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Originally Posted by neverending
I can't pick out performances I think stand above all others- there's just too much amazing work on film. I can. however, pick out some moments I remember just impressing the hell out of me when I saw them. Each time the performers bowled me over with tiny moments in which I thought with just a slight gesture or series of looks on their face clearly showed me an entire range of emotions and thoughts.
There was a moment in Forest Gump where Gump is trying to figure out what Jenny means about who the father of her child is. You can clearly read Gump's thought process even though he never says a word.
Same thing in A Few Good Men when Nicholson breaks down on the stand.
For Bogart I'm always bowled over by the "play it Sam" scene. Also there's a scene in the terribly underappreciated "Dead End" where Bogart, as a hoodlum of minor reknown goes to visit his mother (played witrh heart wrenching pathos by Ma Kettle herself, Marjorie Main). You ain't no son of mine, she tells him, and the pain of abandonment on Bogart's face is more powerful than anything else he ever did.
And believe it or not, Woody Allen even impressed me with his acting once. I attended a double feature of Casablanca, followed by Allen's Play It Again Sam. As I sat there in the darkness, awash wih the mixture of awe and astonishment at just how GOOD that film is, as happens every time I see that film, and Play it Again Sam starts. In the film Woody is watching the end of Casablanca in a movie theatre, and a shot lingers on his face as HE is amazed at the film he just saw- it was the SAME look I still had on my face. Great job.
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Nicholson was really awesome in those final moments of A Few Good Men. Very memorable, and quite excellent.
And I have to agree about Woody Allen. He has done some really good work in his early movies. I don't like his later works though - most of his 90s and post-2000 stuff is borrowed heavily from his 70s flicks.