Showing posts with label Kevin Spacey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kevin Spacey. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Eight Links: Unhinged Women, Union Protests, Unctuous Celebrity

Awards Daily "Women Unhinged" fun piece on all the bat-shit crazy lady characters fighting for Oscar recognition. We're glad to see Lesley Manville (Another Year) getting some attention in her week of snubs.
Movies Kick Ass sees and loves Paprika Steen in Applaus. What a performance that is.
Disney Blog I hadn't heard of this but apparently there's a union protest against Toy Story 3 outside of Academy screenings. Ruh-roh.
I Need My Fix whoa mamma. Check out this slit in Gwynnie's Country Strong dress.

DListed is thrilled that Tom Cruise still has hard nips. Um... okay. You know what I think is the real disturbing fountain of youth magic? That head of hair. Cruise is bothersome in so many ways but that hair? Still perfect.
Towleroad Kevin Spacey still refusing to come out, "never" will. Makes unconvincing case that asking him to do so is equivalent to bullying gay teens. Even threatens to record an "it gets better" video. (Please don't. Kinda too ironic like). Ah well, at least we have better braver less selfish celebrities emerging each year to change the world.
Sociological Images Have you been wondering what Geena Davis' organization "Institution on Gender in Media" has been up to?  Here are some charts about gender imbalances in family movies.

Just Him and His Shadow

GQ Cover boy Ryan Gosling dresses like a movie star. I love this bit on why he got a regular ol' job briefly after The Notebook
" 'I'd never had a real job,' he says. The problem with Hollywood, he goes on, is that nobody works. 'They have meals. They go to Pilates. But it's not enough. So they do drugs. If everybody had a pile of rocks in their backyard and spent every day moving them from one side of the yard to the other, it would be a much happier place.' "
I always thought this was a problem. I always find myself wondering how some famous actors who rarely work, kill time. You know they're not working at delis.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Flashback: Best of the 90s. (Pt 1)

Remember when I shared those 80s scrapbook pages on "Before Websites Pt 1 and Pt 2"?

Well inbetween scrapbooking two decades back and the total new digital world of the Aughts, there was the long transitional period of the 1990s. Remember when the internet was just text (Anyone? Anyone?). The last two issues of my 90s zine (that pre-website relic mentioned in the Julianne Moore interview) were published in 2000.

<-- "90s character collage" Oil on canvas. I'm confused why I included The Phantom Menace because I hated the movie. I think I wanted something "up to the minute" Ha!

I had just moved to NYC and was in the process of chucking Quark for Dreamweaver. The first version of the site was already up and rapidly taking over my life so I'm not sure why I was trying to do both web & print. It was transitional hedging maybe. Plus html was way confusing at first before apps starting doing all the coding for you. Different era.

Interior "Ten Best" pages --- >

I thought I'd share these ancient lists on "Best of the 90s" for fun. I can't really stand by half the choices now 10 years later but can you stand by all your choices from Spring 2000?

Best Supporting Actor
[Top Ten Chronological Order, Winner in Red. Original text with the names listed. The very first one surprises me like you don't even know but we'll get to that in a minute.]
  • Tommy Lee Jones, JFK (1991)
    Tommy back when he was exciting to watch onscreen.
  • Michael Lerner, Barton Fink (1991)
    The funniest supporting turn of the decade
  • Leonardo DiCaprio, What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993)
    The breaking point of Hollywood's It Boy.
  • Ralph Fiennes, Schindlers List (1993)
    Astoundingly frightening American debut.
Leonardo DiCaprio (Gilbert Grape) & Ed Harris (The Truman Show)
  • Samuel L Jackson, Pulp Fiction (1994)
    Much celebrated bible quoting hitman. Great.
  • Martin Landau, Ed Wood (1994)
    Great character actor doing comic justice to a legend.
  • Kevin Spacey, The Usual Suspects (1995)
    Kevin's much lauded Keyzer Soze role.
  • William H Macy, Fargo (1996)
    Almost as great as McDormand. High praise.
  • Rupert Everett, My Best Friend's Wedding (1997)
    Wasn't even nominated. What?!?!
  • Ed Harris, The Truman Show (1998)
    Terrific work from the ever magnetic actor.
That's what I said then. As you can see I wasn't yet a frothing at the mouth "Category Fraud!" crusader since there's at least two "leads" in there. In fact, for '99 I chose Haley Joel Osment (ru: Jude Law) who is obviously the lead of The Sixth Sense and in my runners up I list Rupert Graves in Where Angels Fear to Tread and how is that anything but the lead role? The weirdest nominee in this best of decade top ten is Tommy Lee Jones. I barely remember that performance -- I think he had white hair and that there was some rabidly anti-gay tone to his scenes? -- and what I do remember I don't like. I'm so confused that it's listed but that's what the pages say. The other thing that sticks out at me is that I was apparently on a first name basis with Kevin Spacey (unhh....) and I excluded Burt Reynolds in Boogie Nights (very odd).

So yeah, I'm not happy with this list at all. I'd probably only keep half of it. But I'd need to watch a few movies again.

