What they both need, per the Coens, is a smack of aw - shucks common sense, which comes in the form of stuntman - turned - cowboy -
actor Hobie Doyle (Alden Ehrenreich, downright revelatory).
Who could forget Ehrenreich's performance as the drawling cowboy
actor Hobie Doyle in «Hail, Caesar!»
Not exact matches
«The audience will assume your mirthlessness,» Laurentz tells
Hobie when a desired laugh proves beyond the
actor's range.
As icing on the cake, for an upcoming drama, Minnix deals with esteemed director Lawrence Laurentz (Ralph Fiennes, Spectre, 2015) who is angry that the studio saddled him with the
actor,
Hobie Doyle.
Relative newcomer Alden Ehrenreich plays
Hobie Doyle, a young cowboy
actor who ends up replacing another
actor on a period picture directed by the prestigious Laurence Laurentz (Fiennes).
Instead, they would rather linger on those lengthy recreations, featuring Scarlett Johansson as the actress at the center point of the water ballet, Channing Tatum as the star hoofer who leads that group of sailors in song and dance, and a pitch - perfect Alden Ehrenreich as
Hobie Doyle, the cowboy
actor who performs seemingly impossible stunts and now finds himself struggling as the lead in a drama directed by the esteemed Laurence Lorenz (Ralph Fiennes).
In a tribute to Roy Rogers and famed stuntman Yakima Canutt, there is a segment on popular westerns featuring Alden Ehrenreich (Beautiful Creatures, 2013) as
Hobie Doyle, a popular
actor whose an artist with a rope and horse and guitar, but not so smooth on his transition to the parlor dramas being filmed by demanding director Laurence Laurentz (a terrific Ralph Fiennes).