Monday, August 6, 2018

Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Actor 1984

The Contenders:

F. Murray Abraham: Amadeus (winner)
Tom Hulce: Amadeus
Sam Waterston: The Killing Fields
Jeff Bridges: Starman
Albert Finney: Under the Volcano

What’s Missing

1984 is a great year for movies, and while there are plenty of great male performances, I don’t really object a huge amount to the five performances we’re given. Sure, I’d make a few changes here and there, but these are all quality performances and difficult to argue against. Films like Ghostbusters and This is Spinal Tap present the problem of deciding who is the main actor. Oh, I suppose it’s Bill Murray in Ghostbusters, but really, we could talk about multiple actors in both films being worthy of discussion. As always, there are tons of performances in films that would never be seriously considered. We can start with actors like Eddie Murphy in Beverly Hills Cop and continue through Dennis Quaid in Dreamscape, Peter Weller in The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension, and (and this is admittedly personal) Kyle MacLachlan in Dune, a shitty film that I inexplicably love. Along the same lines, Utu is so unknown that Anzac Wallace almost certainly never crossed anyone’s radar. M. Emmet Walsh is near-perfect in Blood Simple, but he might be more supporting. So let’s talk about the four performances that I think really merit some real attention here. We can start with Robert De Niro in Once Upon a Time in America. Also on this list would be Howard Rollins in A Soldier’s story. I would strongly consider adding John Hurt for 1984. If you limit me to a single addition, it’s going to Harry Dean Stanton in Paris, Texas.

Weeding through the Nominees

5. I like Jeff Bridges, and I kind of understand his nomination for Starman. It does feel like a sort of sop to the genre and perhaps a nod to John Carpenter who never really go the sort of respect he deserved. I like the film quite a bit and think there’s at least some reason to consider Bridges. Then again, Bridges’s performance is really him being mostly human, acting more or less like a hyper-intelligent corvid (look it up) was given human form. It’s nice. It’s noteworthy. He got his Oscar when he should have.

4. I like Sam Waterston, too, and I love that he got an Oscar nomination in his career. That said, and for as good as The Killing Fields is and for as good as he is in it, this film is all about Haing S. Ngor, who did win the Oscar for supporting actor. Waterston has the role of being the white guy in the film who sees the horror, lives through part of the horror, and is able to leave the horror behind. Ngor is the man who lives through it and comes out the other side. Sure, it’s a movie, but Ngor’s part of it is more compelling and much more real. This is his movie.

3. So how do I split up the two men rightfully nominated for Amadeus? I’m not sure, and I could honestly make a case for either of them. I’m putting Tom Hulce in third place not for any fault of his, but out of deference to the other two performances. Hulce was never better than he was here. That’s no shame to say, since it’s not only one of the best performances of 1984 but one of the most memorable of its decade. Hulce’s Mozart is how we all see Mozart now, whether we want to or not. He didn’t become the person; he made us decide that that’s how Mozart really was. He’d be a fair choice in pretty much any other year of this decade.

2. Of all of these movies, Under the Volcano is absolutely the one I’m the least likely to watch again and the one I like the least. But this isn’t about the movie; it’s about the central performance of Albert Finney, who delivers an absolute masterclass in what it means to be the focus of a film. Finney walks a tight line between being in perfect control of an out-of-control character and spinning off completely into chaos. He hold that for the entirety of the film, something that could not happen in the hands of a lesser talent. In any other year of this decade, he’d win from me without a second thought.

My Choice

1. But this is one of those years where Oscar actually handed the statue to the right person. While Amadeus would be nothing without the manic and brilliant performance of Tom Hulce, there would be no reason to spend time with it without the gripping and supreme work of F. Murray Abraham’s Salieri. Abraham’s role here is to create a character who has talent, drive, and desire and is smart enough to realize that nothing he does will ever be good enough to compare to someone he both admires and hates. He lives in his pain and presents it for us, and it is goddam glorious. He should have won, and he did.

Final Analysis

13 comments:

  1. I agree that Abraham is the best choice, but I'm still wondering how Jeff Bridges made it onto the roster with his performance in "Starman." I like and respect Bridges as an actor, but the weird spin he gave his character in "Starman" didn't strike as at all Oscar-worthy.

    In French, a crow is "un corbeau." You can kinda see the Latin hiding in there.

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  2. Whoops. Add a "me" after "strike."

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    1. I agree completely. I like Bridges and I like him in almost everything I've seen him in, but this really didn't warrant a nomination.

      And yes, you can see the Latin. The change from /v/ to /b/ can be hard to understand at first until you realize how similarly the sounds are made.

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  3. It's difficult to argue with Abraham's win. He really hits the bulls-eye with his portrayal though I wouldn't have been unhappy to see either Hulce or Finney win. I'm right there with you on Under the Volcano-what a grindingly despairing film to wade through.

    As to who else might have been considered outside of those already mentioned I'd say Rupert Everett in Another Country and especially Steve Martin who is full of comic brilliance in All of Me.

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    1. It's a really good year. If Oscar was open to a variety of performance and movie types, it would be very easy to create a couple of complete nomination lists that would be good enough in a lot of years.

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  4. Arnold Schwarzenegger not at least getting a nod for his part in "The Terminator" is criminal. Without him, there'd have been no on-going franchise.

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    1. I can kind of see that, but I almost think he'd be supporting.

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    2. I don't see how as he was/is the titled terminator at the epicenter of the film/series, and the driving force of the entire movie. Now, if you want to get complicated, watch J.K. Simmons in "Counterpart" to see him robbed of not one, but two best actor Emmys for the same series while while both Ed Harris and Jeffrey Wright were nominated for a substandard, short, second season of "Westworld."

      If you want to see my choice for best film of 2019 check out "Sacred Games." I never thought this great Indian novel could ever be filmed. Luckily, Netflix, two co-directors, and a stellar cast proved it could be done. Of course, purists will call it a television series, but bingeing it one long sitting will prove otherwise.

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    3. The fact that Arnie was the title character doesn't necessarily make him the main character. I won't quibble--it's actually a solid performance from him all the way through, but I think it's far more about the transformation of Linda Hamilton. As good as Arnie is in the role, I don't know that there's enough there.

      Schwarzenegger can demonstrate some acting chops now and again. Maggie wasn't a great movie, for instance, but he's quite good in it.

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  5. I'm out of the loop here, having not seen any of the noms. I have watched plenty from the what's missing section, though. For me, Eddie Murphy's virtuoso performance in BHC was the best of what I saw. Everything that movie is is because of him. I'm also the biggest fan of The Terminator, being one of those people who prefer it to T2. That said, I'm a big no on an Oscar nod for Arnie.

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    1. You really need to track down Amadeus. There's nothing historically accurate about it, but it's glorious in all the best ways.

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  6. When I saw the lineup in "contenders," all I could think was "Amadeus, Amadeus..."

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