Showing posts with label Charles Melton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Melton. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 February 2024

Alternate Best Actor 2023: Results

10. Mads Mikkelsen in The Promised Land - Mikkelsen is ideal for the "western" lead here, playing stoic strength with ease, but then making such an impact as he reveals the hidden depths of the character. 

Best Scene: Reunion with Anmai. 
9. Michael Fassbender in The Killer - Fassbender covertly gives a hilarious portrayal of a man who believes himself to be the perfect assassin but is far from that. 

Best Scene: Poor estimate. 
8. Sōya Kurokawa in Monster - Kurokawa gives a dynamic portrait of the sides of the young boy we can't understand and slowly granting us that understanding with a real potent empathy. 

Best Scene: Playing it away. 
7. Charles Melton in May December - Melton seemingly is giving one performance as a man "content" in his existence and brings such a power to the crumbling away of that facade. 

Best Scene: Roof. 
6. Teo Yoo in Past Lives - Yoo gives a powerful though very subtle portrayal of the deep connections and romantic notions of a man who is separated by his love in more than one way. 

Best Scene: Bar.
5. Glenn Howerton in Blackberry - Howerton gives one of the most entertaining performances of the year by going all in portraying a business shark without a hint of shame. 

Best Scene: Doing it all in one day. 
4. Zac Efron in The Iron Claw - Efron gives a powerful portrayal of relatively simple man bottling up his emotions until they finally pour out. 

Best Scene: "I used to be a brother"
3. Andrew Scott in All of Us Strangers - Scott gives a heartbreaking portrayal of a man re-experiencing his grief and the complicated relationship with his parents in a most unusual way. 

Best Scene: Talk with dad.
2. Dominic Sessa in The Holdovers - Sessa gives an all time great debut, that avoids all the pitfalls of his role, while thriving in the risks he takes to give an entertaining and very moving performance. 

Best Scene: "I was going to say the same thing"
1. Kōji Yakusho in Perfect Days - Yakusho gives a perfect, often silent, performance that just embodies so much of the human experience, despite being also so very specific. 

Best Scene: Playing with shadows. 
Overall:
  1. Cillian Murphy in Oppenheimer
  2. Kōji Yakusho in Perfect Days
  3. Dominic Sessa in The Holdovers
  4. Andrew Scott in All of Us Strangers
  5. Paul Giamatti in The Holdovers
  6. Zac Efron in The Iron Claw
  7. Glenn Howerton in Blackberry
  8. Teo Yoo in Past Lives
  9. Charles Melton in May December
  10. Sōya Kurokawa in Monster - 5
  11. Michael Fassbender in The Killer
  12. Mads Mikkelsen in The Promised Land
  13. Benoît Magimel in The Taste of Things
  14. Manolo Solo in Close Your Eyes
  15. Eita Nagayama in Monster
  16. Jeffrey Wright in American Fiction
  17. Jason Clarke in The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial
  18. Nicolas Cage in Dream Scenario
  19. Joaquin Phoenix in Beau is Afraid
  20. Peter Sarsgaard in Memory
  21. Byung-hun Lee in Concrete Utopia
  22. Christopher Abbott in Sanctuary
  23. Song Kang-ho in Cobweb
  24. Jussi Vatanen in Fallen Leaves
  25. Joel Edgerton in Master Gardner
  26. Tom Blyth in The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes
  27. Michael B. Jordan in Creed III - 4.5
  28. Enzo Vogrincic in Society of The Snow 
  29. Gael Garcia Bernal in Cassandro
  30. Alberto Ammann in Upon Entry
  31. Anthony Hopkins in One Life
  32. Chris Pine in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves
  33. Franz Rogowski in Passages
  34. Harris Dickinson in Scrapper
  35. Barry Keoghan in Saltburn
  36. Christian Friedel in The Zone of Interest
  37. Michael Caine in The Great Escaper
  38. Dave Bautista in Knock At the Cabin
  39. Seydou Sarr in Io Capitano
  40. Riz Ahmed in Fingernails
  41. Alexander Skarsgård in Infinity Pool
  42. Soma Santoki in The Boy and the Heron
  43. Jay Baruchel in Blackberry
  44. Deniz Celiloğlu in About Dry Grasses
  45. Colman Domingo in Rustin 
  46. Thomas Schubert in Afire
  47. David Jonsson in Rye Lane
  48. Chris Pratt in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 
  49. Saleh Bakri in The Blue Caftan
  50. Shameik Moore in Spider-man: Across The Spider-Verse
  51. Tobias Menzies in You Hurt My Feelings
  52. Kelvin Harrison Jr. in Chevalier 
  53. Benedict Cumberbatch in The Wonderful World of Henry Sugar
  54. Paul Dano in Dumb Money
  55. Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning - 4
  56. Taron Egerton in Tetris  
  57. Jake Lacy in The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial
  58. Johnny Flynn in One Life
  59. Keanu Reeves in John Wick Chapter 4 
  60. Nicolas Cantu in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
  61. Brady Noon in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
  62. Shamon Brown Jr. in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
  63. Micah Abbey in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem
  64. Mamoudou Athie in Elemental
  65. Matt Damon in Air 
  66. Michael Fassbender in Next Goal Wins
  67. Kenneth Branagh in A Haunting in Venice
  68. Corey Hawkins in The Last Voyage of the Demeter
  69. Jorma Tommila in Sisu
  70. Park Seo-joon in Concrete Utopia
  71. Ralph Fiennes in Ratcatcher
  72. Timothee Chalamet in Wonka
  73. Jaime Vadell in El Conde
  74. John Boyega in They Cloned Tyrone 
  75. Adam Driver in Ferrari - 3.5
  76. Joaquin Phoenix in Napoleon
  77. Ryunosuke Kamiki in Godzilla Minus One
  78. Ethan Hwang in Riceboy Sleeps
  79. Dohyun Noel Hwang in Riceboy Sleeps
  80. Zachary Levi in Chicken Run: Rise of the Nuggets
  81. Denzel Washington in The Equalizer 3
  82. Joel Edgerton in The Boys in the Boat
  83. Paul Rudd in Ant-Man & The Wasp: Quantumania 
  84. Ezra Miller in The Flash - 3
  85. Jason Schwartzman in Asteroid City
  86. Harrison Ford in Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
  87. Vin Diesel in Fast X 
  88. Rupert Friend in The Swan - 2.5
  89. Leonardo DiCaprio in Killers of the Flower Moon
  90. Ben Aldridge in Knock At the Cabin
  91. Michael A. Goorjian in Amerikatsi
  92. Callum Turner in The Boys in the Boat
  93. John David Washington in The Creator - 2
  94. Bradley Cooper in Maestro - 1.5
  95. Charlie Day in Fool's Paradise 
  96. Ken Jeong in Fool's Paradise - 1
Next: 1945 lead, though will be on break until the Oscars. 

