Michael Caine did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Denny Mortwell in Mona Lisa.
Michael Caine had a decent show of range for 86 between his Oscar winning performance as a fussy intellectual type going through an affair with his own wife’s sister in Hannah and Her Sisters, and the extreme shift away from that here as a gangster Mortwell, who gives recently released from prison George (Bob Hoskins) a job chauffeuring high class prostitute Simone (Cathy Tyson). The full backstory we get from Mortwell and George is relatively limited though with key hints within just a few lines of dialogue, and through the performances of Hoskins and Caine. Caine’s work has largely a singular purpose here as the central villain of the piece but what can elevate things is a keyed in performance which is what Caine delivers here. On one hand this is an entirely successful villain turn by Caine. He is menacing, particularly using his height against Hoskins to very much emphasize that presence in their scenes together, or even with Tyson as well. Caine enforces himself in certain scenes and very much presents himself with the inherent threat of Mortwell within his presence. Caine calling back, but artfully twisting his work from Get Carter, where you have that same kind of cold intensity within his work, which like that film is remarkable in itself given Caine’s common cinematic presence is charming and approachable. Caine here isn’t charming, he’s not approachable, and he is intimidating by removing those extended presence elements, yet unlike Get Carter where he is the protagonist, Caine shortens the leash that much more to make his depiction of Mortwell that much colder and contained. Which in a fascinating way the less Caine does, the more oppressive he becomes, as Caine looking at someone usually is affable, here when he stares, there is a soullessness about him that unnerves you.
Caine is the effective villain which would be enough for this to be a good performance but what makes this a standout Caine performance is creating the sense of history and internal life within Mortwell that adds color to the role and the film. I love Caine's way of creating the story of Mortwell where we are granted the sense of basically a gangster attempting to elevate himself beyond that of the street thug, but is struggling to do so. Something we allude to in his background with George where we get the sense, George took a fall for the sake of Mortwell with the promise that Mortwell would take care of him. And what we get from Caine in one of his early scenes is a man attempting to reinvent himself, despite still being himself, as we see him talk with George with a skewed and phony grotesque version of how someone like Mortwell would believe “high class” would be. Caine’s amazing in a way by muting his own charm instead presenting someone like Mortwell failing to be charming. Caine has a smile but there’s an obvious sleaze behind it. There's a way of chatting up George like he has big plans for himself, but Caine delivers the words as empty platitudes. What Caine shows is more comfortable, or at least more natural is the violence sleazy gangster beneath any of that. Such as when George trespasses on Mortwell working a deal, Caine in a second's notice shows the real truth of Mortwell as he shows his teeth quickly and you see the vile man beneath that. Contrasting that is Mortwell pushing George to get blackmailing info on a client of Simone’s where again the asking moment is with phoniest kindly quality in Caine’s performance that perfectly sets up a gangster pretending to be far more than he ever could be. Again we see the real man, where Caine is so brutally honest by being horrible in the just barely held together raging frustration as George fails to perform what he has asked. Whenever Caine appears he makes an impact, and one of my favorite scenes honestly is when George rescues Simone’s fellow prostitute from a house Mortwell is overseeing, and we just see the silent reaction of a calm menace that is perfect work from Caine in showing the calculations in Mortwell without saying a thing. Leading to the ending where we get great acting from Caine where he begins by being terrifying by starting so quiet, letting the menace just ooze by only using the implication of danger (IASP reference intentional). As Caine presents essentially any civilized quality of Mortwell being forced and breaking down as his portrayal of the snap is not a gradual build up but just the natural reveal of the reality of Mortwell as he begins to openly threaten her and browbeat George, before physically assaulting her. We get a great subversion of this, however where the moment Simone fights back, by shooting him with a hidden gun, I love that Caine shows all the bluster and immediately leaves Mortwell and his delivery of his screams to George to help him are just a genuine pathetic man begging for his life. Caine delivers a great micro reflection of Hoskins’s work, by instead of slowly revealing the good man within the thug, Caine reveals only more sleaze, darkness and insecurity within the “respectable businessman”.
