Sunday 18 December 2022

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2016: Woody Harrelson in The Edge of Seventeen & Hugo Weaving in Hacksaw Ridge & Results

Woody Harrelson did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Mr. Bruner in The Edge of Seventeen. 

The Edge of Seventeen follows high school outcast Nadine (Hailee Steinfeld) as her life seemingly gets worse when her best friend starts dating her brother. 

This entry into the genre is particularly good for its considerable sense of humor much of which exists within the character of Woody Harrelson's history teacher Mr. Bruner, a character that is often the caring and supportive sort. The opening of the film is a flashforward featuring Nadine as she announces her intention to commit suicide to Mr. Bruner. What follows is one of the funniest scenes of 2016  via Harrelson's perfect delivery with his false sincerity as he announces that her words are "a lot to take in", followed by a perfect deadpan as he announces the fact that he had been drafting his own suicide letter at the same time, before reading it off that notes his exasperation with Nadine and his preference for the peace of a cold death rather than her taking his lunchtime away. Harrelson emphasizes every single word with a kind of honest lack of sincerity, as he makes the annoyance towards losing his time real while being as phony in the best way possible as he delivers each word as an extra degree of truth towards Nadine, before switching to the perfect excrement eating grin when he declares his hope that his indifference would get him fired. Although the film then proceeds to flashback what we get from Harrelson is random appearances of great comedy throughout the film whenever Nadine runs into him. Harrelson's embodying this note-perfect long-term teacher who has seen it all in one way or another. Harrelson's hilarious then doling out his particularly blunt wisdom when noting that Nadine does herself no favors. 

Harrelson though of course delivers these extra bluntly, such as when retorting that maybe she should have a life rather than focusing on one mistake he made during a lecture or noting that she might just be not particularly likable for her lack of friends. Harrelson delivers all of this with impeccable timing that makes his theoretical cruelty pure comic gold, although he does do a bit more to enable the character to serve his purpose beyond the comedy. Harrelson's performance always has this right knowing quality in his eyes as someone who has seen this before even with his approach that does suggest his callousness, while funny, isn't all there is. We develop more so into this as he reads out an impulsive sexually explicit text that Nadine sent, which Harrelson delivers with comic perfection as Mr. Bruner slowly uncovers its nature as he goes along starting with an initial "this isn't so bad" before starting to see it for what it is. As blunt as Mr. Bruner is, when he notes that Nadine is his favorite student and gives her part of her cookie, Harrelson is able to carry with it a more genuine sense of care even within the sarcasm that defines the man. Harrelson's great because he doesn't switch from the note, he rather carries the note authentically from who this guy is and the way he deals with students, likely students like Nadine before. It isn't a sudden shift rather just even though he's still callous, he does care but in his own way. Harrelson ends up being this source of comfort as he is able to create rather brilliantly the sense of sincerity within the sarcastic cynicism, without breaking either which is impressive. How? Well, Harrelson's comic moments again have the right sort of distance in that they definitely are jokes to him as blunt as they are, however when we do see the concern, which Harrelson plays entirely in his eyes, that is wholly genuine though not at all forced. It is a terrific comic performance from Harrelson as he runs with the humor that defines the character, but when he needs to give just the right amount of heart, he does so with a natural ease. 
Hugo Weaving did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Tom Doss in Hacksaw Ridge. 

