Author Topic: Actors you can watch in anything  (Read 10842 times)

Ojingeo

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #45 on: August 30, 2010, 09:24:58 PM »
i third Tony Leung.

I think Roger Ebert said that anything that M. Emmett Walsh or Harry Dean Stanton are in are always in some way redeemable.

Ben Gazzara. But I haven't seen everything he's in. Peter Falk. And any other Cassavettes regular.

I disagree with Klaus Kinski. He was in some serious bad movies. But Werner Herzog as an actor always delivers. (And any time he's in one of his own "documentaries" he is acting.)





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Nicksy

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #46 on: August 30, 2010, 09:35:09 PM »
Larry David.
hey what's up

Senator Gothman (D-OR)

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #47 on: August 30, 2010, 10:07:50 PM »
Oh.  Stephen Root.

Gilly

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #48 on: August 30, 2010, 10:19:54 PM »
I wanted to say John Turturro because he has been fantastic in everything I've seen but then I checked out the IMDB page and I'm probably not going to watch a good chunk of that.

Will Ferrell might be getting stale but I still really enjoy his brand of humor and I'll keep watching.

A few others:

Bill Murray
Steve Buscemi
Marilyn Monroe
Daniel Day-Lewis

Shaggy 2 Grote

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #49 on: August 30, 2010, 10:58:25 PM »
Thanks, Jouster.  I was thinking a few people would give me grief over Jesse Eisenberg or Audrey Tautou, but I find them both very watchable.
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fonpr

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #50 on: August 30, 2010, 11:10:51 PM »
Audrey Tautou
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Joe Rogaine

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #51 on: August 31, 2010, 01:48:24 AM »
Robert Duvall
Elliot Gould
John Cazale
Peter Boyle
Paul Reubens
Michael K. Williams
Dolly Parton
Emily Watson
Cissy Spacek
Michael V. Gazzo
Bibi Andersson
Frank Vincent
Tony Sirico
Michael Pitt
Patrick Fugit
Ryan Gosling
Paul Schneider
Emily Mortimer
Anna Karina
Marty Feldman
David Gulpilil
John Goodman
Emile Hirsch
Jane Adams
Will Oldham
John Lurie
Diego Luna
Joseph Gordon Levitt
Casey Affleck
Ron Livingston
Michael Murphy
Tony Roberts


How awesome would a John Lurie and Vincent Gallo buddy movie be?

Joe Rogaine

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #52 on: August 31, 2010, 02:12:09 AM »
Peter Falk and Ray Winstone are great choices that I can't believe I forgot.

Cant believe i didn't think of Peter Falk, him and Cassevetes i'll watch in anything.

Joe Rogaine

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #53 on: August 31, 2010, 02:17:24 AM »
Thanks, Jouster.  I was thinking a few people would give me grief over Jesse Eisenberg or Audrey Tautou, but I find them both very watchable.

Im with you on Eisenberg i even watched that Fred Durst movie he was in and im probably going to see that Facebook movie even though a movie about Facebook sounds idiotic.

Nicksy

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #54 on: August 31, 2010, 05:46:20 AM »
I honestly don't think there's anybody that I could watch in _anything_ except straight up babes who I'm only watching for J-O appeal. sorry to be risque.
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James W

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #55 on: August 31, 2010, 07:56:11 AM »
I'll see your Jesse Eisenbergs and raise you a Michael Cera. Yeah, that's right. No, I haven't seen Year One yet, but I am never going to get tired of awkward nerdy guys and I don't give a rip.

Also co-signing Sam Rockwell. Did anyone mention Mark Ruffalo or Timothy Olyphant, yet? Those guys. Joseph Gordon-Levitt. (Hmm, that's a lot of DUDES.)

Shaggy 2 Grote

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #56 on: August 31, 2010, 10:24:19 AM »
Thanks, Jouster.  I was thinking a few people would give me grief over Jesse Eisenberg or Audrey Tautou, but I find them both very watchable.

Im with you on Eisenberg i even watched that Fred Durst movie he was in and im probably going to see that Facebook movie even though a movie about Facebook sounds idiotic.

The screenplay is actually pretty good.  It was written by Aaron Sorkin.
Oh, good heavens. I didn’t realize. I send my condolences out to the rest of the O’Connor family.

CaptKarl

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #57 on: August 31, 2010, 11:09:56 AM »

I think Roger Ebert said that anything that M. Emmett Walsh or Harry Dean Stanton are in are always in some way redeemable.

