Showing posts with label Joaquin Phoenix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joaquin Phoenix. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 June 2025

Alternate Best Actor 2017: Results

5. Josh Brolin in Only the Brave - Brolin gives a consistently good portrayal of a firefighter insistent on the importance of his duty. 

Best Scene: Final fight with wife. 
4. Kamel El Basha in The Insult - Although slightly limited by the narrative El Basha finds nuance and humanity beyond the symbol the screenplay sometimes forces him into. 

Best Scene: The apology. 
3. Vladimir Brichta in Bingo: The King of the Mornings - Brichta goes all in bringing an intense and dynamic energy even if the film doesn't always give him the best path to take. 

Best Scene: Removing the makeup. 
2. Jamie Bell in Films Stars Don't Die in Liverpool - Bell has one of the least interesting parts in this lineup making him all the more impressive through the nuance he consistently finds throughout. 

Best Scene: Final goodbye. 
1. Joaquin Phoenix in You Were Never Really There - Good predictions Ytrewq, Jonathan, Marcus, A, Luke, Anonymous, Tim, Matt, John Smith, Robert, Razor, RatedRStar, Calvin,Tahmeed, Emi, Shaggy & Harris. Phoenix gives an understated yet intensely powerful portrayal of a man defined by violence in a very particular way. 

Best Scene: The water. 

Next: 2017 Supporting

Note: I will be updating other rankings later as I want to re-watch a few films first. 

Monday, 19 May 2025

Alternate Best Actor 2017: Joaquin Phoenix in You Were Never Really Here

Joaquin Phoenix did not receive an Oscar nomination, despite winning CANNES, for portraying Joe in You Were Never Really Here.

You Were Never Really Here follows a hired gun as he gets involved with retrieving the kidnapped daughter of a state senator. 

Joaquin Phoenix is obviously an actor I have covered many times, and have covered him many times for playing men who are on some sort of extreme psychological edge. As Joe in this film this is yet another entry, yet an extremely unique entry within his oeuvre, and as I’ve written before, the great actor isn’t always about playing extremely different roles but rather finding compelling variation within similar roles. Within that idea Phoenix immediately crafts something quite different here as Joe than his earlier Freddie Quell or his later greatest hits rendition in Joker. It begins with his specific physicality and I will say while this is an expected element within Phoenix’s work in terms of an inclusion, it is completely different than expected in terms of execution. While Phoenix previously depicted Quell as the literally bent man unable to even physically stand like a healthy man, as Joe Phoenix reinvents that to create something I quite honestly wasn’t aware he could do, which is be physically intimidating. While Phoenix obviously bulked up for the role, it isn’t just that, rather the way he holds himself. Where Freddie was bent, here Phoenix reworks himself into that of essentially a lumbering brute, where all of the intensity he typically has is somehow all forced into himself as a singular shroud of protection. Phoenix wholly convinces at being someone you don’t want to reckon with, and while Phoenix has obviously been dangerous in other roles, it was usually as a live wire type situation, here, you can see him as a specific force. 

That brilliant physicality, which again just is wholly convincing and grants you something immediately new from Phoenix, it goes further as is common to Phoenix is a character dealing with trauma, but in this instance the reaction to that trauma is something quite a bit different. An overriding and callback to aspect of the character of Joe is his suicidal ideation, where throughout the film we see Joe play with methods of killing or harming himself. The film opens with a bag over his head to suffocate himself and soon afterwards, when visiting his elderly mother, he plays around potentially stabbing himself with a knife. Phoenix is incredibly disturbing in the way he handles these scenes, because there is no dramatic element to them either speaking towards intensity of the moment like say Riggs in Lethal Weapon, nor is it even say the way Freddie Quell is festering in his own anguish such as in the prison lash out scene from The Master. Rather Phoenix does something entirely differently by playing it as incredibly casually, which in terms is particularly off-putting. Phoenix portrays this unnerving comfort in Joe in these actions as though they are everyday occurrences for the man, because they are everyday occurrences. What Phoenix presents them as instead as his version, his very disturbing version, of playing with a stress ball, as he brings the same kind of matter of fact quality to these early moments, as a man who just uses that as part of his way of dealing with existence. 

There’s an idiosyncrasy within Phoenix’s approach here within his own turns but just performances in general, particularly within the revenge or vigilante genre. Phoenix makes Joe his own beast and even subverts your expectations of such a character in many ways. There is for example quite a bit of calm in his performance, and calm is usually something that denotes the badass in one way or another. While Joe has traits of such a type of character, the approach Phoenix takes ensures that you would never describe Joe as such. Part of it is the way this calm is more so the way he presents Joe as existing in his world as more so part of this near malaise of his existence that is burdened by unending trauma and violence. And in a way if you had a less intimate view of Joe, you could believe him as a badass when you see him interact with his liaisons, Phoenix delivers his lines with confidence of a man who knows the job and the routine. He has no questions or hesitations about it. Even when he goes about infiltrating the house where the senator’s daughter is being kept, Phoenix interrogates the runner for the house again as a man who is most efficient. Menacing even in his way of just so matter of factly requesting the information where the violence of the man is so innate in himself that Phoenix can barely raise a pulse in his questioning and getting set up to go in for the retrieval. Phoenix does command the space, but what he does is connect this to that same blasé manner towards his own suicidal tendencies, of a many with an eerie comfort towards death. 

That comfort to death extends to the particularly practical but also particularly brutal method of killing each time, which is largely with a hammer he buys at a hardware store. Where we see him go about his trade where Phoenix plays the sequence of killing all the men in the house with not exactly ease, but the same sort of approach someone might take to hammering down a ton of floor boards. It is absolutely routine for him, there is no weight in it, it is just what the man does. An approach that could seem like too little yet I found what Phoenix does here absolutely captivating in creating the idea of a man who in a way thrives with violence because internally he is filled with so much horror that to put it out externally is merely a continuation of that existence. As Joe is haunted by so many horrors of his own abuse as a child, the abuse of his mother by his father, death as a soldier, a mass grave in law enforcement, the man has more ghosts than people, and Phoenix is able to create this state within his performance. One where the horror is within his stare and even so within his consistency when he is killing or facing more death. Phoenix portrays someone so broken by his experience that he is a curiosity in himself and living still is also part of that curiosity. The only breaks whatsoever coming specifically from anyone who seems to try to present themselves to him in any way that isn’t violence. 

