jiltloop wrote: » Until fairly recently I would have went with Leo Di Caprio but I'm finding him to be a bit samey these days in that a lot of his characters are very similar. One of his last great performances I think was Shutter Island.
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » Until fairly recently I would have went with Leo Di Caprio but I'm finding him to be a bit samey these days in that a lot of his characters are very similar. One of his last great performances I think was Shutter Island.[/quoted] I’ve felt that way about DiCaprio for years. I get that people defended him when he was dismissed as the Titanic pretty boy because he is better than that. But I find him a bit limited at times.
jim salter wrote: » John Connors
murpho999 wrote: » I don't see how either you can say di Caprio is "samey" when you compare his performances in "The Revenant" to "Wolf on Wall Street" and "Once Upon a Time in America". 3 completely different performances with different requirements and demands that show he's come a long way in his art from his Titanic days.
Zebra3 wrote: » Modern era? Since the invention of talkies? Since WWII? Since yesterday?
Dravokivich wrote: » What's modern era?
Deleted User wrote: » Javier Bardem, all the way back to Jamón Jamón.
Gremlinertia wrote: » Cate Blanchett would be up there for me.. I think William H Macy manages to lift anything he is in
Abel Ruiz wrote: » Adam driver. Amazing in marriage story and Paterson
byronbay2 wrote: » I’m surprised there are so many different actors being proposed as the best. For me, one actor is well ahead of the rest and that is Marlon Brando. He brought method acting into the mainstream and the intensity/passion he brought to his roles is unsurpassed. His greatest roles for me were in On The Waterfront, A Streetcar Named Desire and The Godfather but The Wild One and Last Tango in Paris would be in any other actor’s Top 3. Even his cameo in Apocalypse Now (greatest movie ever made) is exquisite! He was MILES ahead of his time in the causes he supported (the environment, black civil rights, justice for native Americans) and was willing to risk opprobrium to promote these issues. This is irrelevant to his acting ability, of course, but I thought it should be mentioned.
Vestiapx wrote: » He's not modern era tho.
buried wrote: » He basically created the modern era of method acting though. To go full into a character, to become the character, that's what Brando first brought to the table in mainstream hollywood, before that, leading actors were basically a formulaic, cheekboned, powderfaced smartarse and that was it
Feisar wrote: » Daniel Day Lewis