Alan Bates did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Andrew Shaw in In Celebration.
In Celebration is a more than fine entry into the ennui-filled-reunion genre this time about a group of brothers coming home to celebrate their parent's 40th wedding anniversary.
Alan Bates plays the character quite needed for any such film in this particular genre. The man who intends to prod and pry at the ceremony, needed to create the conflict. Bates's performance is interesting in that there is almost a self-awareness of this he brings within the character. His whole physical manner has this certain excessive ease of a man rejecting the formality of a reunion from the outset. This idea could seem forced however this approach is essential in creating the nature of Andrew as a character. Bates appears first in the film as he hitches a ride with the youngest living brother, Colin (James Bolam), and makes a statement of self-deprecation proclaiming "he is a tramp" to which Colin reacts with what is essentially a knowing bit of exasperation. This is as something Colin has seen before, and Bates embodies a man who definitely is not happy with life. Bates though doesn't make this an overt depression with his portrayal of Andrew but rather as this rejection of normalcy. Bates captures in the very behavior this purposeful, though also honest in its own way, manner of a man who just won't be quite proper. Bates finds this fine line within this as he establishes from the outset that Andrew isn't quite an exhibitionist with his behavior, but he's not too far off.
Brian Cox did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Steven Shaw in In Celebration.
The very talented Brian Cox has had a long successful career, though he has a manged to do this, honestly to do this day, with a rather low profile. Why this is exactly, somewhat alludes me as his talent is ever present, however it perhaps caused by the way he is often in good films somehow forgotten by time. A much younger Cox has a rather challenging role here as that of almost what one might describe as the "other brother". His Steven is the brother who lives nearest to his parent's old home, and makes his career as a teacher, and as a not at all successful writer. Cox's Steven actually arrives first to the family home, and Cox's performance establishes a man who is nearly the polar opposite of Andrew. Cox keeps his externalized expressions particularly subdued, and speaks in rather unconfrontational tones. Cox establishes Steven as a man who in no way wishes to make a spectacle of himself, unlike Andrew, though this does not mean he isn't as well troubled. Cox's whole demeanor though stands in sharp and effective contrast as the passive brother who treats this reunion less as something that requires an "attack" but rather is an earnest responsibility of a dutiful son.
Bill Owen did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Mr. Shaw in In Celebration.
Bill Owen plays the role of the patriarch of the Shaw family, who is one half the titular celebration. The celebration being for his forty years of marriage while also nearing another milestone of nearly 50 years of being a coal miner with only one year left before his retirement. Owen's performance is wonderful in how he distinctly crafts it separately from the work of Cox and Bates. In that there is not a hint of dishonesty in his Mr. Shaw although technically speaking he too isn't quite as he seems. Owen though rather is wholly genuine in his presentation of the man as he greets each of his sons as he arrives at his home. This is with a most earnest smile, and true warmth as greets every one of them. Owen skewers a basic sentiment within the part at the same time though. It isn't though with a hidden motivation that defines the man, but rather presents a more straight forward nature of the man. A man who has worked quite literally within the earth, and this revealed in his way towards life and family. Mr. Shaw too isn't all that he seems from a first look, however in a very different way from how Bates and Cox present his two sons.
Each character does have more to say with every greeting as we hear the conversations before and after the celebration, we never witness the celebration itself. These conversations dig up the truths of the family's past, which sadly is not a simple one. Each actor is terrific though in realizing how each man broaches this material. Bates one might say is the simplest, though also requires the most bravado on his part. Bates again physically embodies the role playing nearly as a drunkard who just won't bare formalities fully. This naturally paints the man as we learn he went from being a lawyer to a wannabe artist, and Bates conveys this decision with this manner. This is opposed to Cox who is so wonderfully quiet in the part, and his role is largely reactionary. His reactions though are what reveal every truth of the character, and the reserve he finds in the role is marvelous. Owen though makes the most honest man of them all though, even with the secrets, of course these secrets are not something he hides, but rather something he wears. Owen bears them as just pains of life deep within his eyes, but never an overt constant, though certainly still a constant. Owen shows a man who has had a harder life than his sons who doesn't dwell, but also can't forget.