The moments where Phoenix breaks the state of Joe in any way are impactful through that consistency he crafts in his idiosyncrasy. As through his journey with his mother, we do see a loving if in no way untroubled son as he helps his mom out in her decrepit state. When he rescues the abused girl the first time, Phoenix says much in the moment where she first embraces him, then tries to kiss him. Where Phoenix in his subtle reaction creating how much any tenderness is more so a knife than what an actual knife would do to him, as he shows both surprise of the care and horror of her attempt to kiss him, stemming from her own mistreatment, where Phoenix reveals the broken psyche of Joe by how deeply each impact him, of course deeply within the malaise of Joe. The next break comes when after the initial rescue the plot gets murkier as the governor has her kidnapped again, trying to cut off all loose ends including Joe who barely escapes and finds that the men even went to his home and killed his mom. And there’s a powerful contrast between two scenes of when Joe sees his mother has been killed and when he “interrogates” one of the men who killed his mom. The former is again a rare moment of released emotion where we do see how much Joe still loves his mom even through the drama, and Phoenix is incredible in letting it eek out. It is amazing particularly since Phoenix often is so emotive, that it becomes so powerful in the way he artfully breaks the state of Joe’s mind only in these rare but impactful moments. And that is further emphasized by when, after wounding the man, asks the man if he killed his mom. Joe is back to his violence and state of perpetual trauma, and Phoenix is almost relaxed in the way he asks. Something that makes sense through Phoenix is realization of this particular state where more suffering is merely the norm. A powerfully shown element when Joe goes about weighing his mother in water and choosing her initially to join her in death by drowning himself. Phoenix’s portrayal creates the turning point of the man just going about accepting what he has been as there is comfort as he goes about his own death, until he sees a vision of the girl he did not save. Leading to the final act, where Joe seems to save the girl, who is him in so many ways, right down to how the plot realizes itself. However pivotal is the final release of his own defenses by seeing himself reflected in so many ways, and Phoenix doesn't suddenly go big. He’s remarkably small, still yet so incredible in the way he releases the emotions dormant, not as a pressurized valve, but rather this quiet erosion through the final scenes. Phoenix presents not a man with an understanding of any of it, or what to do with it, yet Joe cannot escape it. His final line delivery of repeating “it’s a beautiful day”, after being told so by the “rescued” girl, Phoenix is amazing in his underplay, of reaffirming, as an acceptance, yet in no way is it of renewed optimism or anything easy. Rather a man living within his fate of existence, as painful as it is, but speaking that it is what it is. I loved this performance by Phoenix, as much as it is a man on an extreme, Phoenix uncovers wholly new ground in crafting a different kind of tragedy and different kind of experience. Utilizing a more minimalistic and quieter choice, which pierce still so powerfully in creating captivating and unique portrait of a withdrawal of emotion rather than an explosion of it. 

Monday, 21 April 2025

Alternate Best Actor 2017

 And the Nominees Were Not:

Josh Brolin in Only the Brave

Vladimir Brichta in Bingo: The King of the Mornings

Joaquin Phoenix in You Were Never Really Here

Kamel El Basha in The Insult

Jamie Bell in Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool

Wednesday, 9 March 2022

Alternate Best Actor 2021: Results


10. Peter Dinklage in Cyrano - Dinklage delivers a properly impassioned and witty Cyrano, with the right nuance in his vulnerabilities though there are limitations within the film's presentation of the material.
 
Best Scene: Confrontation with Christian.
9. Nicolas Cage in Pig - Although I wish the film let him dive deeper, Cage gives a consistently captivating and quietly emotional portrayal of a recluse who is more than meets the eye.
 
Best Scene: Restaurant. 
8. Joaquin Phoenix in C'Mon C'Mon - Phoenix gives wonderful show of his range in his quietly human and warm portrayal of an average guy's connection with his nephew.

Best Scene: It's okay.
7. Amir Jadidi in A Hero - Jadidi gives a powerfully layered performance of a man who is endearing yet his smile hides a troubled soul.
 
Best Scene: Asking for the video to be deleted.
6. Caleb Landry Jones in Nitram - Jones gives a powerfully disturbing performance as a man who just does not relate to humanity the way most do.
 
Best Scene: "Hear to Heart" with his mom.
5. Dev Patel in The Green Knight - Patel gives a grounding performance for this fantasy, but also delivers so much more in his emotional and spiritual journey as Gawain.
 
Best Scene: The vision. 
4. Jason Isaacs in Mass - Isaacs gives a deeply powerful portrayal of a man's anger and sadness when coming to terms with his grief
 
Best Scene: Describing the shooting.
3. Simon Rex in Red Rocket - Rex gives an uncompromising yet wholly charismatic portrayal of a man who is intent on getting out of his hole by digging himself deeper into it. 
 
Best Scene: Hiding during the arrest.
2. Hidetoshi Nishijima in Drive My Car - Nishijima gives a deeply powerful and nuanced portrayal of man slowly coming to terms with his complex grief.
 
