Showing posts with label Thomas Jane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Jane. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 May 2022

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1997: Don Cheadle, John C. Reilly, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Thomas Jane & Alfred Molina in Boogie Nights & Philip Seymour Hoffman in Hard Eight

Don Cheadle did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Buck Swope in Boogie Nights

Don Cheadle in this film in a way might be part of what makes it as great of a film as it is. Obviously, the main story of Dirk Diggler (Mark Wahlberg) as he makes his way through the porn industry is fantastic, but it is all the little stories that add up together that might make this film as special as it is. The thing is Cheadle in a way you could argue is the most superfluous to the main story, because he associates very little with Dirk, and really most of his scenes are in isolation from many of the other characters. He never feels superfluous though because of just how good his story is and how good Cheadle is in his part. What Cheadle's Buck does provide is contrast. Most characters are broken in a fundamental way and their porn industry behavior is typically seeking acceptance, where they find great success in that industry. Well with Cheadle he's actually probably the most well-put-together person in the film, but the most out of place in the industry. Cheadle brings a wonderful amiable quality with his performance. There's just an innate pleasant optimism that Cheadle expresses as basically his character's default manner. When we see him in snippet moments his manner towards others is always appreciative, always genuine, and always like someone who wants to just be good and see good things happen to others. His delivery without circumstance is that of a light affability, of a man who really does love life and hopes for the best for everyone. 

Where his conflict comes in his profession as an "actor" as he would say it, where he really struggles to find his voice as we see early on as he attempts some cowboy phase and later some dread-locked wig. He's just not a guy who really has the obvious place in the "industry". Cheadle is terrific in these moments because he shows them very much as just the attempt to make something work. He initially brings an eagerness to them, but there's also just this eventual shift towards this certain resignation. Cheadle embodies within his performance just the presence of a man who really is probably in the wrong line of work, even though as the ever optimist he tries hard to do his best. Cheadle again is wonderful in the moments with Buck's eventual wife, and fellow porn star Jessie St. Vincent (Melora Walters). Unlike many other relationships in the film, there is nothing broken in this one. They both find the right chemistry of just two people who genuinely bond and love each other. They have a great simplicity in their interactions that emphasize just people without the complication of needing the relationship due to some personal weakness, rather than need each other just because they love each other. In turn, we learn of Buck's real passion, which is to open a stereo store. Again Cheadle is great by brimming with this pride and energy about the idea, he shows a man with a real dream, and it is a moment in the film where you wholly believe this person in a way that rarely comes up in this film filled with delusion. 

Of course, that isn't to say that Buck fully escapes the common flaw as we find him in a scene attempting to get a loan for his store, with his now pregnant wife. Cheadle is amazing in this scene because he shows both a man who is absolutely one hundred percent earnest but still lives within a definite delusion. Cheadle making his case is great because unlike when say Dirk states his delusions, such as the magic on his eventual attempted musical record, you laugh, but with Buck, you don't. This is because Cheadle shows that within his delivery someone who just wants to live out his simple dream, and in his eyes being attacked for his work one can see it hurts him deeply. Even Cheadle's repeated statements that he is "an actor", while a denial, does feel wholly sympathetic because although the statement is a delusion the way that Cheadle plays is someone absolutely telling the truth. The truth is that he is honestly pained for judgment, again as a man who just wants to be happy and for other people to be happy again. We see this even in one of his last scenes which is a stroke of luck/horror, as a brutal robbery goes down that he just happens to walk into. Cheadle's reactions in the scene are great as his plea for no shooting is blunt care for any human life, and in turn, his reaction to genuine trauma is perfect of a man who would rather see no one gets hurt even if it becomes his eventual gain. Cheadle's Buck again is a side character, but he brings you into every moment of his reflection of the main story of Dirk. Cheadle realizes someone who really does know what he wants, a store and a family, and really just is in the wrong line of work for himself. He's one of the few characters who never rage for his place or turns on someone, rather he so poignantly just someone finding his own place of happiness, in a way other people in his world couldn't even begin to approach. 
John C. Reilly did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Reed Rothchild in Boogie Nights. 

