Friday, 28 March 2025

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1986: Chow Yun-Fat in A Better Tomorrow

Chow Yun-fat did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Mark Lee aka Brother Mark in A Better Tomorrow. 

A Better Tomorrow follows the somewhat convoluted story of an ex-gangster dealing with his family and his old gang ties. 

I’ll admit I had a slightly strange experience watching A Better Tomorrow where I found it just kind of unfocused and clunky, then suddenly quite captivating and stylish. When it was the latter it almost always corresponded with when Chow Yun-Fat is on screen as Brother Mark essentially the best friend/enforcer for the ex-gangster. Something that Chow just owns naturally with such a fantastic cool to his performance, particularly in his earliest scenes where indeed his lighting his cigarette with a counterfeit bill is just a certain kind of cinematic cool that is difficult to achieve. Chow matches the idea and despite being the supporting character here, is the one who comes to life with the striking presence of the proper cool gangster we’d want to follow as he takes on a more nefarious mobster. Chow, for me, very much is the film as it also came to life when he walked on screen each time, partially because Brother Mark seems to move the plot forward in the most compelling fashion, but also because of that presence of Chow’s. Something however that is a mix of badass with a few other elements because it isn’t just the wielding two guns in the and firing, as cool as that is and as well as Chow performs those moments. 

It is around those moments where Chow actually shines, such as the scene where he goes in guns ablazin’, however first setting up some additional guns for himself as he casually walks in. A moment where Chow makes much with the little grin of his in his planting, knows exactly what he’s doing and plays a bit of fun in the moment, before unleashing his fury in the actual gunfight, which is both him shooting down fools and getting injured in return fire. Something where we get the other side of his performance which is presenting some vulnerability, less emotionally but just physically as he literally gets shot. Afterwards then reflecting that state within the character where as much as Chow must be functional at times in terms of progressing the plot you are granted a bit more for his portrayal of Brother Mark’s increasing critical nature as he interacts with a fundamental determination in his moments. Chow’s performance moves from just cool to more so granting the gravity of the situation as the tensions overall raise, to the point Mark is even beaten severely where Chow shows the physical pain combined though with that quiet certainty of his conviction and loyalty regardless. Leading to eventually the final battle where Chow is again great as an action performer in very much selling the action in every little beat he is giving with this time greater intensity and less of an overt cool as he goes about mowing down the gangster’s men one by one. Chow successfully depicts this progression of his character largely through action and creates a compelling character that consistently anchored me to this story despite being a supporting character. In a way it suggests director John Woo figuring out that Chow was the person he always should’ve been focused on in his later films by the promise shown by Chow here. 

56 comments:

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Ratings and thoughts on the cast.

Jonathan Williams said...

Louis: Your top ten animated villains.

Lucas Saavedra said...

Spoilers for Severance season 2

Louis: What are your thoughts on Britt Lower's performance in the scenes where Helena is pretending to be Helly?

Louis Morgan said...

Luke:

Ti - 3(I thought he was truly just okay. The more emotional moments I honestly thought he carried better than just being a compelling leading man as I found his presence not particularly dynamic or captivating here. This was for me a case where Chow dominated way too much to the point that it became a little ridiculous.)

Cheung - 2.5(Obviously far from his finest hour, though he's completely fine but the role is not challenging him in any way and in turn he is far less interesting than he typically is.)

Lee - 3(Decent just sort of sleazy note though didn't get that much more from that than that.)

Jonathan:

Frollo (The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
Feathers McGraw (Wallace & Gromit)
Maleficent (Sleeping Beauty)
Wolf (Puss in Boots: The Last Wish)
Ratigan (The Great Mouse Detective)
Jack Horner (Puss in Boots: The Last Wish)
Other Mother (Coraline)
Lord Shen (Kung Fu Panda 2)
Lady Eboshi (Princess Mononoke)
Gaston (Beauty and the Beast)

Lucas:

I'll say I predicted the twist, though I found the way she portrayed effective, in essentially playing the part as someone playing the part, which is actually why I saw the twist coming, though still convincing that she would fool most of her coworkers. Where Lower presented it with a reserved quality that was never Helly who she always portrayed as rather open with her emotions, particularly her phony story which you could buy as a phony story from Helly but I knew it was phony from Helena because it was lying not from shame, which in itself wouldn't have made sense since she already hated her outie, rather just lying so quite clever work by Lower in being wrong in just the right way.

