Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy in the before sunrise series
Perfect casting
Anonymous wrote:Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy in the before sunrise series
Anonymous wrote:Mary Tyler Moore in Ordinary People
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if we’re going with surprising, then Tom Hanks in Philadelphia. This was the movie that turned him from the comedic leading man into the serious one.
I thought Hanks was terrible. He was incapable of seeming actually in love with Antonio Banderas.
A friend of mine is married to a movie producer, and told me at the time that Philadelphia was “an important movie for Hollywood to make.” I told her it was almost a decade too late to claim that mantle. Hanks got the Oscar because Hollywood thought it was brave to pretend to be gay on film.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tim Robbins in Shawshank Redemption. Before that, I figured he was just the goofy guy in Bull Durham and Top Gun.
Morgan Freeman too! He’s called Red because the character was a red headed Irish guy. They really went off script so to speak and the movie would not be the same without the two of them.
This is so I retesting given the other thread’s discussion of casting actors of a different race than the character in a book. I, personally, am not bothered by changing the race or ethnicity of a person between the book and the movie. The movie is a new artifact and doesn’t need to stay true to the book.
Anonymous wrote:I guess if we’re going with surprising, then Tom Hanks in Philadelphia. This was the movie that turned him from the comedic leading man into the serious one.
Anonymous wrote:Comedian Bill Murray in Lost in Translation. Comedian Hugh Laurie in House and in The Night Manager.
Anonymous wrote:Tim Robbins in Shawshank Redemption. Before that, I figured he was just the goofy guy in Bull Durham and Top Gun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mary Tyler Moore in Ordinary People
That's a great example! I didn't know Mary could be so cold!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cloris Leachman as Maw Maw in Raising Hope
Oh, and Martha Plimpton as Virginia
I loved the whole ensemble. Greg Garcia picks the most interesting looking actors. Quirky beauty with a country- western twang.