I must apologize for my earlier dismissals of this performance as just good limited performance. Now, this is an understandable mistake because Reilly really is rarely the focus of any given scene, he's the guy who's not Dirk, the secondary also-ran who is in the industry but isn't exactly new the star. Reilly though truly puts the value invaluable player, because shows what can be done in just bringing whatever one can bring in the limitations of a part. Reilly is just a ball of hilarity and the extent of his hilarity only gets better the more one watches the film. His initial scenes actually put him in opposition to Dirk in their first discussion together as they attempt to one-up each other. Reilly's delivery of explaining himself as looking like Han Solo with the perfect kind of unabashed straightforwardness makes it as though it would be obvious to anyone who can look perfect. What is only more perfect though is his extremely childish demeanor as he and Dirk attempt to top each other in various feats of strength and so-called accomplishment. Reilly is great because doesn't play it man to man trying to outmatch each other, rather they are so good at being so childlike in their attempts to basically say "nuh-uh" I'm stronger. It's a hilarious bit of work with both finding just the right chemistry in showing two rather thick-headed men meant for each other. Reilly naturally segues into basically Reed accepting his place, not as the lead that Dirk replaces, but rather Dirk's forever sidekick. In this state Reilly is just a ball of hilarity in every moment he is onscreen. There are just so many little moments of Reilly just adding a little bit to a scene through his mere presence, whether that be his enthusiasm that so brilliantly matches Wahlberg's as they come up with a new series of films, his properly bad porno acting, or his moments of being the ever-supportive friend to Dirk. There isn't a moment that Reilly wastes in terms of his performance that just adds a bit more comedy. One of the best scenes showing this approach is when he and Dirk runoff from the industry to try to break it into the film industry. Watch everything that Reilly does in this sequence and you will see a masterclass in the ways of comedic supporting acting. Even the way Reilly starts to mess with the soundboard with curiosity is hilarious before being shooed off. His reaction though as Wahlberg gales everyone with "You got the touch" so perfectly not quite in tune, is true comic greatness in his dancing that seems to say whatever Wahlberg is doing is the greatest thing achieved by man. Reilly though is what makes a funny bit, truly hilarious as that dance of his just adds the level of delusion and ridiculous to proper comic gold. The same is Reilly's own attempt at singing, which Reilly is actually quite great at, in reality, is perfectly inept but what makes it so funny, is that level of confidence on Reilly's face as he sings his duet with Dirk. Now in this sequence, you do get one of the few Reedcentric scenes for Reed where he tries to argue with the studio's owner to get their tapes. Reilly's delivery is marvelous because it is only with the utmost confidence that he refers to their terrible music as "Magic on the tapes". He underlines it with the right desperation, but so the key is just how much conviction he finds just as he stumbles through a spectacularly terrible attempt at trying to convince the owner of it.  Reilly brings, which is wholly hilarious in every way. Again Reilly mostly isn't the focus but he doesn't need to be, this is a performance that rewards you on repeat viewings just to see the bits of comedy Reilly is doing off to the side as Reed just goes along with Dirk's misadventures. A highlight of this is the rock bottom drug deal, where Reilly's reactions are again gold in pure disbelief and comic fright as the two have to run away from a lunatic. Even the way Reilly runs into some bushes to escape shows just how to do that in a way that just looks funny. Reilly again is all about little bits, but little bits that add up magic on film...or at least that's how Reed Rothchild might describe it. 
Philip Seymour Hoffman did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Scotty J. in Boogie Nights nor did he receive one for playing the craps player in Hard Eight. 
 