Hugo Weaving exists in probably the least successful portion of the film featuring the pre-war times where the tonal clash is aggressively evident. The scenes that work best are those that follow squarely on Hugo Weaving as Tom Doss the father of our hero Desmond (Andrew Garfield). Weaving's performance is defined by Tom Doss being a man who mentally died in World War I despite surviving in the body. Weaving's performance is as a broken man specifically as everything about him seems as though he is weighted down within his existence. His face drowns down into a state of just barely holding it together so as not to fall apart constantly, his own physical being sunken and filled with a painful depression. Weaving's performance suggests almost a barely functioning corpse forced to still walk the earth while feeling the constant pain of his death all the same. Every moment we see him there is suffering laden within him whether it be just beneath the surface or constantly oozing out of him. Weaving's best moments come when his sons decide to enter World War II, first his older son Doss's brother, where Weaving is outstanding throughout the dinner scene when Doss's brother arrives in army uniform. Weaving's initial impression with quiet disbelief and an immediate sense of pain. And what is always remarkable is when a performance that is already in a deep pit can somehow go further into that pit. Weaving does this as regales a tale of a local boy who had a clean-cut uniform, and Weaving pressures into each word irony of a man with a broken yet true perspective on the situation. When he finishes the tale by noting the bloody death of the man and hoping his son's death will be cleaner, Weaving's lips quiver as the man barely able to speak the words, and his eyes only become more filled with anguish. Weaving showing as much as the father is brutal, all of this comes from a very real pain at seeing his son potentially die, and when he tells his son to get out of his sight, the anger of it is wrapped by an overpowering sadness. His conversation with Desmond when he enlists is a bit different and I like how in it, Weaving conveys a different relationship with the son he knows is different. Weaving still exudes the petrifying fear and sadness as he looks at his son, however now his trying to explain the situation is with earnest desperation trying to convince him that as a man of faith, in the way Desmond is, it can't work out. What Weaving shows with each scene as much as this is a deeply flawed man, all of what he is comes from his ptsd, and is heartbreaking in depicting his horrible state. The one scene where he seems out of this, and I think Weaving uses particularly well, is when Tom goes about helping Desmond avoid court martial by getting a letter from a General, and former comrade in arms. Weaving's performance in the scene of saving his son from legal punishment shows a potential other side to Tom. Although his eyes are still of the broken man, when Weaving speaks there is a real passion within it as he speaks of Desmond's rights and what he must've fought the previous war for. In the moment Weaving shows strength in Tom, and suggests in it the man he might've been, if he hadn't been scarred so deeply by his past.  

Next: Backlog and recommendations. 

26 comments:

BRAZINTERMA said...

Toshiro Mifune - The Bad Sleep Well
Tatsuya Nakadai - Kill!
Ewan McGregor - The Ghost Writer
Canada Lee - Cry, the Beloved Country
James Cagney - Public Enemy

Mitchell Murray said...

No complaints here; Two very good performances from opposite ends of the emotional/tonal spectrum.

For Weaving specifically, one of the sequences I most remember from "Hacksaw Ridge" would actually be his last chronological appearance. That would be the flashback to Desmond pulling a gun on his dad, and for whatever reason, Weaving's portrayal of Tom's suicidal breakdown stuck with me. The movie is arguably exaggerated in many ways, but its depiction of the mental horrors of WW1, and how they haunted a generation of young man, is commendable.

Luke Higham said...

Toshiro Mifune - The Bad Sleep Well
Alan Bates - Butley
Utpal Dutt - Agantuk
Ray Milland - Alias Nick Beal
Alan Cumming - Josie And The Pussycats

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Has Steinfeld been upgraded. If so, where is she ranked now.

Ratings and thoughts on Roger Guenveur Smith, Craig Robinson and Hugh Jackman.

Matt Mustin said...

Toshiro Mifune in The Bad Sleep Well
Philp Seymour Hoffman in Jack Goes Boating
Ray Milland in Alias Nick Beal
Canada Lee in Cry, The Beloved Country
Paul Dano in Ruby Sparks

Matt Mustin said...

Louis: Thoughts on Christian Madsen in Mr. Church?

Bryan L. said...

Louis: Your cast for a Korean version of Better Call Saul as well? (To follow-up the Breaking Bad one).

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Thoughts on the Oppenheimer trailer.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Weaving is the one thing I like about Hacksaw Ridge, so I'll grant you that one.

Oliver Menard said...

Toshiro Mifune - The Bad Sleep Well
Tatsuya Nakadai - Kill!
Utpal Dutt - Agantuk
Philp Seymour Hoffman - Jack Goes Boating
Paul Dano - Ruby Sparks

Calvin Law said...

Delighted to see Ali make it into the top 5.

Calvin Law said...

Also, could I have extended thoughts on the final scene between Ha Jung-woo and Cho Jin-woong in The Handmaiden? It's one of my favourites in the film.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Really hoping Alan Cumming makes the backlog. His work in Josie has such pitch perfect timing.

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: where would you rank Kanji Furutachi in Harmonium?

Louis Morgan said...

Luke:

Smith - (His performance I just found to be the most interesting thing about the film really in a certain sense because he didn't play even as like say Jackson's character in Django, rather he presents very honestly this true statement of the man who knows what their violence will bring them. There is such blunt honesty about his work that has such a power that he delivers a man who in a way knows too much, not out of cynicism but rather practical knowledge of it all.)

Robinson - (It is more or less him doing his typical thing, just with a bit more emotion to it than usual. He delivers it effectively on finding a bit of variation however.)

