Best Scene: Final scene.
4. John Gielgud in Prospero's Books - Within a director's film Gielgud remains present and elevates its style with his refined yet fluid performance.
Best Scene: Constructing a romance.
3. Matthew Macfadyen in Pride & Prejudice - Macfadyen plays to the truth of a betrayed introvert in creating a more dynamic Mr. Darcy.
Best Scene: First declaration.
2. Tatsuya Nakadai in Kill! - Nakadai gives his own take on Yojimbo essentially and brilliantly finds his own alternative method of the clever badass.
Best Scene: Final fight.
1. John Heard in Chilly Scenes of Winter - Heard gives a captivating but also unnerving depiction of a man's privileged view of a relationship crashing with reality.
Best Scene: The breakup.
Next: The very brief waiting game.





4 comments:
Nice to see Heard go up to #2 for 1979, and for Ray to finally crack a Best Director lineup.
Louis: Ratings and thoughts on the cast of Devi (and where would you rank Chatterjee in Supporting), and your thoughts on the following scenes:
Opening
Kalinkar's Dream
Failing to convince Doyamoyee
Final confrontation/Ending
Nice. Glad to see the discovery I made with Chilly Scenes last year had an impact.
Louis: Disregard part of my earlier comment, I see you've ranked Chatterjee in Lead.
Hello Louis and folks
After the worst, now let's talk about the opposite: tell what was the best year in cinema?
For me, it's a tie between 1962 and 2007.
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