I decided that I might as well include not one but two of the early, essential, and sadly all too brief collaborations between PTA and PSH, which seemed a legendary pairing in progress when sadly the latter died so prematurely. Both of these performances show the ease of the collaboration, as in each role Hoffman's role is relatively limited but nonetheless gives the great actor a chance to leave an impact. Hoffman reveals his range just in these two disparate roles that are of very different men. Scotty is a hanger-on boom mic operator on films that is more than a little affectionate towards the new leading man in Dirk Diggler. Hoffman's physical work here is fantastic as just the way he stands with his hunched shoulders, the way he looks with squinting anxiety, and moves just with this nervous hesitation reveals someone filled with desperation. Hoffman just stands out like a sore thumb in the right way, like someone in any given scene who doesn't quite fit in even in this world of misfits. He brings the right intensity of energy of want and needs to fit in though. His delivery is filled with so much attempt to be upbeat that the act of "please like me" is almost too obvious in that state. Hoffman portraying not a fellow coworker of Dirk, but the biggest fan of his possible, as his eyes are filled with admiration but more so need. Hoffman just is on this constant edge of man so desperate to fit in and please, which becomes most obvious when he shows off his new car to Dirk. Hoffman's face just brimming with pride, but also this intense attachment to Wahlberg throughout the moment as though he's made the perfect choice to make Dirk like him. Scotty then darting straight to trying to kiss Dirk Hoffman brings all the needed awkwardness at a moment's notice. Hoffman goes all in with the moment as though it is an irresistible urge and that he's trying to enact some perfect plan that Scotty had in his head. Hoffman is properly sloppy in every regard of someone unable to connect at the moment despite being so desperate to do so. Hoffman is great than at the moment after Dirk leaves, who actually was relatively nice in his turn down of Scott's advance. Hoffman though portrays no solace but rather just another defeat, and there is something so striking and raw as Hoffman's delivery of "I'm so stupid" is just filled with so much pain of a man writhing, of a man who wasn't exactly up before. Although his work is relatively brief Hoffman is terrific in creating such a sense of the hanger on that is Scotty, and the need in him to find something in this world, even if he mostly finds failure. Although let's also talk about this work as the craps player, which is no longer than 4 minutes, but just might be the best scene in PTA's feature debut. Hoffman shows his strength as a great actor really if you just compare the two characters at a fundamental physical level of his work, as you look at Scotty for a moment, you instantly think insecurities, you look at the craps player you see someone very comfortable in their life, maybe too comfortable, and in both Hoffman instantly shows you a type without a word.
Hoffman brings here as the craps player a frat boy energy who initially dismisses Philip Baker Hall's career gambler Sydney as "Oldtimer". What you get here is in Hoffman is showing what someone can do, as his choices here really are just so inspired in giving so much character, in who is technically a throwaway character in the scheme of the film. This brings this rude bravado however even though he's playing another level as he seems to be scanning Sydney as this intriguing man. His work then as he waits to play by lighting a cigarette with his playful singing as this initial taunt, but a kind of taunt that alludes to a kind of fascination with the person he's trying to mess with. When Sydney throws down a massive bet, Hoffman's reaction is amazing as the gravity of the bet hits him in just the way his face falls into revealing the sudden pressure that Sydney's put on him. Hoffman laughs now with this kind of defense but now his manner is even more of genuine interest as Sydney's revealed himself as a power player in the casino. Hoffman's performance that was a dismissing frat now has this energetic devotion to throwing the dice as he tries to get Sydney's hard eight bet. Hoffman now shows the young man totally into kind of the madness of the bet and his eyes this kind of pressure of the young man now hoping to do right by the old man he quickly dismissed earlier. I love Hoffman's final moment after missing the bet, still laughing to act as though it didn't hit him too hard, yet there is a real sadness. When saying "hey big time I'll buy you a drink" it is with this respect and even apologetic manner as the craps player has been changed in a matter of a single scene, and really via a single bet. Hoffman delivers what has to be described as great acting, because what makes the scene special, what makes the moment special, is really just all in what Hoffman does, all the shades of this guy in a single moment, you get a strong feeling for this random player, and makes for someone who is fascinating to watch for a brief time. It could've been truly nothing with a different actor, with Hoffman he made it something special. 
Thomas Jane did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Todd Parker in Boogie Nights. 