Monday, 19 February 2024

Alternate Best Actor 2023: Charles Melton in May December

Charles Melton did not receive an Oscar nomination, despite winning several critic's awards, for portraying Joe Yoo in May December.

May December follows an actress Elizabeth (Natalie Portman) as preps for a role by meeting and investigating a woman Gracie (Julianne Moore) who had a sexually inappropriate relationship with an underage child, and later married him.
 
Charles Melton previously is an actor I didn't really notice much in the few things I had seen him in, in fact didn't notice he was in them other than Poker Face, where he played a fine though not standout killer of the week. So hearing about his standout work in this film I was very much interested to see what exactly he had in him, in the role of the now aged former victim of sexual abuse, though married to his predator. And I'll admit watching it the first time I was still wondering in the early scenes of the film, where despite getting a bit more focus camerwise found Melton just kind of there in his early scenes where Elizabeth comes to visit and tries to get to know him and Gracie. Melton's performance frankly seems a bit bland as he goes about this seemingly doting around his wife as we see him. Always there for her to lie on and just laughs off a box of sent over crap, literally, as though it is standard procedure. Melton's performance doesn't seem to have much to it in these early scenes as he presents just a man just kind of doing whatever his wife wants and being the image of a potential "ideal" of someone who is doing whatever he can to support his wife. There is no complication in that rather he seems to be existing in this state of a  kind of created being, with a certain malaise underlying it all. As he speaks just in a subdued if not also unremarkable way, just being kind of well "there". Which might sound like I am currently tearing this performance a new one in my description of it all so far, but trust me I'm not. 

Rather, Melton's performance is creating the image for the outside of the man who seems to be compliant in his own former abuse by the way he just seems to be existing so calmly in this state. Although Melton's performance would seem bland, what it is doing is actually setting up for the shift. As his line deliveries are almost like afterthoughts of the man just barely putting himself into conversations between Gracie and Elizabeth. His manner is always different, he is always just there seeming to wait to be supported, and seemingly just alright with everything that is going on. It might seem boring in fact, but what Melton is doing is setting much up with this performance. By being a man of no importance it would seem, just going about his life as this near drone under the sway of Gracie. Although there are moments where Melton speaks just a little more in his performance, which seems to speak much more. When for example Gracie is less open to some of Elizabeth's questions, Melton's face denotes a quiet anxiety as well. When Elizabeth tries to ask him a few more questions early on, Melton's low key great though by actually playing it so stiff. In that what Melton's doing as he's speaking his lines with this kind of just functioning statements, and when pressed to analyze anything about himself such as the fact that he has college age kids at such a young age, Melton's little break and sudden hesitations gives the hint of that all is far from right with Joe, despite how he may seem much of the time. Perhaps the most staggering scene in this stage of his performance is the one with his father where their interaction couldn't be more distant, however outside of the watchful eye of Gracie, you see Melton's performance just slightly but profoundly to suggest a real sorrow, however a sorrow perhaps Joe doesn't entirely understand. 

