Saturday, 25 April 2026

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2004: Results

10. Daniel Wu in New Police Story - Wu makes for a pretty whiny and obnoxious villain. Not in a way that works either. 

Best Scene: Last "duel".
9. Cameron Bright in Birth - Bright delivers on the specific hollow note asked of him but never makes an impact beyond that. 

Best Scene: Being challenged.
8. Tim Meadows in Mean Girls - Meadows finds the right tone for the material hitting his comedic marks while still being believable. 

Best Scene: Riot control.
7. William Hurt in The Village - Hurt manages to deliver what dramatic heft he can from the tricky material even if it only allows him to go so far with it. 

Best Scene: Explaining his decision. 
6. Bud Cort in The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou - Cort gets the most out of his unusual role being both funny but also finding his own little arc as the surprisingly supportive "bond company stooge". 

Best Scene: Human being. 
5. Billy Bob Thornton in The Alamo - Thornton is the most interesting part of his film finding honesty in his deconstruction of man who knows he doesn't live up to his "living legend" status. 

Best Scene: Talking to Bowie. 
4. Nick Nolte in Clean - Nolte gives a very quiet and moving portrayal of man managing his own grief while also trying to honestly negotiate between family members dealing with the same loss. 
 
Best Scene: Important talk with his grandson.
3. Alfred Molina in Spider-Man 2 - Molina manages to thrive within the idea of the comic book villain while still providing essential grounding to provide balance. 

Best Scene: Finale. 
2. Peter O'Toole in Troy - O'Toole provides honest gravitas to tricky material and even more importantly emotional truth. 

Best Scene: Priam speaks to Achilles. 
1. Al Pacino in The Merchant of Venice - Good predictions Omar, Tony, Bryan, Shaggy, Tybalt, Tahmeed, Ytrewq, Luke, Robert, Harris, Maciej, Tim, RatedRStar, My top three of the year all are dealing with tricky material. O'Toole finding life in material that so many become stiff and awkward from. Hoffman finding genuine comedy even when so much of the attempted comedy around him is falling flat. Then Pacino who is in a slightly different situation in that he's dealing with Shakespeare however trying to accentuate a certain context many would argue was not intended in the original material. Pacino though excelling in this alternative approach and finding humanity within his "villain". Although I still settle on Hoffman. Because honestly being good in the bad comedy is a particularly rare occurrence and it's notable while I still found his film largely unfunny, I still laughed thanks to Hoffman. And really put say Dan Fogler, or even Jack Black into that role, I don't think they would've escaped the mediocrity let alone make the mediocrity into something that actually worked.  

Best Scene: "Do we not Bleed" 

Next: 1953 Lead

33 comments:

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Can't be mad at Hoffman keeping his win. Really hope Pacino gets a second win somewhere down the line...maybe '75? (just kidding, I know that's probably settled).

J96 said...

James Stewart - The Named Spur
Gregory Peck - Roman Holliday
Alan Ladd - Shane
Richard Burton - The Robe
Mel Ferrer - Lili
Bobby Driscoll - Peter Pan

J96 said...

James Stewart - *The Naked Spur

Harris Marlowe said...

Love that Hoffman kept his win.

For '53, I'm assuming Chishū Ryū in Tokyo Story is a shoo-in.

Harris Marlowe said...

Louis, could I get thoughts and ratings on Zoe Saldana, Diego Luna, Stanley Tucci and Kumar Pallana in The Terminal?

Luke Higham said...

Louis: My request is Rufus Sewell in The Illusionist.

Your Updated Female top 25s with ratings and other 4+ honourable mentions.

Luke Higham said...

Louis: Did Bardem go up a 4.5. And who was your lowest 4.

Luke Higham said...

Chishū Ryū - Tokyo Story
Charles Boyer - The Earrings Of Madame D.
Charles Winninger - The Sun Shines Bright
Jack Hawkins - The Cruel Sea
James Mason - The Man Between
Bonus: James Stewart - The Naked Spur

Luke Higham said...

Louis: I'll ask for thoughts on performances once 53 is up because I'll be asking for quite a lot.

Matt Mustin said...

I didn't win this round but I want to cash in my existing request for Delroy Lindo in Clockers (Supporting 95);

BRAZINTERMA said...

Charles Boyer - The Earrings of Madame de...
Vittorio Gassman - The Glass Wall
Trevor Howard - The Heart of the Matter
Chishū Ryū - Tokyo Story
Kazuo Hasegawa - Gate of Hell

Bonus: James Stewart - The Naked Spur

Robert MacFarlane said...

Only hope I have for 1953 is that Clift moves to first place this time.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Robert: Same here, one of my all time favorite performances.

Robert MacFarlane said...

Also think that Reed and Lancaster deserve upgrades (and honestly Sinatra to a minor extent). Granted, it’s a film that I hold dear, so I’m generally fond of everyone in it.

Luke Higham said...

Seeing Radcliffe 3rd from bottom in Lead is a genuine shock for me.

Matt Mustin said...

Robert: Yeah I never thought Sinatra was that bad.

Anonymous said...

Louis, rating and thoughts on Werner Herzog in Incident At Loch Ness. He's not listed in either ranking.

Tim said...

your thoughts on Sandra Hüller in Project Hail Mary? Also, i read that apparently James Ortiz is eligible for Supporting Actor

Tim said...

