MovieChat Forums > General Discussion > What is your favourite method act?

What is your favourite method act?


Pirates of Caribbean - Jonny Depp

reply

Daniel Day-Lewis as Daniel Plainview.

reply

He was great. Great movie, too

reply

[deleted]

I never knew about this until now. Thank you.

reply

How did he method act this ?

reply

Marlon brando - on the waterfront, last tango in Paris, The godfather, a streetcar named desire

reply

I just saw Lady Tango in Paris recently and I’m still thinking about it.

reply

What are your thoughts on this? I've seen it more than a handful of times.

reply

Sleazy but beautiful in some shots. Amazing performance by Brando. My first viewing so I’ve got many questions. Was Paul’s abuse the reason why his wife committed suicide? Did Jeanne have daddy issues after her fathers passing and that’s why she got with such an older man? At the end when Paul put on her fathers hat that’s when she decided to kill him. I don’t know - many things to ponder.

reply

Good questions. There's no evidence in the movie, directly or hearsay (conversations between Brando and his mother-in-law) that even hint at abuse. I'd also add the dynamic of Rosa also being involved with another man -- in the hotel she owned and ran, and where she and Paul lived in.

Even better question you raise with Jeanne. I think it starts out with happenstance. Many things in life is just luck. I think she's more intrigued with him than his age. He's not fawning over her, and I'd also throw in Jeanne's boyfriend who is more interested in his movie and using her just for his movie's sake, so she'll get attention elsewhere, and she just happened to meet Paul in a desperate and troubling time for both of them. At first, she seems a little taken back by his personality, but I think that is the reason women become interested - they're intrigued.

I wonder if Jeanne would have shot him anyway, but I think she was tired (and maybe bored when Paul becomes so forthcoming) of Paul, just like she got tired of her other boyfriend (Jeanne Pierre Laud). Bertollucci liked Freud, so I'm sure he added that in, already knowing she would shoot him. Maybe she did it at that point also because she seemed to love her father, and didn't like him poking fun. I think Paul says "How do you like your DEAD soldier?" and it was a good moment to actually display death.

reply

What do you think?

reply

Sorry I replied after editing. Long story but I always have to post by piecemeal because of the problems on the site.

reply

No problem on the edit. Thank you for your perspective. I wondered about Paul’s treatment of his wife because of the way he behaved around his mother in law at the hotel and how he roughed up the “John” on the street as well. Lol. All I know at this point is I need to watch it again. 😀

reply

A lot of that aggression might be as a result of her unknown suicide. Remember the scene when he's with her dead body, he's confused and has no idea why she did it.

And remember her mother felt the same way, completely confused and baffled.

I definitely recommend a re-watch. I think I loved it most on my third or fourth watch.

reply

[deleted]

Just use it for toast😳!

reply

The Room - Tommy Wiseau

reply

[deleted]

Are you sure Tommy was playing a role..?
I just assumed that's how he is everyday😆

reply

James Dean - Giant

reply

Val Kilmer really stuck the landing in The Doors

reply

Oh true! yes he did

reply

Anthony Hopkins and Mads Mikkelsen both, as Hannibal Lector.

reply

Depp - Inspector Guy LaPoint of the great white north

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wm2CIjEQYhk

reply

Amazing.

reply