30 comments:
1. Liotta
2. Stockwell
3. Goodman
4. Ruck
5. Brown
1. Noonan
2. Caine
3. Hauer
4. Chow
5. Bowie
1. Liotta
2. Stockwell
3. Brown
4. Goodman
5. Ruck
1. Noonan
2. Caine
3. Chow
4. Hauer
5. Bowie
Louis: Your thoughts on Pitt, Palladino, Coleman, Camp, and de la Huerta in Boardwalk S2?
Terrific work from him.
1. Noonan
2. Caine
3. Chow
4. Hauer
5. Bowie
Honestly his character was more likable here than in Hannah and Her Sisters.
Louis: what would your ranking be for the acceptance speeches of the past 10 Best Actor winners? (This is including the speech Hopkins gave via Instagram after the ceremony)
Well, the worst is definitely between Will Smith, Adrien Brody and Casey Affleck (all bad in very different ways). The best would be Cillian Murphy's, though I also really liked Brendan Fraser and Hopkins' Instagram speech. The other speeches are all fine (I mean, Joaquin's was a little rambly and messy but at least it felt sincere and built to something touching by the end).
As for the other categories: all the recent Best Actress speeches have more or less been good besides maybe Zellweger, though I have a particular fondness for Colman and Yeoh's. Same with Supporting Actor besides Culkin, though I really like Kotsur, Quan and actually both of Ali's speeches especially. And for Supporting Actress, Youn's is particularly great.
I can't remember Afflecks speech and I really don't want to watch it lol.
Rated R Star: It's nothing bad really. Affleck just thanks people, acknowledges nominees(Washington in particular) and leaves. He just mumbles that's all(which, of course he does, he's Casey Affleck). It's just uncharismatic but nothing he does, for which I would put him in the "worst speech". I do agree with Brody and Smith.
Louis: Do you consider "In Too Deep" which plays on Mona Lisa as an original song?
Louis: What are your thoughts on Isabel DeRoy-Olson in Fancy Dance, Adria Arjona in Blink Twice and Leonie Benesch in September 5?
your thoughts on "Looking for Romance" from Bambi?
Tony:
Pitt - (Pitt impressed me in essentially creating the spiraling of Jimmy downwards in several ways. One in creating the quiet emotional need early on where you see just this vulnerability in his work behind the attempted toughness of someone trying to keep himself together in order to prove himself to the father he both wants approval of and hates. Pitt plays the uneasiness of the man whose real only method of violence and that is when we see the comfort, contrasting that with the natural lack of comfort when we see him pretending to be a politician or powerbroker of any kind. Pitt is woefully inadequate in those scenes in the right way in revealing the inadequacies of the character as something that keeps him from ever being able to fully take. Building to the final episodes most effectively in creating just the increasing sense of frustration and intensity before becoming just an emotional wreck where Pitt brings this insulated element of someone almost hiding within himself as he begins to collapse. Leading to the finale where he is truly great in the final scenes where he presents his only escape from his insecurities is accepting his fate, where PItt’s work is quite haunting by presenting it with so much calm and acceptance as someone who seemingly has finally found peace with himself.)
Palladino - (I wouldn’t say her performance changed too much other than still wavering between genuinely affecting moments then suddenly ones that weren’t entirely convincing to me. Still I’d say she was better than underwhelming on the whole.)
Coleman - (Obviously his performance ends up being relatively limited particularly after his character has the stroke, though I thought Coleman managed to depict that even a way where he didn’t fall into over the top histrionics, still managing to make an impact albeit relatively limited in terms of the scheme of the season. Leaving some semblance of the nature of the character even to the end though I do think the end result was less than the potential obviously due to Coleman’s health situation at the time.)
Camp - (Obviously a very small part but essential to creating a great scene with Huston, where Camp, when at his best, has such the perfect kind of no nonsense, “just speaking the truth” manner of delivery that makes you believe everything he says and gives you just a sense of the wisdom of a guy who knows plenty despite clearly living a very different life than the rest of our characters. Theoretically could’ve been a throwaway but Camp brings such a great directness where you see the right sense of intensity for the protection of his land, but also a specific accentuation as he gives just the right potent hint of empathy towards Huston that he genuinely cares for the man he sees as lost.)