Best Scene: The shattered house. 
1. Bradley Cooper in Nightmare Alley - Good prediction Luke. Cooper gives an absolutely brilliant performance as the great Stanton, finding such variety in his grifts, such nuance in his self-loathing, and such power in his journey of a descent into a personal hell. I had to give Cooper the win here, he just had the biggest impact on me of any performance emotionally, while also being just so technically accomplished. If I didn't it would only be because I already gave him the win in supporting for the funniest performance of the year in Licorice Pizza. He left the biggest impact on me in both a leading and supporting turn, though in very different ways, but I can't deny that impact in either example. The funny thing is, frankly I probably was less positive on Cooper as an actor than many, though I certainly thought he was good actor. He definitely wasn't someone I looked upon as being "overdue" for me, so this purely based on the performances. And in this year, with these two performances, he has forced a new perspective upon me, as he's achieved greatness both dramatically and comedically.
 
Best Scene: "I was born for it".
Overall Ranking:
  1. Bradley Cooper in Nightmare Alley
  2. Benedict Cumberbatch in The Power of the Dog
  3. Hidetoshi Nishijima in Drive My Car
  4. Denzel Washington in The Tragedy of Macbeth
  5. Simon Rex in Red Rocket
  6. Jason Isaacs in Mass
  7. Dev Patel in The Green Knight
  8. Caleb Landry Jones in Nitram
  9. LaKeith Stanfield in Judas and the Black Messiah
  10. Cooper Hoffman in Licorice Pizza
  11. Reed Birney in Mass
  12. Daniel Kaluuya in Judas and the Black Messiah
  13. Amir Jadidi in A Hero
  14. Bo Burnham in Inside
  15. Joaquin Phoenix in C'Mon C'Mon - 5
  16. Nicolas Cage in Pig
  17. Adarsh Gourav in The White Tiger
  18. Andrew Garfield in Tick Tick...Boom
  19. Peter Dinkalge in Cyrano  
  20. Tim Blake Nelson in Old Henry
  21. James Norton in Nowhere Special
  22. Tahar Rahim in The Mauritanian 
  23. Stephen Graham in Boiling Point 
  24. Mahershala Ali in Swan Song
  25. Frankie Faison in The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlain
  26. Udo Kier in Swan Song
  27. Tom Holland in Spider-Man: No Way Home
  28. Michael Greyeyes in Wild Indian
  29. Timothee Chalamet in Dune 
  30. Woody Norman in C'Mon C'Mon 
  31. Riz Ahmed in The Encounter 
  32. Benedict Cumberbatch in The Electrical Life of Louis Wain - 4.5
  33. Vincent Lindon in Titane  
  34. Dan Stevens in I'm Your Man
  35. Cillian Murphy in A Quiet Place Part 2
  36. Yuriy Borisov in Compartment No. 6
  37. Luke Kirby in No Man of God
  38. Alex Wolff in Pig
  39. Stanley Tucci in Supernova
  40. Colin Firth in Supernova
  41. Jim Broadbent in The Duke
  42. Benedict Cumberbatch in The Courier
  43. George MacKay in Wolf 
  44. Frank Grillo in Boss Level
  45. Adam Driver in The Last Duel
  46. Daniel Craig in No Time to Die
  47. Adam Driver in Annette 
  48. Matt Damon in The Last Duel
  49. Clint Eastwood in Cry Macho
  50. Tom Holland in Cherry
  51. Adam Driver in House of Gucci
  52. Ralph Fiennes in The Dig 
  53. Idris Elba in The Suicide Squad
  54. Will Smith in King Richard 
  55. Anthony Ramos in In the Heights 
  56. Alessandro Nivola in The Many Saints of Newark
  57. Justin Chon in Blue Bayou
  58. Bob Odenkirk in Nobody 
  59. Kanji Tsuda in Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle
  60. Filippo Scotti in The Hand of God - 4 
  61. Jonathan Majors in The Harder They Fall
  62. Frank Grillo in Copshop
  63. Yahya Abdul-Mateen II in Candyman
  64. Gerard Butler in Copshop
  65. Tom Hardy in Venom: Let There Be Carnage
  66. Hugh Jackman in Reminiscence  
  67. Tim Roth in Bergman Island
  68. Dave Bautista in Army of the Dead - 3.5
  69. Jason Statham in Wrath of Man
  70. Benicio Del Toro in No Sudden Move
  71. Don Cheadle in No Sudden Move
  72. Jude Hill in Belfast 
  73. Hilmir Snær Guðnason in Lamb
  74. Oscar Isaac in The Card Counter 
  75. Leonardo DiCaprio in Don't Look Up
  76. Will Brill in Test Pattern
  77. Matt Damon in Stillwater
  78. Jack Dylan Grazer in Luca
  79. Jacob Tremblay in Luca
  80. Simu Liu in Shang-chi and the Legend of the 10 Rings
  81. Denzel Washington in The Little Things
  82. Trevante Rhodes in The United States Vs. Billie Holiday
  83. Lucas Hedges in French Exit
  84. Ansel Elgort in West Side Story
  85. Elijah Wood in No Man Of God - 3 
  86. Dwayne Johnson in Jungle Cruise
  87. Eddie Murphy in Coming 2 America  
  88. Jake Gyllenhaal in The Guilty 
  89. Ed Helms in Together Together
  90. Aidan Gillen in Those Who Wish Me Dead - 2.5
  91. Javier Bardem in Being the Ricardos 
  92. John David Washington in Malcolm & Marie 
  93. Jermaine Fowler in Coming 2 America 
  94. Keanu Reeves in The Matrix Resurrections 
  95. Ryan Reynolds in Free Guy - 2
  96. Rami Malek in The Little Things 
  97. LeBron James in Space Jam: A New Legacy
  98. Lewis Tan in Mortal Kombat - 1.5 
  99. Daniel Ranieri in The Tender Bar
  100. Tye Sheridan in The Tender Bar - 1
  101. Ben Platt in Dear Evan Hansen - Wiseaus
Next: 1997 Lead (though I won't be starting until after the Oscars.)

Friday, 25 February 2022

Alternate Best Actor 2021: Joaquin Phoenix in C'Mon C'Mon

Joaquin Phoenix did not receive an Oscar nomination, despite being nominated for a few minor awards, for portraying Johnny in C'Mon C'Mon. 

