Tuesday, 11 March 2025

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1986: Rutger Hauer in The Hitcher

Rutger Hauer did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying John Ryder in The Hitcher.

The Hitcher is a rather terrible film about a young man, Jim, traveling cross country (C. Thomas Howell) who picks up a hitchhiker, who unfortunately is a psychotic killer. 

Rutger Hauer unsurprisingly plays that psychotic killer, which watching this performance made me notice that when Hauer does fully an American accent, though his native accent slips in just occasionally, he sounds just like Paul Newman. Not that this is particularly important to this performance really, but was worth noting. As otherwise this is dumb film where Hauer plays a role that truly exists in a screenwriter's limited imagination, but lacks any reality, nor genuine inspiration. The film I think wants us to believe he is more so a demonic force, if not Death incarnate, which would make sense in that he is omnipotent in so many scenes, however at the same time I guess to beat death you just run him over, and shoot him a few times. Additionally the film does nothing with this idea, it isn’t though we get a bit of insight or interesting philosophical discussions, rather it just feels like an excuse for Ryder to basically do whatever he wants for the course of the film until he dies, and thankfully the film ends. I mention that because Hauer isn’t really working with a character as a just a slasher killer who exists on getting to the next kill logic, rather than any logic of reality or even of some supernatural approach. What the film does have is the fact that Hauer is an extremely captivating performer. There’s an innate charisma to him that lights up the screen, there’s also an innate intensity that just as quickly darkens the screen to grant such striking menace the second he decides to turn it on. Hauer does bring a natural variation in his scenes and is very playing around in the role, because honestly the scenes of what he’s doing are pretty repetitive, he does something to pester the poor kid, he brutally murders someone out of the blue, then taunts him some more. There’s no arc or exploration, really what Hauer presents more than anything is the idea that his character is just kind of bored. So Hauer is just having fun, by showing Ryder having fun, and coming into every scene with an intention to give some kind of chaotic energy to them. Hauer doing it all with such ease, as when he is taunting his hectoring is horrible in a most effective way with the smugness of his sneer, he can suddenly then be extremely cold as though he is giving the young man a lesson (though script wise he’s not), and whenever the killer comes out, Hauer can be a complete sadist loving every minute of his carnage, or the coldest of psychopaths where we just the most vicious directed intensity that is chilling. Hauer plays around with what villain Ryder is effectively to keep his performance unpredictable which keeps his character unpredictable, although the writing is more random than genuinely unpredictable where there’s an honest logic behind it all. Regardless Hauer holds up his end consistently to try to make something out of his scenes, even though the film itself isn’t at all worthwhile nor does it really make his character go anywhere interesting. Hauer does his job though, elevates his film consistently even though he doesn’t save it. 

27 comments:

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: What are your ratings and thoughts on the rest of the cast?

Calvin Law said...

Louis: what are your thoughts on the brothel shootout in the finale of Boardwalk Empire season 3? Was just randomly thinking about how amazing a sequence it is, for Huston's performance of course but also just as this incredibly intense sequence.

Matt Mustin said...

Yeah, he's the best part of a TERRIBLE film.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Why the fuck did I predict him second? I knew you were going to hate this movie.

Matt Mustin said...

Louis: What are your thoughts on the editing of Good Night and Good Luck?

Anonymous said...

Hi there! Did Louis comment on "I'm Still Here" and specifically on Torres' performance? Just saw the movie and would love to see Louis' opinion. Anyone care to send a link? Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous: His thoughts on the film and Torres can be found here.

https://actoroscar.blogspot.com/2025/02/alternate-best-actor-2024-austin-butler.html (you can also find it on his Letterboxd)

https://actoroscar.blogspot.com/2025/02/alternate-best-actor-2024-results.html

Bryan L. said...

One of the few instances where gore actually could’ve helped a film. Sometimes the producers are right.

I did not like this film.

Bryan L. said...

Louis: Your thoughts on John Seale’s cinematography?

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Louis: Now I'm aware that as opposed to me you barely enjoyed The Fall of the House of Usher, so how would you improve it?

Jonathan Williams said...