Thomas Jane plays a fringe player within the fringe world that the main character already inhabits. A man who appears as Diggler and others get more addicted to drugs and he shows up to provide said drugs on the regular. Jane, who later become better known for more straight-laced stoic turns, delivers one of those pre-type against type performances that are always fascinating in alluding to a very different side of a performer. Here you'd never Jane to become pegged as the stoic any man, instead, he just exudes the quiet desperation of a man living on the edge of the edge, right down to his mustache that just seems to scream the state of a man who isn't quite sure what exactly to do with himself. There's in this the right innate intensity, making him different from Scotty, as someone who is embedded in a kind of rougher existence that leaves him in a strange place. Jane's work just properly embodies the "bad friend" who suddenly appears in a drugged state and is all too ready to provide the direction for all to get even closer to rock bottom. The key to Jane's work though is he speaks of the suggestion to Dirk and Reed to take the plunge with this unearned confidence of a man who has accomplished something, which isn't the case for Todd. Of course, before we can talk about that path to rock bottom we must talk about...

Alfred Molina did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Rahad Jackson in Boogie Nights. 

Alfred Molina is one scene of Boogie Nights, and given it just might be the best scene in the film, it deserves more than a little time. We come across Rahad Jackson via Todd's rock bottom reaching method of him, Dirk, and Reed, going together to con the drug dealer Rahad by selling the man false cocaine. Now technically this role is functional, but the greatness of the scene is that Molina's work as Rahad is anything but. We enter into truly a world of his own as Rahad only wearing underwear and a bathrobe, listening to the hits of the day, along with his stoic bodyguard and his "lover/friend/something else?" who is silent except for his repeated tossing of a lit firecracker every so often. That is already a lot to take in and Molina is all the more. Molina right from the outset evokes someone who truly is in his own world in the sheer sort of innate jubilation of the man, who seems like he is always at least slightly high but also strangely high on life. Molina is great because he basically is portraying that Rahad, to Rahad, is living his very best life. When he starts singing along Jessie's Girl, even richly proclaiming that the singer Rick Springfield, is a "buddy of mine", Molina is in this state of sheer jubilation. There's something strangely magnetic in Molina's odd dance and far from perfect singing of a man who is just adoring every moment of this experience that is his life. When the trio of fools at first are living, at least Reed and Dirk, I adore Molina's delivery of "ah you just got here", because he shows that Rahad really just wants to party with them at this moment, he has absolutely no ulterior motives even as the other two men and especially Todd does. Speaking of Todd, Jane's performance is great as he starts out his plan, where Jane says the initial words as though he's planned to say these words a hundred times in just how exact, with the brilliant choice of just being a bit too quiet, showing that even as calculated as it is, his execution is already a bit off. Jane's then delivery of Todd's request for what's in Rahad's master bedroom is great as in his eyes there is just a man whose completely gone, just as he's so affixed to his intention at the moment, that he can't quite notice it as his intensity is also filled with such tremendous desperation. This is best exemplified by Jane's perfect stutter as he assures Dirk he knows what he's doing and really that stutter alone shows he doesn't know. Matching this is Molina's great reaction of disbelief as he hears of Todd's demand. Molina's fantastic by showing it as a genuine moment of disbelief actually towards Todd with his "like really" expression towards someone he just expressed friendship too. I love more though Molina's less convincing "don't worry about it wave" when Dirk and Reed try to explain that they're not in on the robbery, as Molina shows that Rahad is already switching gears to a more brutal drug dealer. Todd pulls out his gun giving two equally great moments from Jane and Molina, with Jane, basically crying in revealing just how gone Todd is into nothing, while Molina runs off with this maniacal laughter. Molina that returns in this rage of insanity as Rahad starts shooting anything that moves, and Molina is outstanding in oozing a mania that can be only defined by being fueled through a strong mixture of narcotics and adrenaline. Molina is beautifully insane through the moment, genuinely menacing while being oh so entertaining in showing Rahad completely off the bend. Jane delivers a memorable turn in creating the drug addict who is too rock bottom even for those at rock bottom, and does suggest perhaps he was often cast in the wrong roles later on. Molina here just delivers a proper one scene wonder, in that everything he does here is absolutely mesmerizing in his portrayal of a deranged drug dealer, it is all off the wall in the best way possible, leaving one of the strongest impressions on the film that is already filled with so many memorable moments and characters.
(Jane)
(Molina)