Jackman - (A performance that actually makes use of his charm quite well and brings the right sort of exasperation but also broad bravado to his work. He creates the right sense of over-the-hill but also the charisma of the man who once was near the top of things.)

Matt:

Madsen - (Not good, really though he carries the same "I'm deeply depressed" face the whole time that is so overdone that it is comical, particularly as it seems his character doesn't age either and just maintains that same face at all times. It is just a ridiculous performance.)

Luke:

I thought that was an AMAZING trailer, from the cinematography, to the effects, to the Murphy, I just hope that rather powerful monologue isn't all this film has to say, since there is so much to explore with Oppenheimer as a man.

Bryan:

Chuck: Roe-ha Kim
Howard: Lee Sun-kyun
Kim: Kim Min-hee
Nacho: Sam Lee
Lalo: Jiang Wen

Anonymous said...

Louis: Ratings and thoughts on Armie Hammer, Jackie Earle Haley in The Birth of a Nation and Samantha Robinson in The Love Witch.

Mitchell Murray said...

Louis: Speaking of these two men, if you haven't given them already, what are your thoughts on the voices of Harrelson and Weaving?

I'll say this with the former; There are some people whose voices don't seem to match their faces or personalities - Harrelson is 100% not one of them. I find there's something naturally engaging about that fluid drawl of his, along with it helping his comedic delivery a lot.

Anonymous said...

Can I please request Gene Hackman in Night Moves as a revisit. Also, Alec Guinness in Smiley's People.

Ytrewq Wertyq said...


Hugo Weaving in The Interview
Toshiro Mifune in The Bad Sleep Well
Paul Dano in Ruby Sparks
Philip Seymour Hoffman in Jack Goes Boating
Ray Miland in Alias Nick Beal

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Louis: Rating and thoughts on Sam Waterston in Miss Sloane?

Anonymous said...

Toshiro Mifune - The Bad Sleep Well
Alan Bates - Butley
Ray Milland - Alias Nick Beal
Utpal Dutt - Agantuk
James Cagney - The Public Enemy

Anonymous said...

Luke, what are your MVP predictions for the recommendations.

Anonymous said...

Louis: Lowest 2.5, 2 and 1.5 in the Supporting ranking?

Matt Mustin said...

Scrooge (1970) is nowhere near my favourite version of the story, in fact it's not even my favourite musical version, but it's still enjoyable, despite the fact that the ending goes on too long (one song covered it just fine) and the songs are mostly pretty forgettable.

Finney-4(Some off moments and I don't really like the idea of writing Scrooge as an idiot, but I mostly enjoyed his more absurd take on the character.)

Collings-3.5

Guinness-4.5(Good at portraying the ghostly quality of Marley, but honestly the more important thing is that he's just massively entertaining here, and I love that the only reason his additional scene is there seems to be just to let him be awesome.)

More-4

Evans-3

Rodgers-3.5(He gets BY FAR the best musical number in the film, and he sells the hell out of it.)

Beaumont-2(Tiny Tim is there to manipulate your emotions, and he's always a little bit cloying, but here...I don't know, I'm supposed to feel for him but this time I didn't.)

8000S said...

Toshiro Mifune - The Bad Sleep Well
Tatsuya Nakadai - Kill!
James Cagney - The Public Enemy
Alan Bates - Butley
Ray Milland - Alias Nick Beal

Louis Morgan said...

Anonymous:

Haley - (Not his finest hour, just overwrought I'm evil guy performance, comparing it to Dano in 12 Years a Slave you see how much he falls short in comparison.)

Hammer - (He could be worse but mostly he's just kind of there. Weak writing to begin with, but Hammer does little more than look kind of annoyed constantly.)

Robinson - 4(It's an entertaining performance that I think hits the style of this kind of bad movie performance while adjusting it just enough to manage to give a comedic energy to the turn while never losing the overall style. She isn't stilted the whole time, rather at the right times, and gives consistent choices that amplify the material.)

Mitchell:

I sure I have on Weaving, Harrelson is the classic good ole boy in every sense, and makes so much sense that he's best buddies with McConaughey as even their voices are slight variations.

Ytrewq:

It's a lame part as just evil guy, but it is kind of interesting to see Waterston get to play a different kind of part than is usual for him. Still it's just means some sneering and being evil, which he doesn't overplay thankfully. Something quite easy to do given how over the top the film Sorkin knock off.