C'Mon C'Mon is a well told simple tale of a semi-estranged Uncle taking care of his nephew while his sister deals with her troubled husband.

Joaquin Phoenix recently won an Oscar for his "greatest hits", the quotations are very important to note there, collection of his work in Joker, which represented kind of a more generalized form of Phoenix's exceptional ability at playing men either in the midst of or currently having a mental breakdown. His performance here is a wonderful change of pace from that as he plays Johnny who really is just an average guy more or less. Phoenix isn't portraying this guy who has suffered so deeply, he's suffered, but more so in a way most people do more or less. Although it is hard to say how Phoenix is as himself, as someone as guarded and awkward as he is in interviews more so indicates a guarded person who struggles to present his natural state, it seems perhaps we might be getting closer to such a person here as Johnny. In way therefore it is an achievement of Phoenix to in a way not play a performance that is built upon a deep character flaw or some other element to start a state of manner as the surface of the character that hides a deeper trauma. Phoenix instead while not extroverted per se here, his work isn't about diving into the deep dark core of the man, it is rather just being a man. What I think here then is a challenge for Phoenix, or at least the potential for Phoenix to in a way silence any naysayers who think he needs to be mannered to deliver fine work. This as there is none of this, no different physical manner, no different type of speaking voice, this seems to be Phoenix as he is, or if not Phoenix is damn amazing at constructing someone who feels like just a normal man. Either way doesn't matter because this is just a performance to be treasured for its straight forward intention of just being a man dealing with a situation in life. 

Phoenix is wonderful as we follow Johnny as he comes to see his sister Viv (Gabby Hoffmann) and his nephew Jesse (Woody Norman). Why is he wonderful, because it feels just simply like a brother seeing his family. Now there is some great articulation of the history here, of course. The way Phoenix is around Jesse initially is with a warm curiosity of someone who knows his nephew but he hasn't been around for awhile. Phoenix with Hoffmann is pitch perfect in creating the ease of a sibling dynamic. This just in the way they speak to one another has the ease of two people who have been talking all their lives, and there is the right lack of formality about it, even as she speaks to the difficult situation involving her husband Paul(Scoot McNairy)'s mental problems. Phoenix's delivery of the reaction to this isn't casual in the way of man who doesn't care, rather he shows a brother who knows his sister and just naturally speaks to her as he would anyone. The following morning as he takes on full Uncle duties for the first time, Phoenix's approach is fantastic in showing the man kind of walking into the scene with a bemused interest. He shows someone who doesn't quite know what to expect, but is willing to find out. This even with the slight bafflement at his nephew's choice to play loud classical music, which indicates that his nephew who by all signs has autism, Phoenix so beautifully accentuates this natural sense of learning about his performance. Phoenix finds that with the right combination between this kind of moment of hesitation, not of a genuine reluctance but rather having a moment to take it in. 

What the film becomes is based around the relationship between Johnny and Jesse, though we do get glimpses to Johnny's past with his sister Viv, including their minor falling out based on their choices around the death of their mother. Although really what is a relatively brief montage, it is powerfully realized by both Phoenix and Hoffmann as just in the singular scene you get all of their troubles and anxiety in this brief snippet of a moment. Phoenix portraying just the sort of adamant and narrow intensity of grief while trying to be as kind to his mother as, likely suffering with dementia, as possible. With this we also see the siblings combating with one another and both really excel in just being basically so real in presenting the frustrations, often frustrations without intelligent logic but just emotional distress that defines them. We also get glimpses about Johnny's state as a single man as he speaks about his moments of mistakes in both his personal romantic relationships and with his sister. In moments that really are not about big emotions, but really just about quiet nuance, Phoenix is incredible. And again so remarkable to see an actor who often is about the emotional extremes, excels in portraying what are intense emotions so quietly. Phoenix just speaking in the calm reflection that speaks some regret and pain, however as a man who knows how to take it in and deal with it, he brings such a poignancy through such an ease in his performance.  
 
The central relationship is the key to the film and is so much within Phoenix's portrayal of this really average guy in so many ways dealing with Jesse whose habits aren't the typical childhood behaviors, as Johnny takes Jesse to various places as he records interviews for a radio documentary about kids' views. Phoenix's work really is fantastic just by so well articulating this relationship both the growth of it but also more intimately the complexity of it. We get really this in two ways per sequence as we get both Johnny dealing directly with Jesse and then verbally reflecting by documenting his thoughts afterwards. What's great here is the way both Phoenix and Norman in these scenes in a way portray both connection and disconnection, often in the same scene because of Jesse's unique emotional and communication needs. Phoenix in a singular scene can go from moments of just warm sort of playful manner of trying to keep Jesse on point and trying to be the responsible guardian. In the same moment though this can shift to a tired exasperation which he plays so well as often just being tired but tired respectfully. Phoenix showing Johnny just trying to keep up with his nephew in a way. Phoenix manages to make a completely natural combination between devotion and pure exasperation. Phoenix makes it such a natural state, and in turn gives these scenes such an honest life to them. 

When there is a bigger moment then, like Johnny's fear and anger when it seems like Jesse has run away from him for a moment in a store, or later in the streets of New York, Phoenix not only makes them totally earned, he's also just amazing in them. The raw emotions are wholly real in Phoenix's performance and making the more intense frustrations tremendous. What I think is most notable is that Phoenix in these moments brings an intensity that feels innate to Johnny without in a way falling onto that more expected intensity Phoenix can do. It is great work by calling up the kind of intensity that is true to this kind of more normal sort of man, which shows Phoenix's remarkable range. And that is so much of this performance which is just articulating everything, though with a sensible attempt at calm. The changes to frustration towards Jesse are minor but palatable. Phoenix brilliantly crafts the chemistry with Norman by in a way having Norman set the state of the scene by portraying Jesse's particular difficulty in relating to a moment, whether it is ealing with his own emotions or struggling to see why he might trouble someone else. Phoenix is pitch perfect in just making these moments then so real, and so honest in the interactions filled with just a beautiful truth of the relationship. It really is never so simple as the Uncle growing in his love of his nephew, though that certainly can be felt, but rather it is articulating his way of being able to find connection with someone whose natural state makes it a lot tougher. Phoenix in turn was such strong casting in a way, not only because he's so talented, but also because he can say so much in a given scene. What's amazing though as instead of showing the extreme harrowing state of a broken man in The Master, he instead explores the still extremely detailed emotions of just this simple human connection of Uncle and nephew. 
 
