MovieChat Forums > Sophie's Choice (1983) Discussion > What's the SECOND best female performanc...

What's the SECOND best female performance?


The general consensus, and rightly so, is that this is the finest performance by a film actress ever. I have watched this movie many times, with many different goals (one included evaluating the movie without considering Streep's performance), and yes, it is almost certainly the best performance by a female actor ever filmed.

So my thread is this: Let's assume that this is the best performance. What's your pick for the second best performance by a female in film? Please include reasons. Being a fan is a reason but not a good enough one. Explain why you're a fan then.


I am thinking, my personal candidates would be:

Helen Mirren in The Queen, since she really did nail it and walked a very delicate tightrope. When you think about it, any decent actress would consider this to be one of the most terrifying roles she could take. Especially if she were a British actress. Mirren was both fearless and flawless.

Jennifer Connelly in Requiem for a Dream. Once again, another horrifying descent into a different type of abyss for an actress. Her unquenchable rage just barely beneath the surface of what could have been a two dimensional portrait of a rich junkie girl is what did it for me. The scene where she stands completely nude in the mirror and examines herself -- What happened to my life, how did I get here? That was heartbreaking. Her sex scene for drugs made me feel filthy and horrible and violated.

Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine. I am going to be biased and pick this as my second best female performance ever. I am a huge fan of the Great (younger) Kate, because all of her characters have some unknowable and slightly dangerous trait of unpredicatability. No matter what her character is, there is always the chance that things could turn dark and dangerous, and quickly. In Eternal Sunshine, her character knows this. Clem knows she is a crazy girl and she probably knows exactly why and how and when and where. She has all the answers but not the solution. She still doesn't have access to peace and joy and security. She knows she just might run even if she doesn't want to. What was amazing to me was that most of our exposure to Clem happens in Joel's head. We get to know Clem through Joel's eyes and memories. It was amazing for Kate to add that extra layer on top of this unstable and unpredictable character, to make her not just Clementine, but Joel's (mostly accurate) version of Clementine. And we fall for her as we go back in time, and we discover along with Joel just what it was about her that made him and us fall for this kooky girl to begin with.

Those are my three ideas, with Kate in Eternal Sunshine being my official second best female acting performance in film. It is just my opinion, and I am sure there might be demonstrably better choices that I simply haven't seen yet.

Come on, this would be a good discussion point. I want to hear what others think and why.

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many contenders actually!

Streep's own in Silkwood.
Winslet's in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Foster in The Accused and Silence of the Lambs
Watts in Mulholland Dr.
Manisha Koirala in Dil Se

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Shame not too many know of Kim Stanley. She did not do many films. Also, any thing with Glenda Jackson.

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Falconetti in The Passion of Joan Arc will always be the best performance ever recorded on the celluloid. The two legendary performances by la Masina and la Leigh are close but not there.

Streep is exceptional in Sophie and especially in the choice scene. However, she came second in the best female performance in 1982 actually.

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I always say that Falconetti and Streep are above all the rest. I just can't choose which one of the two is better as they are so different (other performance mainly shines in speaking various accents and the other one does everything in facial expressions).

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There is no number one in my book because most of the actresses & roles previously mentioned are top notch.

However, and I'm sorry if I missed it, I can't believe nobody has mentioned Maria Falconetti as Joan of Arc. Browse the message boards in The Passion of Joan of Arc and marvel at the well deserved praise she gets...nearly 100 years later.

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Roger Ebert said of Charlize Theron in his review of 'Monster' 'this is one of the greatest performances in the history of cinema' and it is a very difficult claim to argue with. There have been many, many amazing (and overlooked) female performances over the years but for me, Steep in 'Sophie's Choice' and Theron in 'Monster' are the absolute stunners against which all others will be compared. On the subject of overlooked, why oh why did Julia Roberts pick up the Oscar for 'Erin Brockovich' when Ellen Burstyn was nominated the same year for 'Requiem for a Dream'??????? And she should have won for 'The Exorcist' too, Minnelli was good in 'Cabaret' but Burstyn was so natural and compelling in 'The Exorcist'. On a different note, am I the only person who has noticed that people seem a bit more interested in dissecting female performances than male ones? I wonder why.....any takers?

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Roger Ebert said of Charlize Theron in his review of 'Monster' 'this is one of the greatest performances in the history of cinema' and it is a very difficult claim to argue with. There have been many, many amazing (and overlooked) female performances over the years but for me, Steep in 'Sophie's Choice' and Theron in 'Monster' are the absolute stunners against which all others will be compared. On the subject of overlooked, why oh why did Julia Roberts pick up the Oscar for 'Erin Brockovich' when Ellen Burstyn was nominated the same year for 'Requiem for a Dream'??????? And she should have won for 'The Exorcist' too, Minnelli was good in 'Cabaret' but Burstyn was so natural and compelling in 'The Exorcist'. On a different note, am I the only person who has noticed that people seem a bit more interested in dissecting female performances than male ones? I wonder why.....any takers?

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Vivien Leigh in Gone with the Wind.

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Well, Meryl Streep in "Sophie's Choice."

The first, of course, being Vivien Leigh in "Gone With the Wind."

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Juliette Binoche in Blue. Her eyes are worth more than a thousand words. An understated, subtle and true performance.

You're not a vegetarian, are you? I've never met a vegetarian I liked.

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