I liked him, and gave me opportunity to do my thing in class, although I was
the least talented actor.
Not exact matches
But at
least you'll never get lost trying to follow the story because, luckily, every so often Najafi cuts back to a group of far - too -
talented actors sitting in a room together, watching the action on a screen and explaining the entire plot to each other.
But at
least scripters Tony Gilroy and William Blake Heron give her a character to work with, which is more than be said for other
talented actors filling out the ensemble, such as Julia Stiles (merely marking time as the baddies» resident computer expert) and especially Clive Owen, who is completely wasted as a barely - seen and - heard evil operative.
There's inharmonious accents, with just about every
actor trying out their own version of «Norwegian» to near universal failure; total tonally inconsistency, wherein certain characters go from glum to chipper without an ounce of external change; zero chemistry between any of the cast, and with a cast this diversely
talented (it includes Rebecca Ferguson, Charlotte Gainsbough, J.K. Simmons and Toby Jones) that is a feat unto itself; gaping plot holes, from start to finish you'll wait for the screenplay from Peter Straughan (Frank), Hossein Amini (Drive), Søren Sveistrup (The Killing) to tie things up into (at
least their approximation of) a neat little bow.
It'd be one thing if Allen had his own backlot / soundstage and a troupe of
actors, but, nope, he moves all over the world and never fails to attract at
least a handful of famous and
talented actors in demand.
Of course, it doesn't help that both Claflin (Me Before You) and Arterton (Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters) are two of the
least talented British
actors working in mainstream film today.
It's got a cast of
talented actors performing jokes that are amusing at
least half the time, and that's better than a lot of directors can manage.
Even The Perfect Guy's regressions, though, are sadly familiar; this is Sony genre subsidiary Screen Gems» second annual low - rent thriller starring
talented black
actors in the types of leading roles they should be getting in bigger, or at
least better, movies.