Joystiq has you covered with all things Metal Gear Solid 4!

Jeffrey M. Anderson's 400 Screens, 400 Blows - Guilty Thespians



Have you ever liked an actor that no one else seems to like? You almost want to keep your adoration to yourself, for fear that you'll be laughed out of a party or a gathering when you say how much you like Josh Hartnett. I actually do like Josh Hartnett, quite a lot. For a pretty boy, he has a very warm screen personality, and though he can appear perfectly comfortable playing a boxer or a cop, he also has a wonderful sense of humor. In short, he's not a brooder or a poser like most of his other pretty boy contemporaries. And yes, he was in Pearl Harbor, but he made up for that with excellent performances in The Virgin Suicides, O, 40 Days and 40 Nights, Hollywood Homicide and The Black Dahlia. Incidentally, these are all under-appreciated or misunderstood movies, just like Josh himself.

There. I've gone on record. Looking down the list of movies currently playing on 400 screens or less, I came up with several other actors I like that have not really received the love they deserve. First up, we have Amy Adams, who I just caught in the new Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day. As far as I'm concerned, Amy walks on water. She's like a Carole Lombard for the 21st century. That means that she's not particularly suited for low-key "realistic" roles, such as the one she plays in Charlie Wilson's War (97 screens); in that, she basically trails Tom Hanks and occasionally reads some complicated dialogue to him. (I thought Mike Nichols was supposed to be good with actors.) But in Enchanted (329 screens), Amy is perfectly cast as a slightly cartoonish, screwball kook. She can move her eyes and her entire body in very precise ways for outlandish results, but she still retains a strain of humanity; she never spirals off into anything untouchable or unknowable. I thought she deserved an Oscar nomination for this one, but I'm afraid she'll need to put on a lot of "ugly" makeup before she wins anything.


I also quite like Colin Farrell, who, like Hartnett, is a pretty boy that doesn't seem to take himself too seriously. In the right role, he's quick with a smile or a snappy patter. And he, too, refuses to get stuck brooding. When he suffers, he suffers deeply and grandly, as in Woody Allen's recent Cassandra's Dream (already gone after a too-brief run). Sadly, he can be crushed under bad movies (S.W.A.T., Miami Vice, etc.), but when he gets a good one -- or at least a good director -- he can shine. Check him out in The War Zone, Tigerland, Phone Booth, Intermission or The New World. (Even in the awful Daredevil, he brings an animated spirit sorely lacking elsewhere.) He can play a period piece, he can be menacing and terrifying, or he can be funny. I bet he could even pull off Shakespeare. His newest film, In Bruges (232 screens), shows him as a tormented, yet charming hitman stuck in a small, touristy town awaiting who knows what.

Charles S. Dutton, currently in John Sayles' Honeydripper (11 screens), never gets enough credit either. Though he's mostly on TV, in movies he can serve as a kind of anchor, or a base that you can return to for reassurance. In 1999, I selected him as Best Actor of the year for Robert Altman's Cookie's Fortune, for that matter-of-fact posture and style; he appears to be just a hand's grasp away from total understanding and happiness. Shannyn Sossamon, currently in the universally hated horror film One Missed Call (123 screens), shares this same kind of simple style, driven by pure, down-to-earth personality. When she first appeared on the scene, I thought she looked like a second-rate Angelina Jolie, but Sossamon has surpassed the chilly, distant, professional Jolie with her much more approachable, natural beauty and style. She hasn't yet appeared in a great movie, but then neither has Jolie.

All of these actors have something in common: they come across as if they have no training; the strings are invisible. In all my years of movie viewing, I have come to appreciate this more effortless Cary Grant/Jimmy Stewart-style approach, and often prefer it to the more accepted, showier styles (the "Method" and otherwise). I've run out of room this week, so I think I'll continue next week with some more unsung favorites. Meanwhile, I'll leave off with the final performance of a true professional, the late, great Roy Scheider, who voices the self-righteous, single-minded Judge Hoffman in Chicago 10 (14 screens). I had the good fortune of interviewing Mr. Scheider once, and he was just as personable in life as he was in his films.

