Not exact matches
The cast, made up mostly of soap opera / TV
actors do a
decent enough
job and theres even a brief appearance from Robert Englund, stealing the show as a jailed werewolf (think he's a werewolf anyway!)
In the movie, Director Mimi Leder
does a
decent job of showing the villain's side of the story, and Romanian
actor Iures manages to invoke some empathy for his position.
While Ayer
does a
decent enough
job establishing that these men (and woman) have known each other a long time, there's a lack of chemistry (and inability to adequately improvise) among the
actors that seems out of place for how tight - knit they're supposed to be.
The Powers That Be, however, clever things that they are, have surrounded Lautner with a bunch of wonderful older and more experienced
actors who
do a pretty
decent job of convincing us that the decidedly average script has something to offer.
The
actors do a
decent enough
job and go beyond the call of duty that their names suggest, but it's Mendelsohn who outshines everyone and truly looks like he belongs in the fucked up world Gosling juke - boxed together.
I wasn't sure, at first, about Tatum — it's hard to tell if he's a bad
actor who's just very stiff and wooden, or if he's a fairly
decent actor who
does a good
job playing a typically reserved military guy.
Ex-Home and Away
actor Rhys Wakefield however
does a
decent job as Josh, the typical neglected teenage son character of the man leading the expedition, Frank played by Richard Roxburgh.