Each performer layers the men so well in part in the interaction with who they are playing against. Bates again is the most obvious in this approach, such as when he first greets his mother with a bright face, and eager hello. Bates finds this proper combination of a honesty in his warmth, but also something bent within it. There's a troubling thing of any moment of eagerness in Bates, as goes a bit big, though I write this with praise rather than criticism. Bates lays the act on thickly too thickly that it is less an act, but rather a desperate need in a way. Bates plays it with venom, but not entirely so. Not a single moment is that of a true callousness as in his eyes there is always a certain sense of the family dynamic, that isn't defined by hate. There is also rather just the intensity of the emotion, even as he so often jokes around, that portrays a man nearly made grotesque in his attempt to laugh through the past and his current predicament. Bates makes the dishonesty part of the act of a man who must put on the facade of a false excitement, but it is never that simple. Bates shows instead a man still struggling with all himself, and this "performance" of Andrew's is his coping method.
Cox may deliver the most poignant performance in the capturing something very unique onscreen, and something that feels painfully honest. This is of course in such a low key approach though of the man who watches, and observes. Cox's work though is never of just the observer though as he's still part of this family. Cox makes so real the man's way of dealing with such a reunion which is through his own distant way. Again distant in not a cold way, which is what I love what he does here. He looks, and he smiles at his mother and father. When he does this it is wholly with love that small little smirk of his. His also will often feature that warmth of a loving son. That is not all he conveys though as even dealing with the confrontational Andrew Cox delivers the quiet disappointed stare from Steven that say more than a hundred words of hatred could. Cox in his reactions brings the weight of the family and his own hardship. There is a sadness in them, a sadness that only fully reveals itself in moments of complete solemnity so naturally realizing Steven as a man who lives in his troubles only at the most private point, which also keeps him as such an understated figure within his own family.
Back to Owen though who plays a man who really wouldn't know how to create a facade or to only observe. Owen shows a man who made by his difficult experiences but of course never destroyed by them. Owen delivers a real exuberance in his attitude towards life in moments, and showing his love at the right moments. There are darts of darkness, his own secret depression, but the key is that Owen doesn't play this as something he is hiding deep within. It is rather just part of who he is but never does define Mr. Shaw. He wears as a texture more than anything in his performance that will in a moment just linger a little more, or turn a certain line in his delivery that paints some old anxieties or troubles. This troubles such as the death of one of his sons, and the nature of his wife that came from a higher class family than his own. Owen's work is great by making essentially this flow of emotion of a man who has no real wish to dwell on the past, but the past still dwells with in him. Owen in the moment brings the most profound moments of truth, and the most vulnerable moments. This as also the briefest moments though in his work, in just a quick flash of anger, or heartbreak, that never change the man, but are always part of him.
Of course the real drama comes in the mix of these personalities coming together, particularly when the main conflicts of the death of their brother, and the realization that their mother purposefully raised her sons with a certain shame for their father's way of life and a requirement to live within a certain tradition. It is a fantastic scene for all three when this comes to a head by just wholly each grasps their parts, and how the emotion so genuine in all three of them, as well as from Bolam as Colin the most straight forward brother in terms of the presentation of his emotions. Bates makes Andrew a proper mess of a man as any facade of the "showman" hiding his real nature comes out in a more direct hatred towards the ways of his mother. There is only the hints of his phony cheeriness now revealing a man practically writhing in pain. This is against Cox and Owen who are both heartbreaking as two men directly relating to what Andrew is saying. Owen and Cox's reaction is that of a quiet yet devastated resignation in Steven and Mr. Shaw to what life they've had, as Andrew pours salt in the wound. I especially love the power of Owen's work as his is of man fighting hard not to give into this pain, as his eye lids seem to nearly deflect Andrew bringing the worst out into the open. Each in the film's end though shows almost the healthier state of Steven and Mr. Shaw in their way of embracing their existence against Andrew's way of attacking it. As we see Owen and Cox create such tender exchange in their parting of a father and son finding a true comfort, against Andrew once again returning to his ugly "playacting" as the sons depart. Bates, Cox and Owen each deliver a wonderful performance that so vividly depicts each man both in terms of their current state, their past, and how that defines who they are.
75 comments:
Louis: Your top 20 films where the city is a character (specific location).
Your rating for Bolam.
I imagine myself looking like Alan Bates when I am older lol.
Michael: Your ratings and thoughts on Bruce Dern in Smile and Nicol Williamson in The Wilby Conspiracy.
Louis: Your top ten favourite performances in sports films.
Louis: Your ratings and thoughts on The Hindenburg cast.
Louis: Is The Hindenburg film as bad as everyone claims it is, and what you reckon to the special effects?
What is everybodys favorite ever song? maybe one that they can listen to forever or that means something to them perhaps.