Louis: Thoughts on the Life of Chuck trailer.

Harris Marlowe said...

Your present day roles for Laurence Olivier and Alec Guinness?

J96 said...

Louis, your ranking of the Best Animated Feature Nominees of the Decade so far? I just know PiBLW, Wallace and Grommit and Flee are in top 5, at worst.

Bryan L. said...

Harris: He gave Olivier’s roles in Hopkins’ review for Titus, and Guinness’s in Nicol Williamson’s review for The Wilby Conspiracy.

Harris Marlowe said...

Bryan: Thanks for the heads-up.

J96 said...

Louis, have you seen Black Bag? Thoughts? Rankings on the films of Steven Soderbergh?

Louis Morgan said...

Lucas:

Howell - 2.5(There's times where I thought his performance worked, other times where I thought he was a bit over the top. Doesn't quite make for the hero you want to follow, but doesn't completely flop either. Of course it doesn't help that there's very little character to actually speak of other than "average guy".)

Leigh - 2(Honestly was a little surprised with just how dull I found her here, and didn't think she really made any impression.)

Calvin:

An amazing scene where it is a payoff for Harrow's story, and particularly satisfying to see Rossetti's men being taken out. But also really the needed upping the ante after the previously amazing sequence of Nucky's escape in the penultimate episode. The sequence itself though just is fantastic in the intensity of the execution, from the way we get Harrow just going in as a soldier not a gangster in terms of his approach of just mowing everyone down without hesitation and very much as a battle rather than a mob hit. Where Huston's performance throughout amplifies every bit of the tension though, showing as efficient as Harrow is, there's still a struggle there, but also of course that dogged intensity that is fueling him the whole time.

Matt:

I mean one of the most efficient films around in terms of the pacing where the film just moves, yet doesn't feel rushed or anything of that nature. Rather just provides just one moment to the next with natural progression and still emotional and character tension. With particularly brilliant use of the actual footage so naturally weaved in certain scenes that only amplifies the entire piece with such ease.

Bryan:

Seale's work really makes the whole thing seems a whole lot more dignified than it should be. As there is such a strong sense of space and isolation he captures. Using such striking naturalistic lighting at times that gives the film a particularly eerie quality in making it viscerally tangible. Again, all this is wasted in the sense because the stupidity of the actual script, but Seale knows what he's doing.

Ytrewq:

Make the children less over the top, OR make them genuinely amusing. Bring better satire than the near Adam McKay level elements I saw there with lines like "I LOVE FOX NEWS"...subtle. Make the raven more subtle that slowly reveals her existence, rather always being there and being so obviously real from the start that it makes the whole setup/execution of each kid so obvious without, for me, being insightful or entertaining. Maybe allow some depth to the kids to make at least a few a bit more tragic. Also ease up on the over the top didactic speeches of the raven that really makes the already obvious message that much more obvious. Also get better performers for the majority of the cast.

Jonathan:

Kind of a "series of images" trailer, and looks fine as such, though I've never been terribly impressed by the cinematography of his work, and wasn't exactly blown away here either. But still interested in seeing it.

J96:

1. Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
2. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
3. The Boy and The Heron
4. Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl
5. The Wild Robot
6. Flee
7. The Mitchells vs. The Machines
8. Turning Red
9. Wolfwalkers
10. Memoir of a Snail
11. Flow
12. Soul
13. Inside Out 2
14. Elemental
15. Marcel the Shell With Shoes On
16. Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio
17. The Sea Beast
18. Onward
19. Nimona
20. Raya and the Last Dragon
21. Encanto
22. Luca

As others have stated, if I've seen the film it will be logged on Letterboxd, but I probably won't see it until after theaters due to my aversion to Soderbergh's specific eccentricities as a filmmaker, despite liking the cast and the genre.

1. Sex, Lies and Videotape
2. Ocean's Eleven
3. King of the Hill
4. Out of Sight
5. Traffic
6. Logan Lucky
7. The Limey
8. Contagion
9. Behind the Candelabra
10. Che
11. Kafka
12. The Informant!
13. Side Effects
14. High Flying Bird
15. The Laundromat
16. No Sudden Move
17. Erin Brockovich

Louis Morgan said...