De La Huerta - (I was impressed by the emotional depth she managed to find within the “type” she represented in the first season. Not ignoring that earlier work but rather just showing the woman out of her element and a blunt reality within living in the situation Van Alden has created for her. She impressed me in being able to provide a real emotional resonance in the sort of wasting away quality within the character in her situation, but also later on a quiet minor bit of pride in her performance that shows a surprising strength however in a believable way.)
Robert:
I watched the most recent episode of Severance, were you inquiring by any chance due to the appearance of a lesser known actor famous for a certain vocal performance?
Anonymous:
I won’t rank the speeches, but I will say my favorite and least favorite speeches are
Lead actor Best: Murphy’s and Hopkins’s, both pulling off class with such ease.
Least: Will Smith, I actually wouldn’t even put Brody’s non stop rambling next to this in terms of how dire a speech that was for so many reasons.
Lead Actress Best: Favorite is easily Colman’s. I wouldn’t say I have a least, I think maybe Zellweger was the worst, but even then not terribly so.
Supporting Actor Best: Rylance and Quan’s.
Supporting Actress: Favorite Youn quite easily.
Shaggy:
Yes.
Lucas:
I believe I covered DeRoy-Olson previously.
Arjona - (Her performance just manages the tone quite effectively in bringing a little bit of comedy early on but successfully bringing a pronounced determination within her performance later. Creating the right sort of horror protagonist performance, despite not being as such, and brings a much needed sort of badass presence within the scheme of the film.)
Benesch - (Much like the other performances one based mostly on just bringing weight to reactionary moments, something she excels with throughout in just carrying the emotional weight of the progression of the situation though combining the right quality between excitement to get the story, frustration of dealing with sometimes being ignored but also heartbreak when things go as they do. She plays it all very naturally and just creates gravity to the moments by being just honest in the moments.
Louis: I saw an image of him online in it and I was shocked he was out of retirement. My mutuals keep talking about how creepy he is.
1. Stockwell
2. Liotta
3. Ruck
4. Goodman
5. Brown
1. Noonan
2. Caine
3. Hauer
4. Chow
5. Bowie
Robert:
He's expertly creepy, and I'll admit there was a little something extra when I kept thinking "wait he sounds and looks familiar" but couldn't quite place it until the credits.
Louis: I couldn't find your thoughts on her anywhere
Louis: Could you give Psycho III a viewing.
So, quick question, does every song from "A Hard Day's Night" and "Help" count as original or are there some that don't?
Robert: Huh, you weren't kidding. It seems that the actor in question has entered the final stage of his career, which is to say Castlevania's Dracula.
Lucas:
Quick reiteration then, her performance is largely her chemistry with Gladstone which is very strong in creating the bond between the two through both warmth and the spark of excitement in those moments. I do think though the film slightly limits her since it barely deals with a pretty key thing her character does due to the film's swift wrap up.
Matt:
They need to actually be featured in the film at some point and be an original song to the album itself (not a reissue or a cover). For example "Yesterday" doesn't qualify because it's on the album but it's never actually in the film.
Louis: Your top ten scores and compositions by James Horner.
Louis: I haven't watched it yet but there is a Siskel and Ebert We Picked the Winners special for 1988 now on.
Louis: Your thoughts on Jon Chu’s direction for Wicked.
Louis: Could I have your thoughts on these original film songs?
"Zara Sa" from Jannat (2008) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsAOnmByy38&ab_channel=SonyMusicIndia
"Kabira" from Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHNNMj5bNQw
"Avijog" from Best Friend (2018) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CzMLuLwuZ00 (you can turn the captions on for the lyrics in this one)
1. Liotta
2. Stockwell
3. Brown
4. Goodman
5. Ruck
1. Noonan
2. Caine
3. Chow
4. Hauer
5. Bowie
Louis: What was your interpretation of The Brutalist's epilogue, and specifically, where do you stand on the matter of how much of Zsofia's speech we are to take at face value?
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