Emmett Walsh brought to mind David Huddleston. Kris Kristoferson always gets me, and he has been in some terrible pictures, but I sit through them regardless. Most of mine are character actors like Stephen Tobolowsky, Michael Hitchcock, or John Michael Higgins. Really all of the Christopher Guest regulars would fall into this list.

CaptKarl

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #58 on: August 31, 2010, 11:12:35 AM »

Emile Hirsch
Diego Luna
Joseph Gordon Levitt
Casey Affleck

If I were to create a list of people that ruin good things that I want to watch simply by their involvement; these 4 are in the top 10.

Matthew_S

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Re: Actors you can watch in anything
« Reply #59 on: August 31, 2010, 11:20:10 AM »
Robert Duvall
Elliot Gould
John Cazale
Peter Boyle
Paul Reubens
Michael K. Williams
Dolly Parton
Emily Watson
Cissy Spacek
Michael V. Gazzo
Bibi Andersson
Frank Vincent
Tony Sirico
Michael Pitt
Patrick Fugit
Ryan Gosling
Paul Schneider
Emily Mortimer
Anna Karina
Marty Feldman
David Gulpilil
John Goodman
Emile Hirsch
Jane Adams
Will Oldham
John Lurie
Diego Luna
Joseph Gordon Levitt
Casey Affleck
Ron Livingston
Michael Murphy
Tony Roberts


How awesome would a John Lurie and Vincent Gallo buddy movie be?

Has anyone read this article:

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/08/16/100816fa_fact_friend

Only the abstract is online:

ABSTRACT: DOWNTOWN CHRONICLES about John Lurie. From 1984 to 1989, everyone in downtown New York wanted to be John Lurie. Or sleep with him. Or punch him in the face. Lurie, the star of the Jim Jarmusch films “Stranger Than Paradise” and “Down by Law” and the saxophone-playing leader of the jazz-punk group the Lounge Lizards, was intensely charismatic. He wore a Borsalino fedora and old suits and painted expressionist album covers and picked up girls at the Mudd Club and snorted coke at the Palladium. In the nineties, he let his acting career go, but “Fishing with John,” his tongue-in-cheek cable show showcased his ingenuity and candor. A year and a half ago, however, at the age of fifty-six, Lurie disappeared. What happened first was that Lurie was stricken with a mysterious disease that confined him to his SoHo apartment for six years. Then, in 2008, he and his closest friend, a younger artist named John Perry, had an explosive rupture, and Lurie went into hiding in the belief that Perry intended to kill him. This was a reasonable point of view, as Perry was stalking him. In October, Lurie began living incognito in a rented house in Palm Springs, California. Perry and Lurie got to know each other in the early nineties, at the SoHo restaurant Lucky Strike. In the fall of 2008, Perry asked Lurie to pose for him for an instructional TV pilot called “The Drawing Show.” A few hours in, Lurie was clearly ill, wincing and slumping in his chair. Sometime after 10:30 P.M., Lurie left and then he collapsed in the hallway. In the days that followed, Perry called Time Warner Cable and discovered that Lurie had ordered a pay-per-view boxing match shortly after he left the shoot. Lurie e-mailed Perry to say, “I suffered agony for you—it was met with disappointment and derision.” Perry, stung, began speed-dialing Lurie’s apartment, and then he appeared downstairs at his apartment building. That night, Lurie moved out to the Bowery Hotel and in the morning he sent Perry an e-mail saying that his threats amounted to extortion. Perry promptly filed a police complaint against Lurie, making up a claim that Lurie had threatened to hit him with a baseball bat. That afternoon, Lurie filed a police complaint against Perry for harassment. Both men were avowedly heterosexual, but Lurie felt that Perry’s behavior suggested a rebuffed lover. In February of 2009, Lurie moved to Flea’s house in Big Sur to paint. Mentions Lurie’s assistant, Nesrin Wolf, and “Good Morning America”’s Bill Stanton. A number of Lurie’s friends now felt that Perry was his default topic, and paranoia his default mode. Neither man wants to apologize unilaterally—or, really, at all. However, Perry did tell the writer, “I regret the whole thing, it was silly and cruel.” The protracted duet has become a kind of living performance piece, but neither man is able to see it as art: Perry because he views himself solely as a painter, and Lurie because he never before associated art with a fear of death.