Jonathan Williams said...

Louis: Your top ten animated heroes.

Luke Higham said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain

RatedRStar said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

RIP Bruce Glover, still one of my favorite Bond villain's henchmen

J96 said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain and Bruce Glover.

RatedRStar said...

RIP Bruce Glover,

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: Your thoughts on this scene from Severance?

https://youtu.be/UFbIn5rmm-g?si=SRkonEi6Q1UG1qGi

And what are your thoughts on Tramell Tillman's performance in the other scenes where Milchick "stands up for himself" (to Miss Huang, Helly R. or the wax statue of Kier for example)?

ruthiehenshallfan99 said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Which 5 actors that Robert Eggers has yet worked with, do you think would be a great fit for his style of filmmaking.

Anonymous said...

What's everybody's prediction to win 2006 supporting actor.

Luke Higham said...

Anonymous: I re-watched both Dead Man's Chest and At World's End recently and Bill Nighy is a definite contender for the former.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

I'll go to bat for Caine in The Prestige, his best ever 'mentor' performance.

Robert MacFarlane said...

I just rewatched The Prestige the other night and think Caine will probably be upgraded to a 5.

J96 said...

This White Lotus tension is giving me anxiety. I've been all over with my predicted ranking. Right niw, I'd probably predict:

Patrick Schwartzenagger
Carrie Coon
Sam Rockwell
Walton Goggins
Jason Isaacs
Parker Posey
Natasha Rothwell
Sarah Catherine Hook
Michelle Monaghan
Jon Gries
Thayme
Charlotte Le Bron
Leslie Bibb
Aimee Lou Wood
Sam Nivola
Nicholas DuVernay
Arnas
Julian Kostov
Yuri

roughly......... I could be completely wrong. I'm basing it on believability, range, impact, and what I know about your blog.

J96 said...

What is y'all's opinion of Mobland, so far?

J96 said...

Louis, how do you rank the Best Picture winners that received no acting nominations? (I KNOW "Parasite" is #1! Return of the King or Braveheart for #2!)

And your top 10 performances within those films?

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Louis: Thoughts on Harris Dickinson, Paul Mescal, Joseph Quinn and Barry Keoghan being cast as The Beatles in upcoming biopics?

Tony Kim said...

Ytrewq: He commented on all of those except Quinn here - https://actoroscar.blogspot.com/2024/07/alternate-best-supporting-actor-1998_18.html

Marcus said...

Louis: I understand if you don't want to get into it, but what are your thoughts on the whole generative AI/Ghibli controversy and what implications it could have for the industry.

Louis Morgan said...

Lucas:

Some of my favorite moments of his performance and of the series in general. Something I find especially impressive is someone working within such a confined “type” as Tillman being the corporate “yes man” in demeanor so revealing what’s underneath that without breaking that is incredible each time. In this scene Tillman is amazing in how he plays first Milchick losing his composure just a bit in heartbreak essentially in the browbeating, before finding his composure through strength of his own attack, where you see such determined incisiveness where he keeps his calm, but again now just beneath it there is such viciousness in each moment, with especially affection for his delivery of monosyllabically filled with so much venom, while still being “proper” at the same time. Each scene like this is why Tillman was #1 on my list for mastering that playing the “line” of the performance, which by maintaining the corporate man, even as he’s raging in such hate towards aspects of it just beneath that surface is just incredible to watch each and every time.

Luke:

Mathias Schoenaerts
Tom Waits
Viggo Mortensen
Mia Goth
Kathryn Hunter

Marcus:

I'll just say there does need to be some kind of legal copyright clarification regarding AI generation, given that it can involve taking information from copyrighted material in that generation.