Saturday, 30 April 2022

Alternate Best Supporting Actor 1997

 And the Nominees Were Not:

Dan Aykroyd in Grosse Pointe Blank
 
Masato Hagiwara in Cure

Cary Elwes in Liar Liar

Bruce Greenwood in The Sweet Hereafter

J.T. Walsh in Breakdown
Nor were they the Boogie Nights All Stars:
 
Don Cheadle
 
John C. Reilly
 
Philip Seymour Hoffman
 
Thomas Jane

Alfred Molina
 
Predict the ranking of both sets, if you like. 

Thursday, 22 February 2018

Alternate Best Actor 2017: Results

10. Thomas Jane in 1922 - Jane delivers a solid turn in granting a curious yet honest life to his very peculiar character that manages to realize the strange state of the man without devolving into caricature.

Best Scene: A ghastly messenger.
9. Christian Bale in Hostiles - Bale's work here has the raw materials of a great performance yet he is consistently ham strung by the film's underdevelopment of every facet of his character's journey despite Bale's best efforts to sell them as this hardened soldier.

Best Scene: Burying his friend.
8. James Franco in The Disaster Artist - James Franco manages to go a bit further than just providing a hilarious impression of the strange and enigmatic Tommy Wiseau, as he does find enough of a depth within the nearly impenetrable character. 

Best Scene: Too many questions. 
7. Sebastian Stan in I, Tonya - Stan delivers a great performance here as he manages to not hold back in his depiction of the casual cruelty of a insecure man, but at the same time delivers a very funny portrayal of a fool.

Best Scene: News of the attack.
6. Jeremy Renner in Wind River - Renner delivers a brilliant turn here going against the expected approach for his role, and creating a different yet wholly convincing portrayal of a man dealing with his losses and the idea of retribution.

Best Scene: Way to make peace.
5. Robert Pattinson in Good Time - Pattinson gives a truly magnetic turn here that matches the kinetic pace of the film by so effectively realizing this man who will do anything to solve his problems except for the right thing.

Best Scene: The back of a police car.
4. Song Kang-ho in A Taxi Driver - Song carries this film every step of the way through his incredible performance that manages to begin as an amusing lightly comedic turn that naturally transitions to a heartbreaking portrayal of a man bearing witness to an atrocity.

Best Scene: A different kind of song.
3. Hugh Jackman in Logan - Jackman ends his tenure as Wolverine on a high note far beyond the original expectations of the role. Jackman expands beyond the limits of the past performance to give absolutely heartbreaking portrayal of a man coming to terms with his age and loss, and facing the responsibilities in his place as a "superhero".

Best Scene: So this is what it feels like. 
2. Ryan Gosling in Blade Runner 2049 - Gosling delivers a masterful performance in his creation of this exact state of the replicant that seemingly is now more machine than man. His exploration of the extent of this, and the ability to change within this context is realized with such a true poignancy by this flawless performance.

Best Scene: The memory is real. 
1. Harry Dean Stanton in Lucky - Good Predictions Lezlie (x2), Charles (x2), Tahmeed, Omar (x2), Luke, Robert(x2), Nguyễn Ngọc Toàn, and RatedRStar, I will say this is not a clear cut case for me in the slightest as I hold Gosling and Stanton's performances in equally high esteem. It would pains me to deny other one the top spot. On any other day I could side towards Gosling as both of these performances are among the best of the decade. Nonetheless my #1 is Harry Dean Stanton for his swansong performance that couldn't be a more perfect send off for the actor. It is one more chance just to appreciate his one of a kind screen presence and talent with this tender, funny, and incredibly moving portrayal of man coming to terms with his age and mortality. 