RatedRStar: I'm not sure I have a favourite ever song, in the same way I can't think of a favourite ever film. I will say, however, that a track I'll listen to whenever I get the chance is, strangely enough, "Sweet Child O'Mine". Perhaps its because I like the band and vocals, or perhaps its because I've been very moved whenever its been used in movies IE The Wrestler and Captain Fantastic. Either way, its a special song for me and one I'd happily recite.
RatedRStar: That's a tough question, Bohemian Rhapsody would probably be mine even if it's a really obvious one.
RatedRStar: Quite a few actually.
'Right Here Waiting' by Richard Marx (because... reasons xD)
'Bohemian Rhapsody' and 'The Show Must Go On' by Queen
'Numb' by Linkin Park
'Don't Stop Believin' by Journey
RatedRStar: I don't think it's possible for me to just choose one song. Maybe "Beyond The Realms of Death" by Judas Priest or "Platform Moon" - Jupiter One since I've listened to them for years now and always come back to those.
Louis: With A Bullet For The General, I think it would be best to place it in 1966. I've seen enough sources saying 7th December, so I'd give it the benefit of the doubt.
RatedRStar: "Come as You Are" by Nirvana and "Sultans of Swing" by Dire Straits
Louis: Your Top 10 Underrated Best Picture Winners?
RatedRStar: Gun-to-my-head, Misery Business by Paramore.
Guys, Do you have any suggestions for 2013, if you disagree with any of mine for Supporting, let me know.
2013 Lead
Christian Bale - Out Of The Furnace
Christoph Waltz - The Zero Theorem
Alden Ehrenreich - Beautiful Creatures
Masaharu Fukuyama - Like Father, Like Son
Toni Servillo - The Great Beauty
Domhnall Gleeson - About Time
Ethan Hawke - Before Midnight
Sol Kyung-Gu - Hope
Terence Stamp - Song For Marion
Irrfan Khan - The Lunchbox
2013 Supporting
Ed Harris - Snowpiercer
Bill Nighy - About Time
Colm Meaney - Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa
Nawazuddin Siddiqui - The Lunchbox
John Gallagher Jr. - Short Term 12
Alt. John Hurt - Only Lovers Left Alive
Matthew Goode - Stoker
Will Poulter - We're The Millers
Sam Rockwell - The Way Way Back
Stellan Skarsgard - Nymphomaniac
And LaKeith Stanfield - Short Term 12
Strongly support Nighy and Goode. Rockwell hasn’t stuck with me that much in particular, and I doubt Louis will like Nymphomaniac. Gallagher Jr. and Hurt are good but I wouldn’t say they’re the highlights of their respective films. The Lunchbox looks really interesting.
Like: Stanfield is definitely more of a standout.
Calvin: Thanks. I'm putting Harris down as a bonus instead.
I had a somewhat hard time leaving out Hiddleston, Firth and Fiennes from Lead but I'm happy enough with what I've chosen.
Stanfield should be a definite.
(Also, I advocate for Jeremy Irons in Beautiful Creatures, but that's just me.)
And Jim Broadbent in Le Weekend.
*Week-End
Of that 2013 Lead cohort I’d say Stamp and Hawke have a chance to get 5’s.
Calvin: I could see Fukuyama and maybe Kyung-Gu get 5s as well along with Bale and Waltz going up.
Bryan L: I'd say The Best Years of Our Lives is a pretty underrated Best Picture winner. Yeah, It's a Wonderful Life is a masterpiece but BYOOL is also one.
I guess I'll go
1. Richard Dreyfuss
2. Alan Bates
3. Nicol Williamson
4. Ugo Tognazzi
5. Bruce Dern
Still really wish I could find a version of My Friends with English subs.
Luke:
Williamson - 4.5 (Williamson does an excellent job giving a slightly different approach to this sort of villain, he never seems like an over the top bigot nor does he come off as a self-appointed crusader for the white race. Rather, he always presents himself as a figure who is simply serving his own practical needs, which makes for a consistently compelling antagonist. I should also note he's got a couple of great quips as well.)
Dern - 4 (Has a difficult job since his character is meant to be fairly shallow, but of course Dern does an admirable job of finding depth within this idea. In the scenes where he is judging he shows an honest investment in the sort of silly process, as well as a genuine if misguided care in the scenes with his friend. Also, he definitely wins points for his silent introspective moments at the end.)
Also for 2013, Joaquin Phoenix in The Immigrant.
Also, I saw The Sisters Brothers today. It's definitely a little messy, and I'm still mulling over the social awareness of a certain scene, but there's still a lot to like particularly in the second half.