Every scene in the film becomes its own little gem just because Phoenix and Norman's chemistry is just that good. Whether that be in the moments of misunderstandings, frustrations or simple understandings. The film really isn't about big moments that define their relationship, except for one at the end, but rather every little moment between them. And in every little moment you get such a moving sense of the connection that slowly develops between them, and through that such they articulate that understanding of both Uncle and nephew. The big scene as much as it is a break in a way, it does wholly work thanks to the strength of the performances. Phoenix's work here works in basically portraying Johnny as his most direct and in a way now knowing exactly how to connect with Jesse, which is to be expressive and encourage outward expression. Phoenix's delivery of its okay for things to be not fine, is great as he yells them but as this encouraging yell to get Jesse to know its okay to be frustrated at times. It wholly works, but so does the quieter and truly poignant moment of embrace afterwards as Phoenix so genuinely presents the loving warmth Johnny has for his nephew, who he can now successfully connect with it in this way of his. This is a great performance by Joaquin Phoenix, that is one of his least showy in at least a traditional sense, but just establishes that Phoenix does have to have all that to deliver a fantastic turn. It's just a subtle yet wholly powerful turn that based on the little moments that add up to a whole lot.

Thursday, 24 February 2022

Alternate Best Actor 2021


And the Nominees Were Not:

Bradley Cooper in Nightmare Alley
 
Nicolas Cage in Pig
 
Joaquin Phoenix in C'Mon C'Mon 
 
Amir Jadidi in A Hero
 
Dev Patel in The Green Knight 

Predict those five, these fives, or both: 

Hidetoshi Nishijima in Drive My Car

Jason Isaacs in Mass

Simon Rex in Red Rocket

Peter Dinklage in Cyrano

Caleb Landry Jones in Nitram

Tuesday, 9 November 2021

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2000: Results

10. Jeremy Irons in Dungeons & Dragons - The best part of his atrocious film, however doesn't achieve the true brilliance of a performance of its ilk.

Best Scene: Blood in the sky.
9. Lucas Black in All The Pretty Horses - Brings a moving authenticity that is bluntly missing from the rest of his film.

Best Scene: Being taken off.
8. Stephen Tobolowsky in Memento - Tobolowsky in his brief screentime finds the humanity in his odd state.

Best Scene: Insulin.
7. Sean Connery in Finding Forrester - Connery one last time brings out his actor in delivering a properly charismatic yet also troubled turn as a recluse.

Best Scene: Explaining why he is recluse.
6. Kyle MacLachlan in Hamlet - MacLaclan gives a powerful portrayal that manages to modernize the role of Claudius while also mine the greatness of the character in his traditional form.

Best Scene: Limo phone call.
5. Song Kang-ho in Joint Security Area - Song gives a brilliant portrayal of man who puts on a facade of the cold soldier, and reveals the empathetic human within.

Best Scene: The Event.
4. Joaquin Phoenix in The Yards - Phoenix proves his measure early on here in his remarkable and intense portrayal of a wannabe gangster coming to terms with himself. 

Best Scene: Final scene.
3.  Emilio Echevarria - Amores Perros - Echevarria gives a terrific portrayal of man struggling with empathy so naturally seguing from a broken animal lover and a callous hitman.

Best Scene: Finding the dogs.
2. Paddy Considine in A Room For Romeo Brass - Considine delivers an absolutely stunning debut turn that manages to be equally every bit of the mess of a man both terrifying yet also heartbreaking.

Best Scene: The threat.
1. Malcolm McDowell in Gangster No.1 - Good predictions Razor, Ytrewq, Shaggy (X2), and Brazinterma. McDowell delivers a proper ferocious portrayal of a vicious gangster, yet is also oddly heartbreaking in his portrayal of a man realizing the meaningless of his life.

Best Scene: "Number one"

Next: 1955 Lead

Wednesday, 27 October 2021

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2000: Joaquin Phoenix in The Yards

Joaquin Phoenix did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Willie Gutierrez in The Yards. 

The Yards is James Gray's Mean Streets I suppose, though it might owe the most to On the Waterfront, this about the seemingly more level headed, recently released ex-con, Leo (Mark Wahlberg), who gets deeper into the criminal level due to his more unpredictable friend Willie (Joaquin Phoenix). Superior to his Little Odessa, particularly in what can be admired, though also similar it doesn't quite match its seeming ambitions. 
 
Now a flaw right off the bat in the film is found in the imbalance in the central casting, much like We Own the Night, where Joaquin Phoenix is in another league from Mark Wahlberg, though I think Wahlberg is better here overall. Phoenix, in what is both his banner and breakout year, delivers his best performance from his trio of turns in the 2000's. This as Phoenix delivers a fully confident performance here in the role of Willie, a criminal with certain ambitions who we initially meet as Leo's friend who is more than eager to get the man back into the life. Phoenix delivers the right confidence here inherent for such character and needed to convey his stature, or attempted stature within the life. Phoenix has that natural bravado and just manner of the man seemingly within his state, unlike Wahlberg's Leo who seems somewhat out of place, both intentionally and to a degree unintentionally. This is exacerbated by Willie's girlfriend being Leo's cousin Erica (Charlize Theron), who Leo is obviously in love with since Gray like many dramatists is clearly from Shelbyville. 