Best Scene: "You smile." 
Overall Ranking:
  1. Harry Dean Stanton in Lucky
  2. Ryan Gosling in Blade Runner 2049
  3. Daniel Day-Lewis in Phantom Thread
  4. Joaquin Phoenix in You Were Never Really Here
  5. Hugh Jackman in Logan
  6. Robert Pattinson in Good Time
  7. Simon Russell Beale in The Death of Stalin
  8. Song Kang-ho in A Taxi Driver
  9. Jeremy Renner in Wind River
  10. Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out
  11. Steve Buscemi in The Death of Stalin
  12. Nikolaj Coster-Waldau in Shot Caller 
  13. Ethan Hawke in Maudie
  14. James Franco in The Disaster Artist
  15. Liev Schreiber in Chuck
  16. Jamie Bell in Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
  17. Vladimir Brichta in Bingo: The King of the Mornings
  18. Jake Gyllenhaal in Stronger 
  19. Steve Carell in Battle of the Sexes
  20. Laurence Fishburne in Last Flag Flying
  21. Tom Cruise in American Made
  22. James McAvoy in Split
  23. Joel Edgerton in It Comes at Night
  24. Chris Pine in Wonder Woman
  25. Denzel Washington in Roman J. Israel, Esq.
  26. Christian Bale in Hostiles 
  27. Sam Elliott in The Hero
  28. Harris Dickinson in Beach Rats
  29. Gary Oldman in Darkest Hour
  30. Steve Carell in Last Flag Flying
  31. Timothée Chalamet in Call Me By Your Name
  32. Andy Serkis in War for the Planet of the Apes
  33. Kamel El Basha in The Insult
  34. Michael Fassbender in Alien Covenant
  35. Levi Miller in Better Watch Out
  36. Thomas Jane in 1922
  37. Robert Redford in Our Souls At Night
  38. James McAvoy in Atomic Blonde
  39. Bill Pullman in The Ballad of Lefty Brown
  40. Vince Vaughn in Brawl in Cell Block 99 
  41. Kyle Mooney in Brigsby Bear
  42. Brian Cox in Churchill
  43. Chris Hemsworth in Thor: Ragnarok
  44. Shawn Yue in Mad World 
  45. Masaharu Fukuyama in The Third Murder
  46. Kevin Harrison Jr. in It Comes at Night
  47. Dave Franco in The Disaster Artist
  48. Richard Gere in Norman
  49. Josh Brolin in Only the Brave
  50. Pierce Brosnan in The Foreigner
  51. Lior Ashkenazi in Foxtrot
  52. Sherwan Haji in The Other Side of Hope
  53. Sakari Kuosmanen in The Other Side of Hope
  54. Claes Bang in The Square
  55. Rajkummar Rao in Trapped
  56. Domhnall Gleeson in Goodbye Christopher Robin
  57. Kenneth Branagh in Murder on the Orient Express
  58. Ben Whishaw in Paddington 2
  59. Tom Holland in Spider-man: Homecoming
  60. Ben Stiller in The Meyerowitz Stories 
  61. Colin Farrell in The Beguiled
  62. Sul Kyung-gu in The Merciless
  63. Ross Lynch in My Friend Dahmer
  64. Douglas Booth in Loving Vincent
  65. Adam Driver in Star Wars: The Last Jedi
  66. Jacob Tremblay in Wonder
  67. Stephen Curry in Hounds of Love 
  68. Ben Mendelsohn in Una
  69. Ansel Elgort in Baby Driver
  70. Adam Driver in Logan Lucky
  71. Traci Letts in The Lovers
  72. Josh O'Connor in God's Own Country
  73. Charlie Hunnam in The Lost City of Z
  74. Adam Sandler in The Meyerowitz Stories
  75. Ewan McGregor in T2
  76. Ben Stiller in Brad's Status 
  77. Jaeden Lieberher in The Book of Henry
  78. Dan Stevens in The Man Who Invented Christmas
  79. Daniel Giménez Cacho in Zama
  80. Miles Teller in Only the Brave
  81. Woody Harrelson in Lost in London
  82. Will Arnett in The Lego Batman Movie
  83. Keanu Reeves in John Wick Chapter 2
  84. Fares Fares in The Nile Hilton Incident
  85. Cosmo Jarvis in Lady Macbeth
  86. Josh Gad in Marshall
  87. Colin Farrell in The Killing of a Sacred Deer
  88. Anthony Gonzalez in Coco 
  89. Sverrir Guðnason in Borg vs. McEnroe
  90. Elijah Wood in I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore
  91. Chadwick Boseman in Marshall
  92. Andrew Garfield in Breathe
  93. Channing Tatum in Logan Lucky
  94. Miles Teller in Thank You For Your Service
  95. Dan Stevens in Beauty and the Beast 
  96. Bryan Cranston in Last Flag Flying
  97. Nahuel Perez Biscayart in BPM
  98. Géza Morcsányi in On Body and Soul
  99. John Cho in Columbus  
  100. Kumail Nanjiani in The Big Sick 
  101. Jackie Chan in The Foreigner 
  102. Keith Stanfield in Death Note
  103. Chris Pratt in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
  104. Adel Karam in The Insult
  105. Michael Caine in Going in Style
  106. Alan Arkin in Going in Style 
  107. Jason Sudeikis in Colossal
  108. Joel Edgerton in Bright
  109. Sam Claflin in My Cousin Rachel
  110. Arnaud Valois in BPM
  111. Aleksey Rozin in Loveless
  112. Will Tilston in Goodbye Christopher Robin
  113. Noah Jupe in Suburbicon 
  114. Hugh Jackman in The Greatest Showman
  115. Guy Pearce in Brimstone
  116. Tom Hanks in The Post
  117. Matt Damon in Downsizing 
  118. Will Smith in Bright
  119. Liam Neeson in Mark Felt
  120. Taron Egerton in Kingsman: The Golden Circle
  121. Javier Bardem in Mother!
  122. Im Si-Wan in The Merciless
  123. Morgan Freeman in Going in Style
  124. Vin Diesel in Fast 8
  125. Luke Evans in Professor Marston and the Wonder Women
  126. Justin Timberlake in Wonder Wheel
  127. Matt Damon in Suburbicon
  128. Ben Affleck in Justice League 
  129. Tom Hiddleston in Kong: Skull Island 
  130. Michael Fassbender in The Snowman
  131. Jason Segel in The Discovery
  132. Ali Fazal in Victoria & Abdul
  133. Brad Pitt in War Machine
  134. Mark Wahlberg in All The Money in the World 
  135. Nat Wolff in Death Note
Next Year: I'm taking a break until the Oscars, but the next year after that will be 2008 lead.