Reilly: 5
Phoenix: 4.5
Gyllenhaal: 3
Ahmed: 3.5
Fukuyama for Like Father Like Son and Kyung-Gu for Hope should be fives. I also recommend Bale, Ehrenreich & Waltz for a five line-up(although it should be 10) I would also like to see Hurt reviewed for supporting.
Anonymous: I've heard the same about the film too, even if It's A Wonderful Life has been way more remembered (deservedly so, I'd add).
Luke: I too, want to see Louis thinks of Poulter in We're the Millers, especially after Detroit haha (which was released after, but you know what I mean).
Luke: I would actually oppose a Poulter review for the supporting line up. I saw it when it first came out and i found it a lesser comedic performance.
Bryan L: Both deserve to be equally remembered.
I would give Poulter a 3.5, a funny performance but nothing beyond that.
The lineup I have now is:
Nighy
Meaney
Siddiqui
Goode
Stanfield
Bonus: Harris
Michael: I recall Louis saying he needed to re-watch Phoenix in The Immigrant but had no plans to review him.
Lastly, any suggestions for 2014. Once again, let me know if you disagree.
2014 Lead
Tom Hardy - The Drop
Jeremy Renner - Kill The Messenger
Tom Cruise - Edge Of Tomorrow
Oscar Isaac - A Most Violent Year
Jesse Eisenberg - The Double
Viggo Mortensen - Jauja
Shahid Kapoor - Haider
Dan Stevens - The Guest
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau - A Second Chance
Ethan Hawke - Predestination
Alt. Antoine-Olivier Pilon - Mommy (Has anyone seen it and is he any good)
Left out O'Connell because I feel he's very good with a limited character in '71 and Mikkelsen will probably get a 4 for The Salvation.
2014 Supporting
John Cusack - Maps to the Stars
Taika Waititi - What We Do In the Shadows
JoaquÃn CoisÃn - The Perfect Dictatorship
Sam Claflin - The Riot Club
Sam Shepard/Don Johnson - Cold In July
Alt. Choi Min-Sik - Lucy
Jeffrey Dean Morgan - The Salvation
Louis: Your thoughts on the production design of Double Indemnity and Sunset Boulevard.
Louis: If you plan on reviewing Simon Pegg in Hot Fuzz and The World's End, could you review them simultaneously with Shaun Of The Dead instead of separately at the expense of others.
Guys, I've been making lineup spreadsheets lately like RatedRStar's been doing for awhile and I'm currently working on 2006. What do you think of Hugh Jackman in The Fountain and Song Kang-Ho in The Host. I've got Levitt, Jones, Cohen, Whishaw and Mikkelsen (After The Wedding).
And what do you think of Vin Diesel in Find Me Guilty.
Apparently Venom is 92 minutes long and has a 15 minute credit sequence from what I have heard.
Luke: I'd want to see what Louis thinks of Jackman in The Fountain and Crowe in Noah, but I could live without a review for them honestly.
Song > Jackman.
Bryan: I think Crowe's solid enough in Noah.
Calvin: You must've really hated Jackman. How good is Kang-Ho.
I've read that Diesel's quite great in Find Me Guilty. Not a huge surprise when you're being directed by Lumet.
Louis: Seen any new releases in the past 2/3 weeks.
Calvin: Nevermind about Kang-Ho, You said sometime ago he would get a 3.5 or a 4.
My Lineup is:
Levitt
Jones
Diesel
Whishaw
Mikkelsen
Bonus: Cohen (Ã la Will Ferrell in Anchorman)
Luke: I agree. It's definitely a role that plays to Crowes strengths, and I'd give him a strong 4 for Noah.
Also, call me crazy, but do you think there's a chance he watches Crank, for Jason Statham? Just for laughs.
Bryan L: I don't necessarily care much for The Water Diviner but he was very good (4) in that too.
Bryan: Perhaps, The RT scores for both are decent.
Song Kang-Ho in The Host is a good performance, although not worthy of a review. Thirst is a must for him.
Charles: Agreed.
I actually re-watched The Host recently and Song definitely grew on me a lot more. I'd say about a 4.5 for now.
I didn't mind Jackman, probably a weak 3.5 for me, I just found the film to be yet another example of the Aronofsky obnoxious egotism I've grown to hate.
Michael McCarthy: You didn't like A Simple Favour, how come?
Robert McFarlane: Paramore are a good band lol haha, although they do have a tendency to be quite a safe band (not to an extent like Nickelback though)
RatedRStar: Is Gael Garcia Bernal better in Bad Education or The Motorcycle Diaries.