Phoenix though delivers what you would want from a character like Willie, and in many ways suggests his most potent elements as a performer that he would call on far more regularly in his most recent and remarkable efforts. That side of Phoenix though is here, though I think really realized in a fascinating way here as Willie because he does not make it the initial basic state. In fact he does create enough of a likability as the friend initially, there is enough of a charm he brings and just attempted endearing manner as he pulls Leo back into things. Phoenix delivers that vibrancy of the character and you get a real sense of the wannabe gangster in every moment. This in that you do believe his relationship with Erica beyond vanity, and even with it with Leo beyond that point. Although Phoenix doesn't hide the obvious bad influence that is Willie, he also wholly convinces us of his appeal. This as the little grin that Phoenix brings is just the sense of status as he makes every deal, but in his eyes though there is the further ambition that drives Willie. This quickly driving Willie to kill an associate at a rail-yard, while Leo gets accosted by a cop leading him to become accidentally the center point of the investigation, and here we get perhaps the bread and butter of modern Phoenix.

Phoenix of course doesn't disappoint in revealing the killer edge in hectoring the railway worker, in fact we see why he is such a tremendous talent in the moment. This delivering that incredible intensity of his with such ease, and in turn showing us the vicious edge of Willie without exception. Phoenix though goes further though in the nuance of the moment though showing as much as his killer intent is natural for Willie, in his eyes there is the sense of fear really with having gone beyond the pale. This made clearer in his conversation with Leo shortly afterwards over the phone, where Phoenix's delivery of screen is really masterful in that he grants this kind of perfunctory conviction in explaining the killing, while also still conveying the cracks in Willie's confidence as this criminal. Phoenix is wholly captivating in creating this conflict within the character, and in a way makes Wahlberg's performance's limitations all the more obvious. This as Leo's conflict seems so thin, while Phoenix just brings us this wholly tangible man in this situation from every moment. This as Phoenix never lets a scene merely be, as each moment he keeps alive the history of Willie's mistake from there on. I particularly love a tender moment he shares with Erica shortly afterwards, as Phoenix says barely anything yet you wholly understand the tensions just wearing down his face as Erica speaks of the future, and Willie can only think of the immediate present. 

Where an obvious flaw of the film comes in is as we follow between Leo and Willie both dealing with the fallout of the night, and one is absolutely captivating, while the other is less so. Sadly the former is less focused upon, nonetheless Phoenix steals the film wholesale in creating Willie's journey as he deals with his murder and tries to keep himself up within the situation. This is to the point that the success of a given scenes is maybe a little too dependent on whether or not Phoenix is in it. This is as Phoenix is so gripping in creating the complexity of the man who is largely morally onerous, yet not entirely. It is in that gray area (No pun intended), where he makes Willie such a compelling figure here. This as every point, including when the heat moves to Leo from him, Phoenix speaks as the man compromising however he never makes it so easy within his physical performance. Phoenix conveys the fear, the weakness, but also the actual concern in the man. His falling apart and turning on Leo, particularly as his relationship with Erica is revealed more obviously to him, I think honestly could've seemed more pedestrian if not for Phoenix's consistently potent work here. Phoenix as much as he in the end is playing the villain, never portrays him as such. His final moments of showing the man completely falling into despair within where his actions have left are genuinely heartbreaking. This is due to Phoenix's complex work that creates a detailed sense of this man. His flaws most certainly but also the humanity behind that weakness.

Thursday, 7 October 2021

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2000

And Nominees Were Not:

Emilio Echevarria in Amores Perros
 
Kyle MacLachlan in Hamlet
 
Malcolm McDowell in Gangster No. 1 (and to continue to contemplate his placement)

Stephen Tobolowsky in Memento

Sean Connery in Finding Forrester

Predict those Five, These Five or Both.
 
Joaquin Phoenix in The Yards

Lucas Black in All The Pretty Horses

Jeremy Irons in Dungeons and Dragon

Paddy Considine in A Room For Romeo Brass

Song Kang-ho in Joint Security Area

Tuesday, 21 January 2020

Best Actor 2019: Results

5. Joaquin Phoenix in Joker - Phoenix delivers some fantastic individual moments in his film though the shortcomings of it limit his work and in some points send it in the wrong direction.

Best Scene: Asking for his file.
4. Jonathan Pryce in The Two Popes - Pryce makes use of great casting to give a charming and engaging turn that goes beyond the somewhat surface realization of Pope Francis offered by the screenplay.

Best Scene: Having made his confession.
3. Antonio Banderas in Pain and Glory - Banderas effectively shows off his range to give a subdued but captivating portrayal of the emotional state of his film director living through so much of his past, in the present.

Best Scene: Meeting his old lover.
2. Leonardo DiCaprio in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood - DiCaprio gives one of his best performances, in his wildly entertaining portrayal of the various roles of Rick Dalton, and the amusing fragile state of the actor.

Best Scene: Dalton in the trailer.
1. Adam Driver in Marriage Story - Good predictions Lucas Saavedra and Robert MacFarlane. Adam Driver gives a great performance that is based on creating such a naturalistic, intimate and vivid portrayal of a man's journey through a very painful divorce.

Best Scene: The argument.

Next: 2019 Alternate Supporting

Best Actor 2019: Joaquin Phoenix in Joker

Joaquin Phoenix won his Oscar from his fourth Oscar nomination for portraying Arthur Fleck who becomes the titular character in Joker.

Joker features a pseudo origin of the famous Batman villain, through the story of a mentally disturbed rent-a-clown who dreams of becoming a stand-up comedian.

