Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmWhat the heck are you talking about? In 1970's Little Big Man, Dustin Hoffman played a character who was 121 years old and he was in his 30s.
Obviously, fantasy magic realism movies are one exception which proves the rule (which, for clarity's sake is: Actors hardly ever play "older", the VAST majority plays "younger" ... They only play older if it's necessary for the story... Just in case it wasn't clear what I meant the first time. Sorry for that. )
And aging characters are the other exception. Besides, they wére ólder than their characters youngest versions, which proves my point.Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmMarlon Brando and Al Pacino played older versions of their characters in the Godfather movies.
This is BOTH magic realism/fantasy AND an aging character! Or, de-aging. WhatevsNight457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmIn The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Brad Pitt's character aged BACKWARDS.
Too funny, who says old guys can't be ageists?Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmKing Lear on stage and film is always played by an actor much younger than the character, because it involves alot of action and dialog to memorize. An actor of the right age would not have the energy.
Not only does that prove MY MY MY point and not yours, but ......"college-student"?? Somehow, "college-student" is nót a relevant aspect of his character, I don't even remember it being mentioned at all, but I haven't seen it in a looong time. The RELEVANT aspect is that he's a prince of Denmark!
Unless you watched an Americanized version of Hamlet, set on some type of campus?
Hé proves my point, and she played her own age, which doesn't DISprove my point. Besides, their fóúr year age gap, not 9) does not make HER "play older" but makes him "play younger", that's some peculiar logic you got going there.Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmGlenn Close is about 9 years older than Mel Gibson, but played his mother in Hamlet.
Again, hé proves my point, and she played her own age, which doesn't DISprove my point. Also, the aging character exception. She played younger and her own age, sNight457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmShe was about 4 years older than Robin Williams, but played his mother in The World According to Garp.
Which, how odd, PROVES my point, idk why you brought him up.Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmRobin Williams was about 30 but played his character as a college student.
PhD??? What does that have to do with anything? He played a a college graduate who have an average age of 23 he turned 30 during filming which again, proves my point! He did NOT play some PhD cobber.Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmDustin Hoffman at about the same age played a college graduate in The Graduate, and no his character did not have a PhD.
Which? I'm curious. Even if she did that in all her movies, she still would an exception. Do you mean "Mother"? Teen moms exist and young 20 something moms are even more prevalent. And in "Passengers", that loveable vehicle of date-rape, she was FROZENNight457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pmJennifer Lawrence has played older characters in a number of movies.
Again, shé proves my point.Night457 wrote: Sat Jan 20, 2024 7:27 pm Scarlett Johansson was 18 in "Lost in Translation" and playing a college graduate.
It kinda never happens. The closest case was Michelle Williams in Dawsons creek who was 18 playing a 16 year old.
But now I dó remember one well known case, Mila Kunis in That 70s show. But she doesn't count because she lied like hell to get that part. The producers THOUGHT, ASSUMED she was 18 year old playing a 16 year old but she was 14 or something. 15?
It's ... generous? ... of you to provide at least three examples (gibson, williams, Yohansen, which prove MY point, and not yours. That's big of you, I have to say...