I did see Novocaine, which is held back by some truly dull villains, however does get by through the ridiculousness of its gimmick, albeit just enough, via some creative and grotesque sequences, and the general affability and offbeat quality of its romantic leads.

Quaid - 4
Midthunder - 3.5
Nicholson - 2
Batalon - 2.5
Gabriel - 2.5
Walsh - 2.5

Anonymous said...

Louis: Thoughts on the cast of Novocaine.

Tony Kim said...

Thoughts on Whigham, Shannon and Huston in Boardwalk S2-3?

Louis Morgan said...

Anonymous:

Quaid - (I would say in general that he seems to have a tendency to go much bigger than he needs to based on this and Companion. This however is an instance where his bigness worked by in a way not giving a wholly convincing performance and having a certain awkwardness, because his character is supposed to be rather awkward in all situations and seems very much out of place. Quaid’s specific somewhat questionable presence then works effectively here because he’s not exactly in scenes, however in a way that works. And I’ll give him a bit more credit than that here as there are some scenes where he needs to be a bit more subtle with Midthunder, and I felt he brought a quiet tenderness there that did work. Although I will say that I would like to see a performance of his that is a bit toned down on the whole however.)

Midthunder - (Manages to not fall too much into the basic damsel in distress more than anything just by finding some effective off-beat chemistry with Quaid and playing into some of her later moments with a more honest depth than I think some might’ve been able to bring to the role.)

Nicholson - (Has his dad’s face, but lacks his charisma or acting talent. Just found him kind of off on every note he was trying to play. Found him trying too hard to be intense, too hard to try to be darkly comic, just trying the whole time, with that “try” being abundantly obvious in every choice leaving it a rather poor performance.)

Batalon - (Basically gives the exact same performance as in Spider-man)

Gabriel & Walsh - (Standard cop characters to almost a comical degree, though they don’t bother to make much of a joke. They are truly okay in extreme cliches.)

Tony:

Let me finish the series and I’ll give cumulative thoughts on those cast members.

Calvin Law said...

I will say that Quaid was a bit distracting in Oppenheimer for me too. Obviously not a big role but I would say compared to most of the other scientists he did feel a little too contemporary.

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

I saw Nicholson in a leading role in Out of the Blue like 2 years ago and let me tell you that this man is not fit to follow in Jack's footsteps at all.

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: What are your thoughts on Ocean's Eleven (2001) as a film?

Houndtang said...

Did you ever review Michael Palin in Brazil? I was 98% sure you did but couldn’t find it

Tony Kim said...

Louis: Are you okay with giving thoughts on individual episodes right now, or would you prefer to give them after finishing the series as well?

Also - what are your overall thoughts on Che and Traffic?

Louis Morgan said...

Lucas:

It's a fun heist movie, by having a clever enough heist at the center of it with a swiftness in its execution and its use of the various cast members as parts of the heist. I will say I find the Tess element less interesting, but thankfully it doesn't take too much of the film's screentime overall.

Houndtang:

No, I never did review Palin there.

Tony:

Wait on that.

Che, I never actually finished part 2 because I found it to be such a slog, Che part 1 has some good scenes (The UN speech, some of the guerrilla action) and is aided by a strong performance by Del Toro, but I think it also suffers from being a touch vague on some of the aspects of its central subject as well as the Cuban revolution in general. It doesn't quite hit the right balance between the personal and the political leaving itself imperfect as such.

Traffic is a mixed-to-positive bag for me, one negative being the color filters which is a start of a trend I find most unpleasant for Soderbergh, however at least there's a purpose (albeit doesn't make them work for me) by distinguishing the stories, and also sadly I believe started the trend of making Mexico yellow. But more so the stories themselves, I think Del Toro's is entirely good, you feel a sense of character, connected with the progression of his story and wholly works. The Douglas story, while not terrible, almost hits moments that feel closer to "important issue movie of the week" with how on the nose some of it is. The Zeta-Jones/Cheadle story I think is okay, but doesn't really fully develop itself on either end, suffering I think from being just a vignette.