Daniel: The characters in the film are very much what you'd expect from a Paul Feig comedy, which immediately eliminated any actual tension and suspense building. It was like they took characters from a broad comedy and threw them into a psychological thriller, which can potentially work if you have a STRICTLY consistent tone (like Two Hands for example) but this really does bounce back and forth. Also, the incest subplot could have been totally done away with, and if you have something as taboo as incest in your story it has to be crucially important to the story you're telling or else it just comes off as fetishizing.
Anonymous:
1. Amadeus
2. Back to the Future
3. It's a Wonderful Life
4. In Bruges
5. L.A. Confidential
6. Blue Velvet
7. Zodiac
8. Chinatown
9. The Third Man
10. On the Waterfront
11. All The President's Men
12. Yojimbo
13. The Quiet Man
14. Hot Fuzz
15. Mulholland Drive
16. Seven
17. High and Low
18. Dog Day Afternoon
19. Rocky
20. The Lives of Others
Luke:
4
Scott - 3.5(It's fine work from Scott just bringing some sort of gravitas to the proceedings. Although the drama is weakly conceived as written Scott does everything in his power to sell his side of it, and though he can't save the film, he at least accomplishes something with his own work.)
Bancroft - 4(She's a delight as usual, and is just a bit of needed fun. It is very much the comedic older lady so common in the 70's disaster films, but Bancroft does the trope rather well.)
Atherton - 3.5(Again the writing really sinks his character as they don't create a real drive within the plot that always feels like it meanders despite the impending doom. Atherton to his credit though also at least sells the emotional stakes from his work, even if it is missing in the writing.)
Everyone else is fine but all the roles are underwritten.
Well my comment about Phoenix in the Immigrant came several years ago before I started the bonus rounds. Trust me I will review Phoenix at the very least over Will Poulter in "We're The Millers". Actually, let me re-word that, trust me I will review Phoenix in the Immigrant.
And yes, I can do all of Pegg's reviews in one.
RatedRStar:
I thought it was more a wasted opportunity than a truly awful film. A film one could potentially remake I'd say. As there is a potentially fascinating plot in the idea of looking for a saboteur, and the lead investigator having a crisis of conscience. Unfortunately this is so weakly written nothing really comes from it. The idea also of the sort of the "Cabaret" period also is naturally compelling in my mind, but this to is wasted. It isn't a terrible film, but it isn't good either.
The effects, which are my win by default (the only other choice is to reward Jaws for the extremely sparingly used Bruce) go from decent to slightly underwhelming. Some of the playing with the interior work of creating the air ship is where it shines, but some of the outward green screen work is decidedly less impressive.
Bryan:
1. The Last Emperor
2. The Best Years of Our Lives
3. Chariots of Fire
4. The Lost Weekend
5. Marty
6. A Man For All Seasons
7. In the Heat of the Night
8. Ordinary People
9. Platoon
10. Tom Jones
Note: I don't consider films like Braveheart, Rocky, or Gladiator underrated as they are beloved by the general populace/casual film goers, it is "cinefiles" who typically bash them, however even that is not universal. Side note that reminds me of one of the best lines from the Big Sick, regarding Forest Gump.
Tahmeed:
1. Joe Pesci - Raging Bull
2. Robert De Niro - Raging Bull
3. Paul Newman - The Hustler
4. Sylvester Stallone - Creed
5. Carl Weathers - Rocky
6. Kirk Douglas - Champion
7. Channing Tatum - Foxcatcher
8. Jackie Gleason - The Hustler
9. Michael B. Jordan - Creed
10. George C. Scott - The Hustler
Anonymous:
Double Indemnity's production design is very low key, in fact it is a representation of the direct period. With that said, there is a definite artistry in every choice to reinforce the film's tone, particularly in the spacious Dietrichson house, or even the grocery store that is never inviting, but rather alienating at every point.
Hans Drier's however gets to be a bit expressive in his work in Sunset Boulevard. Again it is strong work in terms of the "modern sets" that have the right type of vibrancy in detail, whether it be Joe's beaten down "rental room" or even the executive's office. It is never boring even when basic. Of course what I'm waiting to talk about is Desmond's mansion which is brilliantly done in a fantastic yet grotesque representation of the fading starlet. As it is both vast and adorned, like the sets she use to live on, yet dead and hollow in that extravagance.
Louis: Your thoughts on Cedric Gibbons and Edith Head as production and costume designers, respectively.