Monday, 19 February 2018

Alternate Best Actor 2017: Thomas Jane in 1922

Thomas Jane did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Wilfred James in 1922.

1922 is an adequate enough Stephen King adaptation, although I think the story probably could have been handled as just a segment in a horror anthology film, about a farmer taking a most unorthodox method to maintain his house and home.

1922 is very much in the vein of classical Gothic horror, southern Gothic in this case, as Stephen King does a sort of a variation on Edgar Allen Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart", though here with the lead of Thomas Jane's Wilfred James as a simple farmer type. Jane being no stranger to a King adaptation however this time in a very different role as the central lead. Jane's whole performance is fashioned as a different kind of perspective in this lead character who he takes on his peculiar journey. Jane plays the part more akin, though with more depth mind you, to a character who would more likely be a side character used as part of the atmosphere of a typical horror story. This includes Jane playing the part with a thick southern drawl, and his whole physical manner being of a man of the earth type. Jane emphasizes a certain simplicity in this in the way he speaks so bluntly even with his technically colorful accent performance wise, however Jane fashions it to be a naturalistic aspect of this man of this time and place. His whole performance embodies this man who is made to be part of the earth in a way in his comfort in the rural land, in his simple gait, stoic manner and that pronounced droop in his lip that fills perpetual frown of contentment worthy of a man who lives his rougher life through the land and very happy to do so.