Best Supporting Actress
[Top Ten Chronological Order, Winner in Red. Original text with the names listed]

Juliette Lewis (Cape Fear) & Patricia Clarkson (High Art)
  • Annette Bening, The Grifters (1990)
    As the delicious decadent Myra Langtree she was radiant.
  • Uma Thurman, Henry & June (1990)
    Seduced Henry, Anaïs and the world as June Miller.
  • Juliette Lewis, Cape Fear (1991)
    At just 18, stole the show from Lange, Nolte and DeNiro.
  • Judy Davis, Husbands and Wives (1992)
    Gave Allen's neurosis a whole new energy level.
  • Uma Thurman, Pulp Fiction (1994)
    The hip film's central female role. Uma nailed it.
  • Dianne Wiest, Bullets Over Broadway (1994)
    Dianne is always a treat. Against type, she soared.
  • Joan Allen, The Crucible (1996)
    Breathtaking. One of the great screen presences.
  • Julianne Moore, Boogie Nights (1997)
    Should've won the Oscar. What were they thinking?
  • Christina Ricci, The Ice Storm (1997)
    Smart sad work. Confirmed her best-of-generation status.
  • Patricia Clarkson, High Art (1998)
    How did this marvelous turn go so unnoticed?
That's what I said then. Obviously Catherine Keener would've made the list for Being John Malkovich had I waited a year to compile this. (I'm always so hesistant about brand new movies. A weird tic. And apparently I did the same thing here declaring 1999 movies ineligible for these top tens. Weirdness.) But nothing much surprises me about these supporting actresses. Love them all and the next ten would be almost as wondrous.

Best Actor
[Top Ten Chronological Order, Winner in Red. Original text with the names listed. I've recreated the illustration here just because I thought it was funny and I remember being super angry that Anthony Hopkins started going hammy and/or phoning it in starting about the mid 90s.


I no longer have any strong feelings about him. The quality dropoff was so severe that even know 15 years later I see his name in casting items and I feel nothing more than "Why'd they go with him? Laziness in thinking about their options?". Like, what was he doing in The Wolf Man? I feel like you give that same part to some hungry actor his age who never got inundated with huge offers and they're going to reward you with something special even if the movie bites. I don't mean to sound cruel about Sir Hopkins and I did name him Best Lead Actor of the Decade and that's saying something. He'll always have 1991-1993 when every performance was an event!]
  • Anthony Hopkins, Silence of the Lambs (1991)
    Perhaps overcelebrated but it's a juicy star turn.
  • River Phoenix, My Own Private Idaho (1991)
    A transformation that made him an icon.
  • Denzel Washington, Malcolm X (1992)
    Should have easily bagged him the Oscar.
  • Daniel Day-Lewis, In the Name of the Father (1993)
    Does anyone else miss this guy? Great actor.
  • Anthony Hopkins, Remains of the Day (1993)
    Unquestionably fine. Does repression like no one else.
  • Nicolas Cage, Leaving Las Vegas (1995)
    His last great performance before big budgets beckoned.
  • Sean Penn, Dead Man Walking (1995)
    Completely believeable difficult turn as a repentant killer.
  • Ian Holm, The Sweet Hereafter (1997)
    A performance as complex as the film. That's high praise.
  • Ian McKellen, Gods and Monsters (1998)
    Should have won the Oscar. What were they thinking?
  • Edward Norton, American History X (1998)
    Fierce work that confirmed his best-of-generation status.
That's what I said then. And said rather repetitively, too. I used some of those exact same lines for Best Supporting Actress. Where was my editor? Oh, yeah. That was me. Elsewhere in the magazine I proclaim Kevin Spacey in American Beauty Best Actor of 1999 and now I would definitely rewrite history to pretend that I chose Jim Broadbent in Topsy Turvy (who I at least nominated. Yay, me). I had also forgotten that DDL made so few movies in the 90s (only 5) despite becoming a big star with the first of those (The Last of the Mohicans). And then he made even less in the Aughts (4) ! Does this mean we can only expect 3 movies from him from 2010-2019? And if so, does one of them really have to be a Sherlock Holmes sequel since he works so infrequently?

I'm also a bit surprised that I didn't give the top prize to River Phoenix as I was quite obsessed with My Own Private Idaho in the 90s. River Phoenix would've turned 40 last week. One has to wonder what would be different in the movies had he lived. Which star would never have risen up instead. Which roles we're familiar with would he have ended up playing?

I'm disappointed looking back that I didn't list Christopher Guest whose "Corky St. Clair" in Waiting for Guffman is arguably the finest comedic character creation of the 1990s. He should've made the list.

River Phoenix (My Own Private Idaho) & Christopher Guest (Waiting For Guffman)

You know what to do in the comments. Your lists please... and how have they changed over the past ten years. What did you love or hate then that you've changed your mind about now? And let's say you were born in the late 80s or in the 1990s. Which of these movies have you always meant to see but just haven't got around to yet?

p.s. If you're new to the blog and want to see more recent "best ofs" you can check out Best of the Aughts or my awards for 2009.
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