Louis: Do you think Leonardo Dicaprio and Andrew Garfield would be a great fit for Jesse James and Robert Ford for a 2010s TAOJJBTRF? With perhaps David Lowery as director?
Sorry if that abbreviation looks terrible, not to mention incorrect lol
Luke: I dont actually think Bernal is worth a review really in either role having eventually seen Bad Education, his work in Motorcycle Diaries I just thought was dull though.
Louis: your top 10 peter stormare acting moments
Louis: Your top 10 Sissy Spacek acting moments?
Luke: He is good in Bad Education but I dont think he will be as good as the majority of review choices.
1. Richard Dreyfuss
2. Alan Bates
3. Nicol Williamson
4. Ugo Tognazzi
5. Bruce Dern
So Ansel Elgort has been cast as Tony in the West Side Story remake...I’m not gonna be okay for a while.
Charles:
1. Saying goodbye - Badlands
2. Prom - Carrie
3. After the murder - Badlands
4. First Performance - Coal Miner's Daughter
5. The fight - In the Bedroom
6. Unusual crucifixion - Carrie
7. After sex - Badlands
8. Interview - Coal Miner's Daughter
9. Meeting him - Badlands
10. Wedding Night - Coal Miner's Daughter
1. Dreyfuss
2. Bates
3. Williamson
4. Tognazzi
5. Dern
RatedRStar: Did you see the leaked footage for the Harry Potter RPG.
Great BCS episode again. Okay, maybe still not as much Nacho as I’d have liked but boy were Seehorn and especially Odenkirk downright brilliant.
Although Esposito and Mando’s moment was terrific, I’m really enjoying the Lalo stuff and the reveal.
Louis: Your top 20 best shot films of the 70's.
Calvin:
Agreed fantastic episode, with amazing performances from Odenkirk and Seehorn. Loved all of it honestly, though I do think they missed an opportunity for an even greater ending if they had stopped after the fight, though where the episode ended was also quite great.
Anonymous:
Cedric Gibbons's work in a way nearly becomes overwhelming with the sheer prolific nature of it, common in the studio system. Not every bit of art direction therefore was masterful, though all of it with more than a little grandeur, but quite a lot of it was. Unforgettable work whether that be the fantasy of of Wizard of the Oz, the gothic style of Gaslight, the recreations of Lust for Life, bare period work like Julius Caesar, grandeur of Marie Antoinette, or even just a blunt reality of Blackboard Jungle. The work was typically dynamic, and varied with most of it successful, with so many achieving such heights to become iconic sets within all of cinema.
Edith Head's extremely prolific work helped to define essentially cinematic, or perhaps general cultural, glamor for a time. Although her work is perhaps best known for sort of either the grand evening gown, or sort of the sleek dress wear that adorned so many actresses from the period, her work was more varied. As with so many craftspeople there is always the extent in which a director knew how to utilize a talent, and her best work is typically in great films. Great films where the character becomes evident in part through the costuming to which her work was an essential facet, where the major aim was that rather than glamor such in her work in Sunset Blvd. and The Heiress. Now given how prolific her output was, not every costume was unforgettable but the amount that were leave an everlasting impression on film.
Bryan:
Uh DiCaprio maybe, only because Pitt technically surprised me in the role, and he technically has the right presence for it. Lowery also makes sense. Garfield, maybe, though it would be more of stretch, where Affleck has a better natural "misfit" quality to him that was so perfect for Ford.
Anonymous:
1. Highway massacre - Fargo
2. Reacting to the soap opera - Fargo
3. "I need unguent" - Fargo
4. Wood chipper - Fargo
5. Where is Pancakes house - Fargo
6. Meeting Jerry - Fargo
7. Staring - Fargo
8. "You owe me a quarter" - Seinfeld
9. I need holes - Seinfeld
10. Nihilists demand money - The Big Lewbowski
Anonymous:
1. Days of Heaven
2. Barry Lyndon
3. Apocalypse Now
4. The Conformist
5. Badlands
6. The Duellists
7. The Godfather Part II
8. Bound for Glory
9. The Deer Hunter
10. McCabe and Mrs. Miller
11. The Mirror
12. Deliverance
13. All the President's Men
14. The Godfather
15. Alien
16. Close Encounters of the Third Kind
17. Ryan's Daughter
18. The Last Picture Show
19. The Long Goodbye
20. Fiddler on the Roof
Jesus Christ...Venom is at 25% at RT
*32%
Emi: I'm not surprised lol
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