The initial conflict from the film then comes from his wife's desire to move from the farm, due to the value of the land they own, and move into the city. This is with or without Wilfred but she intends to take their son either way. Jane through his realization of this specified nature of the man does find an internal disturbing logic within the man as he decides to murder his wife in order prevent from his son from moving away. Jane doesn't portray this idea as a man with any sort of sadistic glee but rather portrays it as an anger attached specifically towards this decision. When we see Wilfred finding this decision Jane attaches this certain pride for the land, a very problematic pride, which should seem outlandish however Jane's way of finding it within his exact characterization actually does make sense of it within the man's bent logic. He projects that pride of wishing to hold onto his own land no matter what he says. The planning of the murder he says the same way his Wilfred would go about refusing to sell his land to anyone and speaks of the murder as he would planning the planting of a new crop. Jane is notable in the way he makes this initial monstrous action such a natural aspect within his work. He makes this seem like the actions of the man with a very specific worldview rather than of some overt psychopath although Wilfred does qualify as that as well in his own way.

The man successfully murders his wife along with the help of his son before dumping her body into his well. In the initial scenes of the cover up again Jane effectively portrays this as a man just going about his life as the way he sees fit, a rather problematic way to most, however Jane again normalizes it within that very exact portrayal of his. There is a momentary respite as Jane depicts this relief in the man ready just to live his days by tending to his house and home as he always intended without interference. The tell tale heart aspect of this story rear its head within the rats that feast on the man's wife's rotting corpse, and which continue to haunt him throughout the film. Jane in his reactions to specifically the rats embodies well this seed of a guilt from the first instance which he portrays well as just a momentary fear that he tries to quickly cover up as soon as possible. The rest of Jane's performance is dealing with the idea of his specific guilt towards the death of his wife. Early on in this process he shows these as those lapses into fear that usually result from being occasionally reminded of this gruesome end, but much of the time Jane portrays that same sort simple stoicism that initially defined the man as again just the man who thinks himself as the this guardian of his house and home. When he even describes his decision to his son Jane delivers his line with a modest certainty of this farmer who just believed that he knew best.

Obviously given this is Gothic horror things must not go unpunished for our main character as in addition to the frequent appearances of rats other troubles soon arise when his son runs off with the neighbor's daughter, after getting her pregnant. This leads to the gradual downfall of Wilfred as his guilt seems to take a supernatural turn as he begins to see visions, whether real or fake, of more rats and of his dead wife bringing him news that their son has become a bank robber before dying along with the neighbors daughter as his accomplice. Jane reveals this growth in guilt also within his performance where he portrays that loss of that stoic conviction or even pride that defined his initial decision. Jane devolves properly to a more introspective portrayal of the man coming to understand his mistakes revealing a more overt humanity in the fear now revealing itself to be within a more genuine remorse. Wilfred never openly admits his guilt to anyone other than himself however does so well to portray this growing rot within the core of the man through essentially revealing a more open manner in his depiction of the man's emotions. He shows Wilfred no longer able to find solace in his ways as a "man of the earth" and instead finds this man wallowing in his misdeeds. There are no further revelation to destroy the man just more visions of his misdeeds, and essentially they get louder just as the heart got louder in Poe's story. Jane in the end shows the man not breaking as this extreme anguish but rather a more subdued yet powerful evocation of the emotions as the man quietly bears witness to his crimes now with the understanding that he destroyed all that he wanted to preserve through them. This is a strong performance by Jane as he manages  to realize the unique manner of the man in a convincing fashion while avoiding making Wilfred a caricature or a one note monster. He grants insight into the strange man and his horrible decisions, even if that makes all the more disturbing in a way.

Saturday, 10 February 2018

Alternate Best Actor 2017

And the Nominees Were Not:

James Franco in The Disaster Artist

Robert Pattinson in Good Time

Ryan Gosling in Blade Runner 2049

Jeremy Renner in Wind River

Sebastian Stan in I, Tonya

And for the Second Set of Predictions:

Song Kang-ho in A Taxi Driver

Hugh Jackman in Logan

Harry Dean Stanton in Lucky

Christian Bale in Hostiles

Thomas Jane in 1922