Joker is the film that has captured the stupidity of many. I say as someone who typically respects most opinions as long as they are spoken with logic. Logic though was not to be seen with so many around this film, in so many different spectrum of thought, taking an aggressively foolish approach to this film, many of these before they even saw it. This with a odd pioneering of the film, or a near demand of censorship of it with similar hysteria behind them, with the most extreme and bizarre notion of so many that violence was sure to come from the film. That last element being quite disgusting honestly, with strangely so many, who likely would've condemned such thoughts for other films, for whatever reason fell into them for this film. Well all I can say is that is a whole lot of noise, for what is kind of a thin forgettable film, that looks nice, when you break it all down. This as re-watching the film, after only a few months, I was surprised by how much of the film I had not remembered, which is rare for me, but perhaps testament to the limited amount of substance. I believe when I first wrote of the film I described it as effective, though I did not get into much more detail than that. Well I will stand by that in the sense, that when the violence does happen you take notice, but it is of such a perfunctory nature that it fails to leave an impression beyond the first blood splatter.

The one element of the film I suppose I didn't forget was what I am here to write about, that being Joaquin Phoenix, who is such a great actor that he would struggle to give a truly forgettable performance, Irrational Man aside. This taking on the role of the Joker, that certainly feels like an actor's playground as it allows one to go to such an extreme. Brilliantly so in the last Oscar nominated Joker turn in Heath Ledger's take on the clown prince of crime, less so as Jared Leto's wannabe gangster doofus. Phoenix's performance though differs from all other cinematic depictions of the Joker in that in his role is not of a super villain, or even a true career criminal, it is as a disturbed man. The nature of the disturbance is when the film begins to vex me a bit, but at least it lets me finally get into Phoenix's work a bit. Phoenix is of course no stranger to the extreme of humanity, offering several brilliant performances this decade alone that focuses on idiosyncratic traumas. So here, this role is something Phoenix can thrive in, and he does. One should not hand wave Phoenix's work here because we know he can pull something like this off, that is indeed true, but if this was the first time we saw some of these scenes from him, they would be impressive on their own. A lot of this might not be something new from him, but it is still something he can pull off that most cannot.

Take the opening scene of the film where we see his Joker, named Arthur Fleck preparing for his day of workman clowning, you know that average job most people have. Anyway though we get to see Arthur preparing in a mirror attempting to fashion his own smile with a fingers, while a deep sadness that penetrates his eyes. That is well performed by Phoenix and we get this generalized idea of pathos here. We see his first bad day on the job as those anti-sign hooligans steal his sign, always a problem, and proceed to beat him, because there's nothing worse than those gangs of anti-clown, anti-advertisement people. There is nothing there but a scared man wasting away as Phoenix portrays the reaction to the first attack. We get the defeated Arthur as he saunteres home, well conveyed again by Phoenix in his poor postured, and trudging gait of a man who seems to be in the margins of it all. This whole thing is vexing me in one way that I will get to, but there is something else more obviously vexing in the meantime. This as we learn of Arthur's laugh. A well performed guttural laugh by Phoenix that he delivers in a pained, nervousness of a reflexive response rather than a genuine giggle. This is supported as such as a card informs us it is from a neurological condition. That's all well and good, certainly well realized by Phoenix, but then we see the same laugh typically used in a more sociopath way, where Arthur laughs at inappropriate times, thinking it is the time to laugh. This could be the card lied to us, or it could be lazy writing, for some reason I think it is probably closer to the latter.

Again the idea of the sort of synaptic response, is an interesting idea, particularly as performed by Phoenix, but the film doesn't quite stay true to it, as it just is Arthur's laugh the rest of the time. Anyway though we see Arthur at his home with his mother Penny (Frances Conroy), who calls him "Happy" and he treats with great affection. Nonetheless we see him fantasize about being called a surrogate son by late night talk show host Murray (Robert De Niro). A scene that is from King of Comedy, but it has De Niro in it, so I guess that makes it an homage. Anyway, Phoenix again portrays another potentially effective strand of an idea in the fantasy scenes where he delivers his line as though he is a 1st grader reciting an essay about how he loves his mom. It is earnest, yet disturbing, however this sort of stunted mental state, really required by the dialogue of the scene "I've been the man of the house for a long time", however doesn't really invest itself towards a general idea other than being a general off-putting sort of idea. Phoenix pulls it off, but it goes into the film's list of things that make Arthur a generally eerie sort, there for the sake of it, which is rather vexing. This breaks, very quickly, technically speaking as Arthur is accosted again, by those anti-clown, pro-Broadway, rich hooligans, they're worse than the anti-sign crowd let me tell you. They not only take the time to attack you, they also bother to regale you with Sondheim when doing it, that's rough man. And you know, Arthur, now armed with a gun, can't take it much either, as instead of being the beaten down man we see in the opening we see his expression burn towards a hate, before violently reacting by killing all the men.

We are given enough for that snap in a way, even if it comes perhaps too early in a narrative sense, in that Phoenix does exude the desperation of the man effectively, particularly in his scene with a social worker. This where he speaks of his bad thoughts, Phoenix filters each word with a deep seeded anxiety and anguish that does develop a sense of the man's broken state of mind. This idea of the man at this lowest point then who seems to find his "calling" through violence is disturbing enough. This with though usually set up by having Phoenix dance, obviously to show those Broadway hooligans, that dance is superior to song, or perhaps to show him embracing his life. His very first dance scene in clown makeup, realizes this sort of an effective way at least on Pheonix's end, as the film itself seems like director Todd Phillips didn't know how to get from one scene to the next he went, "uhhh Phoenix dance again, it's artistic!". Phoenix to his credit does find something in the moment as this release of emotion, after the first killings, and at the end of it becoming this triumphant Joker stance, that alludes to that more sinister calling. The film though then detours a bit as we get caught up into a subplot where Arthur tries to find out if he's the son of Thomas Wayne or not. This again falling into the film's way of kind of just running through different ideas then really having a proper narrative flow, though I guess you do get a bit of an acting showcase for Phoenix.