Also, i would like to request Richard Jenkins in Nightmare Alley

Matt Mustin said...

Tim: THANK YOU for that request.

RatedRStar said...

Louis: I always felt like Sinatra wasn't a 1.5 because I think From Here to Eternity is a great film and he isn't painful to watch, but I do accept that supporting actor 1953 isn't great, I think Palance is good though, I felt that Sinatra's big moment.... was actually Clifts moment.

Tony Kim said...

I'll request a review of Gabriel Byrne in Miller's Crossing.

Matt Mustin said...

Luke: All the Ocean's 12 guys are listed.

Matt Mustin said...

Tony: And thank you for THAT request, as well.

Tim said...

Matt: really hoping for him to become a five by then

Lucas Saavedra said...

Louis: Could you add Cameron Bright in Birth, Om Puri, Naseeruddin Shah, Pankaj Kapur and Piyush Mishra in Maqbool, Hiei Kimura in Nobody Knows, Kurt Nielsen in Pusher II, and Lekh Tandon in Swades to your ranking?

Luke Higham said...

Could you add Clive Owen in I'll Sleep When I'm Dead.

RatedRStar said...

Louis: Congratulations btw... any guesses to why?

Robert MacFarlane said...

Concerning Thewlis in POA: It's pretty obvious he was playing Lupin as gay, right?

Anonymous said...

Could you add the Coffee & Cigarettes guys to the overall as well?

Louis Morgan said...

Harris:


Saldana - 2.5(Honestly I think she has a slight awkwardness here. Not enough to be truly bad but there’s not a completely natural quality to her performance either. A performance that really is meant to achieve a very basic need of selling the subplot romance which she’s not terrible in all moments of but she’s not consistently believable either.)

Luna - 3(There to sell the same type of earnestness though I think he does it a little better in just playing up this naive kind of enthusiasm which there is a certain charm to him here that works.)

Tucci - 3(In many ways a thankless role as scripted his character is excessively a jerk to the point where it does stretch how believable it can be. Tucci I think manages to be decent but not great mainly by not going too far in selling the jerk nature. He does at least have some moments where’s not at that extreme even if he’s mostly playing that pompous note.)

Pallana 3.5(Manages to hit his comedic suspicion note more than decently in his early scenes before later segueing to theoretically to the most dramatic of the side characters technically. Which is not given too much depth but Pallana I think does bring the right kind of sincerity in that sudden passion in the man doing the right thing for the sake of someone else.)

Luke:

Actress:

1. Imelda Staunton - Vera Drake
2. Catalina Sandino Moreno - Maria Full of Grace
3. Maggie Cheung - Clean
4. Uma Thurman - Kill Bill Vol. 2
5. Kate Winslet - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
6. Ronit Elkabetz - To Take A Wife
7. Son Ye-jin - A Moment to Remember
8. Dana Ivgy - Or (My Treasure)
9. Zhang Ziyi - House of Flying Daggers
10. Nicole Kidman - Birth
11. Leleti Khumalo - Yesterday
12. Alexandra Maria Lara - Downfall
13. Irma P. Hall - The Ladykiller
14. Julie Delpy - Before Sunset
15. Audrey Tatou - A Very Long Engagement
16. Natalie Press - My Summer of Love
17. Holly Hunter - The Incredibles
18. Julia Jentsch - The Edukators
19. Ashley Judd - De-Lovely
20. Sibel Kekilli - Head-On

Supporting Actress:

1. Ziyi Zhang - 2046
2. Ronit Elkabetz - Or (My Treasure)
3. Tabu - Maqbool
4. Marion Cotillard - A Very Long Engagement
5. Emily Barclay - My Father’s Den
6. You - Nobody Knows
7. Cate Blanchett - The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou
8. Hannah Pikes - The Woodsman
9. Virginia Madsen - Sideways
10. Gong Li - 2046
11. Sophie Okonedo - Hotel Rwanda
12. Rosemary Harris - Spider-Man 2
13. Naomi Watts - I Heart Huckabees
14. Kirsten Dunst - Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
15. Jennifer Saunders - Shrek 2
16. Daryl Hannah - Kill Bill Vol. 2
17. Rachel McAdams - Mean Girls
18. Gayatri Joshi - Swades
19. Carina Law - 2046
20. Hanae Kan - Nobody Knows
21. Ayu Kitaura - Nobody Knows
22. Amanda Seyfried - Mean Girls
23. Momoko Shimizu - Nobody Knows
24. Dakota Fanning - Man on Fire
25. Yuen Qiu - Kung Fu Hustle - 4

RatedRStar:

You'll have to enlightenment me.

Robert:

Certainly more than some undercurrents one can take there.

Tahmeed Chowdhury said...

Robert: Thewlis himself confirmed it, and Cuaron encouraged the choice. Tonks debuted as a character in Order of the Phoenix, and her and Lupin's relationship only started being a thing from Half-Blood Prince onwards if I recall correctly.

LeonardFox said...

Tahmeed: 75' is the year, where I genuinely CAN'T choose. Pacino's work is amongst the most arduous and complex and technically accomplished performances ever(I genuinely got into acting because of this performance), whereas Jack's might be the most charismatic performance ever in the history of cinema. Both Nicholson and Pacino, are tied at number 1 for the greatest performances of the 70s, for me.