alley.
I know this is very off-topic, but is there someone here who likes How I Met Your Mother? I've just finished the whole series and I think it's great, so funny sometimes and so moving at others. The actors are great, particularly Alyson Hannigan is hilarious, but my two favorites are easily Cobie Smulders, who's terrific, and Neil Patrick Harris, simply amazing, and I think that they're both the funniest and the most affecting at times.
Gunnar Björnstrand - The Seventh Seal
Gunnar Björnstrand - Wild Strawberries
Maurice Chevalier - Love in the Afternoon
Lee J. Cobb - 12 Angry Men
Burt Lancaster - Sweet Smell of Success
Sidney Poitier - Edge of the City
Gunnar Bjornstrand in The Seventh Seal
Bengt Ekerot in The Seventh Seal
Jack Hawkins in The Bridge on the River Kwai
Lee J. Cobb in 12 Angry Men
Louis, I'd love you to review a couple of Angry Men, you know, like 7 Psychopaths.
Apart from that:
Burt Lancaster - Sweet Smell of Success
American Sniper Ratings:
Cooper - 4.5 (leaning towards a 5)
Miller - 3.5
Ratings and thoughts on Ferrer in Ship of Fools?
Luke:
Courtenay - 4.5(Courtenay has yet to disappoint me and once again gives a good performance as the technical moral center of the film, but the moral center no one likes. Courtenay's very moving though showing the passion of his character that stays even as he wains as a man both due to physical degradations and the fact that no one seems to care but him. My favorite scene of is his sad realization that many of those in the high command have been cheating the troops)
Robert:
Ferrer - 1(A terrible performance as Ferrer seems to suggest a true Nazi was a guy who made the most absurd gestures possible not only in every facial gesture, but just every movement. Someone he makes playing ping pong seemed forced here. It's an outstandingly bad performance that Ferrer delivers here as there is not a scene where he does not stand out in a bad way, and the thing is there's only two people really giving good performances in this film and they don't share many scenes with Ferrer. I guess you can say one thing positive it does make you notice that the bland performances of much of the cast do come off at least a little better when Ferrer's around)
Can you give thoughts and ratings on Garner and Sandler in Men, Women, and Children? I'm sorry to bring up performances you hate again, but I'm curious.
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