Well at two ends I suppose as one we get a scene where he introduces himself to Bruce Wayne, where he does a clown routine of some cheer though creepy due to the context of who he is. We then get another scene of him confronting Thomas Wayne about his assumed paternity situation. This where Phoenix actually gets a little strangely whiny and makes the situation less palatable. He gets to make up for that though in the scene where he decides to track down the information for himself at Arkham Asylum from a clerk (Brian Tyree Henry). This may be the best scene in the film as it is actually filmed in a way to capture both what Phoenix is doing and the reaction to Phoenix in Henry's performance. A consistent problem in the film in the way it so constricts the view around Phoenix it actually limits his impact in a way. This as he speaks about his changes in mind having "lost it" as he speaks about doing bad things. Phoenix is excellent in this moment in being truly chilling in the confidence in which he speaks of again the man seeming as though he has found his purpose. In turn Henry is also provides an essential element in the scene in his slow realization of terror as he begins to understand what Arthur is talking about. It is a great moment for Phoenix as he manages to really grant the sense of the creation of a much darker fiend in that instance. This is even followed up by another great scene for Phoenix anyways, where he discovers the apparent truth that he was adopted into an abusive situation that caused his brain injury. There Phoenix does excel in capturing the shattering reality in his emotional breakdown, and with that intensity that only Phoenix really can bring.

The film then kind of wanders around a bit more though as that subplot finishes with unceremoniously murders his mother, mainly because we barely see a reaction from Conroy in the moment. Of course again the killing is so soon, that really that subplot is there to fulfill the need for more screentime, until we get to the film's ending, with no real sense of purpose within these developments. This being as the film vexes me in how it introduces elements, the laugh, the firing, the murders, the fake relationship with a neighbor, his childhood, so many things, but with so little meaning. This more of creating funnels for shocks and extremes for Phoenix to play. One of those comes in his next murder, this time killing an old co-worker, who betrayed him, in front of another one who was friendly to him. Again Phoenix's portrayal of the vicious hate of the murder is striking enough, the scene itself is the one funny, though very darkly so, moment in the film as it plays around with whether or not he's going to kill the other co-worker. This as we get the spirit of the other Jokers when he fake lunges at the other man, and in that moment Phoenix delivers that unpredictable terror effectively. That scene in a microcosm, honestly has potential, but in this film it is another scene among scenes. Speaking of, we then get him becoming the joker again in dance, though this time a little sillier, maybe don't over do it Phillips, as some the steps become a bit goofy, as it is one time too many perhaps. If this sounds like a meandering review, well this sums up the film for me, that is just a lot of stuff that happens, and Phoenix is there to wrangle it basically through his talent. I mean imagine the Jared Leto starring version of this film, a terrifying prospect I know, but there you can see the success but also the waste of what Phoenix is bringing here.

Not done yet though as we must see him visit the Murray show, where we get Phoenix's worst scene, but not without quality. This as we see him waiting to go on the show, his festering hate that builds as he is made fun of, is palatable within Phoenix's eyes. The same is as he is speaking to Murray, and he speaks of Murray's cruelty towards him. In that very much his incisive eyes are indeed horrifying as you see a true killer's sense, though with also the wrenching anguish of all that the man has suffered as well. This although though is within Phoenix truly playing the Joker I guess, which is to play every line with this whiny "I hate the world" inflection to every line delivery and overwrought flamboyance. It doesn't help that his lines in this scene are downright terrible, but it is one scene where the film's awfulness really rubs into Phoenix's work as well. This as it is the one scene where Phoenix loses Arthur to what feels like a detached showboating that doesn't feel naturally built on what he had been doing throughout. I do think Phoenix gets to make up for this slightly, with his more interesting portrayal of the Joker personality in just the confidence as he watches the chaos of the city, and speaking of his enjoyment. There his mania is far more disturbing as we see a more natural transition from the desperate man to the man whose found his way through horrible acts. This is even capped with one more dance, that while gratuitous, is more so in that vein. It is really just a repeat of his dance after the first killing, but again  Phoenix does find an effectiveness in the creation of this Joker that feels like a natural transition for Arthur, as opposed to that prancing one we saw on the Murray show. This is a good performance by Joaquin Phoenix, as he does often make the protagonists journey tangible, and it definitely has great moments that only could be delivered by Phoenix's immense talent. The raw materials for an unforgettable portrayal of the character are there, they just don't quite come together due to a script without depth and a director who cannot point Phoenix in the right direction nor properly make use of his performance.You know, maybe actually bother to you know, direct him. Crazy, I know.

Saturday, 18 January 2020

Best Actor 2019

And the Nominees Are:

Leonardo DiCaprio in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Joaquin Phoenix in Joker

Adam Driver in Marriage Story

Jonathan Pryce in The Two Popes

Antonio Banderas in Pain and Glory

Sunday, 9 June 2019

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 2013: Results

5. Nawazuddin Siddiqui in Lunchbox - Siddiqui's work effectively turns his character from a purposefully thin caricature trying to impress, to a honest protege trying to learn.

Best Scene: Being chewed out for his mistakes. 
4. Colm Meaney in Alan Patridge: Alpha Papa - Meaney plays right into his wheelhouse, effectively so, being the right irascible straight man of sorts to Steve Coogan's daffy title character.

Best Scene: "Always on my Mind"
3. Bill Nighy in About Time - Nighy captures just the right tone for the material in his easy going approach that finds both the humor and the heart in the material.

Best Scene: Last chat. 
2. Lily Franky in Like Father, Like Son - Franky delivers a completely naturalistic turn that offers such a wonderful and authentic contrast to Masaharu Fukuyama's leading turn.

Best Scene: Hurtful suggestion. 
1. Joaquin Phoenix in The Immigrant - Good Prediction Michael McCarthy, Luke, Charles, BRAZINTERMA. Maciej, and Calvin. Phoenix delivers one of his best turns, in his ambitious performance that captures his film's tone so beautifully, and so powerfully creates a complex portrait of a liar.

Best Scene: Only taste poison.
Updated Overall

Next Year: 1963 Lead