Related Headlines

Reader Comments

(Page 1)
NEWS
Awards (849)
Box Office (579)
Casting (3765)
Celebrities and Controversy (1855)
Columns (240)
Contests (211)
Deals (3052)
Distribution (1041)
DIY/Filmmaking (1848)
Executive shifts (99)
Exhibition (646)
Fandom (4533)
Home Entertainment (1211)
Images (691)
Lists (362)
Moviefone Feedback (5)
Movie Marketing (2318)
New Releases (1804)
Newsstand (4416)
NSFW (87)
Obits (304)
Oscar Watch (501)
Politics (820)
Polls (29)
Posters (171)
RumorMonger (2212)
Scripts (1542)
Site Announcements (277)
Stars in Rewind (71)
Tech Stuff (413)
Trailers and Clips (627)
BOLDFACE NAMES
James Bond (207)
George Clooney (151)
Daniel Craig (83)
Tom Cruise (235)
Johnny Depp (148)
Peter Jackson (128)
Angelina Jolie (162)
Nicole Kidman (48)
George Lucas (193)
Michael Moore (69)
Brad Pitt (155)
Harry Potter (164)
Steven Spielberg (295)
Quentin Tarantino (144)
FEATURES
12 Days of Cinematicalmas (59)
400 Screens, 400 Blows (110)
After Image (39)
Best/Worst (36)
Bondcast (7)
Box Office Predictions (83)
Celebrities Gone Wild! (23)
Cinematical Indie (3981)
Cinematical Indie Chat (4)
Cinematical Seven (239)
Cinematical's SmartGossip! (49)
Coming Distractions (13)
Critical Thought (347)
DVD Reviews (207)
Eat My Shorts! (16)
Fan Rant (58)
Festival Reports (884)
Film Blog Group Hug (56)
Film Clips (32)
Friday Night Double Feature (31)
From Page to Screen (7)
From the Editor's Desk (68)
Geek Report (81)
Guilty Pleasures (27)
Hold the 'Fone (429)
Indie Seen (7)
Insert Caption (119)
Interviews (331)
Killer B's on DVD (78)
Monday Morning Poll (52)
New in Theaters (314)
New on DVD (279)
Podcasts (105)
Retro Cinema (80)
Review Roundup (45)
Scene Stealers (13)
Seven Days of 007 (25)
Summer Movies (44)
The Geek Beat (34)
The (Mostly) Indie Film Calendar (39)
The Rocchi Review: Online Film Community Podcast (30)
The Write Stuff (26)
Theatrical Reviews (1605)
Trailer Trash (450)
Unscripted (37)
Vintage Image of the Day (140)
GENRES
Action (4893)
Animation (986)
Classics (981)
Comedy (4465)
Comic/Superhero/Geek (2422)
Documentary (1311)
Drama (5672)
Family Films (1132)
Foreign Language (1483)
Games and Game Movies (292)
Gay & Lesbian (225)
Horror (2177)
Independent (3091)
Music & Musicals (882)
Noir (193)
Mystery & Suspense (804)
Religious (99)
Remakes and Sequels (3606)
Romance (1180)
Sci-Fi & Fantasy (3033)
Shorts (266)
Sports (268)
Thrillers (1791)
War (259)
Western (68)
FESTIVALS
Oxford Film Festival (2)
AFI Dallas (45)
Austin (23)
Berlin (89)
Cannes (329)
Chicago (18)
CineVegas (13)
ComicCon (90)
Fantastic Fest (63)
Gen Art (8)
Los Angeles Film Festival (9)
New York (52)
Other Festivals (297)
Philadelphia Film Festival (13)
San Francisco International Film Festival (28)
Seattle (66)
ShoWest (3)
Slamdance (20)
Sundance (603)
SXSW (275)
Telluride (61)
Toronto International Film Festival (343)
Tribeca (258)
Venice Film Festival (11)
WonderCon (1)
Friday Night Double Feature (1)
DISTRIBUTORS
Roadside Attractions (7)
20th Century Fox (592)
Artisan (1)
Disney (556)
Dreamworks (284)
Fine Line (4)
Focus Features (147)
Fox Atomic (16)
Fox Searchlight (169)
HBO Films (33)
IFC (123)
Lionsgate Films (370)
Magnolia (106)
Miramax (71)
MGM (184)
New Line (382)
Newmarket (17)
New Yorker (5)
Picturehouse (15)
Paramount (600)
Paramount Vantage (44)
Paramount Vantage (11)
Paramount Classics (48)
Samuel Goldwyn Films (10)
Sony (513)
Sony Classics (147)
ThinkFilm (115)
United Artists (39)
Universal (665)
Warner Brothers (941)
Warner Independent Pictures (94)
The Weinstein Co. (451)
Wellspring (6)

RESOURCES

RSS NEWSFEEDS

  • RSS News Feed
Powered by Blogsmith

Sponsored Links

Most Commented On (60 days)

Recent Comments

Weblogs, Inc. Network

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: