It doesn’t
take much poking around on this blog to realize that one of my favorite
pastimes is loving characters and appreciating the actors who play them. I love watching someone bring a character to
life, and from my various actor-specific review series to my write-ups of
virtually any movie or TV show, you’re likely to find some glowing opinions of
people’s performances.
However,
I’ve recently been doing some thinking about acting and casting, and I’ve
decided to excise a few phrases from my comments on performances. Specifically, I want to get away from saying
things like “So-and-So is perfect” / “So-and-So is the perfect Such-and-Such”
or “no one else could’ve played Such-and-Such.”
Now, I
get that we as humans like our hyperbole and that’s just how we talk sometimes
– it’s generally not meant to be literal.
As such, it might seem silly to want to wean these particular
exaggerations from my review vocabulary, but I’m also someone who likes to
think about words and what they convey, and these phrases ignore an important
fact of the industry.
Which is
this: “the best person for the role,” at
most, means “the best person we saw for the role.” I can love Jennifer Lawrence’s portrayal of
Katniss Everdeen, but I have no idea if she’s “the only one” who could’ve done
it because there are a lot of actresses who weren’t allowed to audition. People don’t get into the room due to race,
size, disability, age, appearance, and other factors everyday. Out actors get skated over because producers
doubt their ability to “convincingly” play straight. Roles are whitewashed and cis actors are cast
as trans characters to the tune of “there are no bankable XYZ actors out there!”
Apart
from that, there are just good old-fashioned connections. Sean Astin’s dad did a movie with Peter
Jackson, which helped him get in the room for Lord of the Rings. Lena
Dunham cast a number of her friends in Girls. A ton of directors have “their” actors that
they like to cast over and over, like a Hollywood version of seeing the same
local actors in eight different community theatre productions – “New Joss
Whedon project: wonder who Amy Acker’s
playing this time?” On the opposite
side, we now know that Harvey Weinstein was responsible for getting actresses
blackballed in Hollywood if they didn’t give him what he wanted; his
connections cut them off from their work.
And on
top of all that, there’s fame, plain and simple. Celebrities can get to a point where they no
longer audition for a role, they instead
go into “talks” for a role. Producers
and creatives kick around names, theirs comes up, and the meeting starts with
visions of box-office draw dancing in people’s heads. You can’t claim a meritocracy where “they
picked the best person for the job” when that person was picked without even
having to get in the line.
So,
yes. I can think Tom Holland is an
incredible Spider-Man all day long, but I can’t truly say he’s “the perfect”
Spider-Man, because there’s no way to know how many “perfect” performances
might be out there that never had a chance to get seen. This in no way diminishes my 100% earnest
love for Tom Holland’s performance (bring me End Game yesterday, thanks, Marvel); it just frames it in a lens
that’s truer to the facets involved in decisions like this.
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