But this goes into AI spreading faster than reaction/regulation can happen to it. Although I will also note about 99% of AI generated anything is trash, and identifiable so. And most of the time is a gimmicky shtick essentially like those Ghibli style images. The assumption is that it will get better and that won't be the case, though I do have certain doubts of that given that even in the current form it is a computer recycling and regurgitating old material theoretically in a new form, but there is nothing new in the form, lacking the essential creative spark...of course studio hack jobs hardly care about that to begin with, so clarifications do need to be made regardless.

Matt Mustin said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

RIP Val Kilmer.

Razor said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain and Val Kilmer.

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Luke Higham said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Tim said...

R.I.P. Val Kilmer

You were our Huckleberry

RatedRStar said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Maciej said...

RIP Richard Chamberlain, Bruce Glover and Val Kilmer

Louis Morgan said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Michael McCarthy said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Anonymous said...

Rest In Peace Val Kilmer. You fought a good fight.

Sad day. The Moses of my childhood has transcended.

J96 said...

Rest In Peace to the greatest Doc Holiday and first glorious voice of Moses I heard.

J96 said...

You fought till the end.

Jonathan Williams said...

RIP Val Kilmer

Anonymous said...

R.I.P. Val Kilmer.

A said...

R.I.P. Val Kilmer.

Perfectionist said...

Ohh man. His portrayal of Doc was one of my all time favorite performances(my win for 1993 supporting). Rest in Peace Val Kilmer.

Luke Higham said...

Mickey Rourke is gonna be on the UK version of Big Brother. It's sad to see him reduced to this.

Robert MacFarlane said...

RIP Val

ruthiehenshallfan99 said...

RIP Val Kilmer

8000S said...

R.I.P Val Kilmer

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Louis: Could I have your thoughts on the this track, "Tum Se Hi" from "Jab We Met"? I'll never get over how much Shahid Kapoor looks like Cillian Murphy here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cb6wuzOurPc&ab_channel=T-Series

Matt Mustin said...

Finished the first season of The Good Place which I enjoyed very much. The best role of Ted Danson's career.

Cast ranking
1. Ted Danson
2. William Jackson Harper
3. Kristen Bell
4. D'Arcy Carden
5. Marc Evan Jackson
6. Adam Scott
7. Maribeth Monroe
8. Tiya Sircar
9. Jameela Jamil
10. Manny Jacinto (the only one in the cast I straight up didn't like)

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: What are your thoughts on Emma Mackey and Russell Brand in Death on the Nile?

Harris Marlowe said...

RIP Val Kilmer.

Perfectionist said...

Tahmeed: Hahaha. He does look like Cillian Murphy there.

Bryan L. said...

Louis: Your 1960s and 1970s cast/director for Black Bag?

Ytrewq Wertyq said...

Louis: Your past and present roles for Morgan Freeman (in a dream world where he didn't get typecast so hard as a stoic old mentor)?

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Whenever you finish both Tarkovsky and Angelopoulos' major works, do you intend on getting around to Bela Tarr, many consider him along with the former two a master of slow cinema.

Bryan L. said...

Ytrewq: Wilford from Snowpiercer might be a good shout.

Louis Morgan said...

Tahmeed:

Quite a pleasant song I particularly like the lyrics very much "dancing" around within the song itself with a particularly nice balance between the vocals and instrumentation. Something that the song builds with the simple percussive vocal backing that only amplifies what is already there. An altogether very just quietly nice song.

Bryan:

Black Bag 1960's directed by Billy Wilder:

George: James Mason
Kathryn: Deborah Kerr
Clarissa: Janet Munro
Freddie: Peter Ustinov
Col. Stokes: Dirk Bogarde
Dr. Zoe Vaughn: Kay Walsh

Black Bag 1970's directed by Robert Altman:

George: Robert Shaw
Kathryn: Jean Simmons
Clarissa: Helen Mirren
Freddie: Ian Holm
Col. Stokes: Yaphet Kotto
Dr. Zoe Vaughn: Diahann Carroll

Luke:

I mean at some point.

Ytrewq:

Thomas Wake
The Father
Michael Sullivan - Road to Perdition (which I think would actually potentially add an interesting element to why he can't ever be ranked higher by John Rooney)