MovieChat Forums > John Cusack Discussion > John Cusack Never Understood His Cusackn...

John Cusack Never Understood His Cusackness


https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/09/14/magazine/john-cusack-interview.html

For certain moviegoers — and I’m one of them — the quick-witted, alternately idealistic and morally deluded characters that John Cusack played in films like “Say Anything . . . ,” “Grosse Pointe Blank” and “High Fidelity” were charismatic guides to the pitfalls and promises of youth and young adulthood. To others, Cusack was more straightforwardly a movie star, as he shared top billing in 1990s and 2000s box-office hits like “Con Air,” “America’s Sweethearts” and “Serendipity,” to name a few. And when the studios didn’t quite know what to do with a no-longer-boyish Cusack — he’s now 54 years old — the actor found success with character work in smaller films like “The Paperboy” and “Love & Mercy.” But that last one was six years ago, and since then he has kind of fallen into a cultural limbo of “Where’s he been?” Gen X nostalgia. (At least for those of us not plugged into progressive-politics Twitter, where he’s very active.) But a pivotal role in Amazon Studios’ upcoming, eagerly anticipated sci-fi thriller series “Utopia” should change that. “It’s always a dance, and you always feel like you didn’t do it well enough,” Cusack said about his career’s twists and turns. “But I tried to do my best.”

reply

Yup, he needs to do a sequel to Being John Malkovich: Being John Cusack where he enters his own head! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6Fuxkinhug

reply

I kind of agree with this. He carries the burden of having been the quintessential teen movie star for many people in the 80s, and i think both the studios and the public have problems accepting him in other roles.

So he seems to have drifted into anything that is offered, anything that comes his way. Fair play to him, he needs to work.

And credit to him for not trying to recreate his earlier teenage roles and choosing more interesting movies, even if they are not always successful.

That said, I loved him in The Grifters, Identity, Love and Mercy and Being John Malkovich. We could also talk about movies like Con Air, High Fidelity and Hot Tub Time Machine.

I am sure there are a few more movies I have seen him in that are also pretty good. But I think he has done pretty well for himself, worked regularly and resisted being typecast.

reply

Raven

reply

He was once the 'greatest' (with the one/two knockout combo of 'one Crazy Summer' and 'Better Off Dead')
.....But then (sadly, as we all do) he grew up.

reply