Which actors have the tendency to overact or ham it up?
Someone who wasn't in on the joke, at least to me, is Richard Dreyfus; even though he was in so many movies I enjoyed: Jaws , Close Encounters , Goodbye Girl. It never ruined the movies for me, but when he started yanking the pantyhose off the rack in Goodbye Girl I wanted to ask
if he 'd like those cold cuts of his with Swiss and mustard on rye.
That is why I believe films from the 70's and even some from the 80's have more staying power. The choices we had for writers and actors seemed more professional, and took many chances, and did the work to a T. I think if you compare a lot of the zany acting from now you will see how the digital realm has robbed a lot of commitment, what with all of the options and abilities to burn through 1's and 0's without accruing any print or processing costs in post.
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With Branagh it seems to me more a lack of oomph, of energy. I said recently elsewhere on the forum that I found him unwatchable in the British Wallander. People raved about him in Macbeth as well and when I saw a clip I'd never found the term "a damp squib" more appropriate.
The big difference when you see either of the Swedish versions is how effortlessly the cast exist in their roles. You feel like you're watching people, not actors saying lines from a script.
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His Poirot is a pretty good example of that lack of oomph. Externally he’s all flamboyancy but nothing about his performance gives it any life at all. He’s a mustache, attached to the veneer of a character.
The film itself shares this flaw.
I still love his Henry V and Hamlet though.
The film itself shares this flaw.
I still love his Henry V and Hamlet though.
His Poirot is a pretty good example of that lack of oomph. Externally he’s all flamboyancy but nothing about his performance gives it any life at all. He’s a mustache, attached to the veneer of a character.
The film itself shares this flaw.
I still love his Henry V and Hamlet though.
The film itself shares this flaw.
I still love his Henry V and Hamlet though.
He looks okay in Henry V – I saw a scene around a year ago and I liked his steeliness. Maybe there's something about Shakespeare that he feels more at home with, in a weird way, than contemporary language.
I think it was Paul McGann I was watching once where he said that Kenneth Branagh was at RADA at the same time; Branagh has said that he always wanted to be in movies, rather than on stage, so his ultimately being touted as the new Olivier, with this emphasis on Shakespeare must have been a surprise to all of them .
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Oscar Issac - tries too hard and has a lack of charisma.
I don't know if he tries to hard, but definitely he has a lack of charisma I totally agree on that one
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"Beliefs don't change facts. Facts, if you're rational, should change your beliefs" Ricky Gervais
"Beliefs don't change facts. Facts, if you're rational, should change your beliefs" Ricky Gervais
Seconded. He is brilliant in The Gift. To be honest, I thought he was pretty fantastic in Juno too.
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