Although all this would be maybe looking too much into this if there was a very exact and brilliant gradual change in Melton's performance as Joe the more Elizabeth interacts with him and the more she causes, if only for selfish reasons on her part, to think more about his past. When for example she asks about his habit of saving butterflies, Melton is great in the way we see the malaise partially remove itself from him as he lets out excitement about his quiet passion. Just a little bit and Melton's so good because he almost seems to be struggling against a kind of conditioning in every moment of the conversation. He's kind of showing himself but not fully. And we have more of this when Elizabeth asks him more for his side of the story where Melton is great in his run down of Joe's version of the events, which is an incredible mix in his performance between conditioning and seeming truth which he differentiates in his performance. When telling it as though he is somehow the one who wanted to be preyed on by a much older woman, Melton recites the lines as though very much Joe reciting his lines where each point seems so specifically said with this overdone calm and consideration for selling the perspective that has been brainwashed into him. Again when Joe talks a little more about his own family, having lost his mom and dealt with his distant father and his own problems with girls that were his own age. The emotion as he drifts to these lines suddenly feels real and more importantly suddenly feels very raw and powerful as he speaks these words as filled with so much more anxiety and more importantly truth. We see in the same scene from Melton the man who he truly is in what has happened to him and the man who has been "crafted' by Gracie. 

We see the contrast between Joe and Gracie, when she has a mental breakdown, and Melton portrays this sad sort of reduction of himself to be her "rescuer" every time and is a most frozen in arrested development. This is against when we see him with his adult children, where Melton portrays the "dad" at moments where you again see a break in his behavior. His interactions with them are more natural than with Gracie and you see the moment of seeming attempts at real happiness albeit broken in their way still. Something that comes out more when he talks to his son on the roof of his house and they both get high. Melton is great in the scene because in the moment, he shows the man unencumbered by any of the forced expectations put on him by Gracie. Melton's breakdown reveals more than just a guy not knowing how to deal with the drugs, rather a man seeing his emotions more directly for once. His delivery is so powerful because it is a man so sloppily coming out with any sense of self and trying to explain himself to his son. Melton brings such a seething desperation in the moment of just showing how truly broken the man is in the moment, and struggling to try to fully connect with his son beyond the confines of the mental prison Gracie has put him in. Melton shows the mess within the man's mind when he begins to face it, though what we see as the film progresses is the man coming more and more to terms with his mental anguish. Melton's performance basically shedding off that state we originally saw him in through the first act of the film, and we see the shifting in the man as he seems to be finally doing any reflection whatsoever on what was done to him at a young age. 

Part of this comes in when Elizabeth purposefully seduces him, seemingly just for her own research for her role and little else, where Melton's performance is great in the aftereffect of it because you see his reaction closer to like a teenage boy in the moment. You see suddenly shame reflect on his face and anxiety as you see him thinking about Gracie, though not as sadness but rather as an internalized fear. Melton though articulates so much pent up hesitation and frustration that speaks to a history of repression. When Elizabeth dismisses his whole life as "a story", Melton's performance is very effective in showing just how broken Joe is as he brings such a natural, unnatural quality, and by that we get this sense of adult like betrayal in his anger towards Elizabeth's blitheness, while also showing the sheer mess as he falls into this petulant childlike delivery of any line speaking towards thinking that Elizabeth cared for him. And with this Melton shows the man who doesn't want his emotions played with but also the boy whose whole idea of romance, attraction and sexual behavior is completely broken by what was done to him as a child. He's equally fantastic in the following scene with Gracie, where you see the man no longer in the sunken state but yes in the submissive state as he tries to talk to Gracie. Where he and Moore don't have chemistry of a romantic pair, rather you see consistently this state of manipulation. Starting with this meek way of trying to get beyond her control in her way and genuinely asking if he was too young to make the decisions she claims he made to pursue the relationship. Melton is heartbreaking because you sense the years of anxiety but also mental grooming he is struggling through as he shows deep down it is just a man looking for answers for this life of his, which Gracie treats only as an infraction. Melton is very moving then in his final scenes in the film where we see him with his daughter before graduation and you have the hint of a more complete man in the honest way he presents his love to his daughter. In the moment Melton shows the one part of Joe that isn't controlled or broken in any way and that's the love for his kids. With his final reaction to seeing his kids graduate high school being incredible work that offers an end to his character without words. As you see that love in his eyes, the man is moved as a man should be to see his kid, but this slowly becomes mixed in with all the trauma the man has gone through and is finally truly feeling as he breaks down in the moment so painfully though poignantly as you do see the joy of children with the suffering of his plight. This is great work by Charles Melton because what he does is present you with the surface idea, which he slowly cracks at then reveals the truth in his powerful portrait of man finally realizing his life is a lie.

Saturday, 10 February 2024

Alternate Best Actor 2023

And the Nominees Were Not:

Koji Yakusho in Perfect Days
 
Charles Melton in May December
 
Andrew Scott in All of Us Strangers
 
Zac Efron in The Iron Claw
 
Dominic Sessa in The Holdovers
 
Predict Those Five, These Five or Both:

Michael Fassbender in The Killer
 
Glenn Howerton in Blackberry
 
Teo Yoo in Past Lives
 
Sōya Kurokawa in Monster
 
Mads Mikkelsen in The Promised Land