I would much rather they save that Ellen Page fund and hire several
decent actors who can speak in their native accent and still fit in.
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.
He is
a decent actor who delivers great performances in films no one sees and mediocre work in major films.
Not exact matches
I do give kudos to Christopher Reeve,
who showed us he is a
decent actor even among such a shitty plot and premise.
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.
There's a
decent supporting cast, with Ben Whishaw as a Copenhagen bachelor attracted to Lili (for a long time it's not clear if he knows she's still a man underneath) while the Belgian
actor Matthias Schoenaerts does his handsome best to bring to life a character
who feels he's been invented especially for the film — the childhood friend
who once found Einar so attractive he kissed him, but whose romantic attentions are now firmly fixed on Gerda.
With Get Low opening today with
decent enough reviews — we have to look at the Best
Actor race, and whether a vet like Robert Duvall,
who gives a well reviewed performance, can...
«Fifty Shades Darker» is melodramatic garbage of the highest degree that forces
decent actors like Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan (
who look as interested as their contracts obligate them to be) to deliver cringeworthy, soap opera - quality dialogue.
I got the feeling that the
actors are those kind of performers
who, if they are well - directed, can hand in a
decent performance.
Michael Parks is a
decent actor, but his character is so by - the - numbers (a doctor, with a missing daughter,
who decides that the Parkers could be behind it), that his sub-plot never truly resonates.
With «Taken,» released in January 2009, the right formula met the right
actor, and ever since, it has been a delight watching Neeson play downtrodden, fundamentally
decent men
who realize themselves by becoming homicidal maniacs.