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I hope I'm posting this in the right forum. If it should be in the "Opinions" forum or something like that, please move it for me. Thanks.
Did you guys see "Walk The Line" or "Ray"? I had discussion with my coworkers last week about those movies. I was pretty impressed with Jamie Foxx as Ray Charles in "Ray". I watched "Walk The Line" about Johnny Cash, and was impressed with the portrayal of Johnny Cash by Joaquin Phoenix also.
Here's the problem: My coworkers believe that their performances in those movies are not real acting. If you are like me, you are going, "what!?". I told them that if anything, it's even harder form of acting, because you will be compared to the original model/character. Their argument was that in real acting, you have to create your character, and you are not able to model after examples. It really doesn't make any sense to me. If you are pretending to be someone else, that's acting to me.
Anyways, if these coworkers of mine were just anybody, I wouldn't even take them seriously, but they both happened to be as big of a movie buff as I am. One of them also claimed that George C. Scott turned down a Best Actor Award for "Patton", because he didn't want to be awarded for pretending either. I googled little bit on this. While it is true that he turned down a "Best Actor" award, I didn't find anything that mentioned Scott having problem with the acceptance of the award for what my coworker was claiming.
Did you guys see "Walk The Line" or "Ray"? I had discussion with my coworkers last week about those movies. I was pretty impressed with Jamie Foxx as Ray Charles in "Ray". I watched "Walk The Line" about Johnny Cash, and was impressed with the portrayal of Johnny Cash by Joaquin Phoenix also.
Here's the problem: My coworkers believe that their performances in those movies are not real acting. If you are like me, you are going, "what!?". I told them that if anything, it's even harder form of acting, because you will be compared to the original model/character. Their argument was that in real acting, you have to create your character, and you are not able to model after examples. It really doesn't make any sense to me. If you are pretending to be someone else, that's acting to me.
Anyways, if these coworkers of mine were just anybody, I wouldn't even take them seriously, but they both happened to be as big of a movie buff as I am. One of them also claimed that George C. Scott turned down a Best Actor Award for "Patton", because he didn't want to be awarded for pretending either. I googled little bit on this. While it is true that he turned down a "Best Actor" award, I didn't find anything that mentioned Scott having problem with the acceptance of the award for what my coworker was claiming.