Archive for July, 2008
TOP 5 MOST VERSATILE ACTORS
(PAST AND PRESENT)

5. Ben Kingsley - For his role as Ghandi alone, Sir Ben Kingsley is on this list. His character Don Logan in Sexy Beast was also bald, but on the opposite side of the karmic spectrum. An all around great actor who absorbs himself in every role, like House of Sand and Fog.

4. Gary Oldman - He’s played roles ranging from Sid Vicious to Sirius Black, and just about everything in between. He scared us in Dracula and Hannibal, and is known for playing the bad guy. But in films like The Professional and Batman Begins, we see that he is not so one dimensional, and can take on the role of protagonist with ease.

3. Johnny Depp - This guy might have everyone on this list beat for sheer scope of fun characters. Though he had acted in Platoon and 21 Jump Street beforehand, it was his role as Edward Scissorhands that made people take note. Since then he’s played everybody from Ichabod Crane to Hunter S. Thompson to Willy Wonka to Donnie Brasco. It’s good to be Jack Sparrow . . . I mean, Johnny Depp.

2. Peter Sellers - One of the greats, though no longer with us. He gave us Inspector Clouseau. He gave us Captain Lionel Mandrake, President Merkin Muffley, and Dr. Strangelove. He gave us Hrundi V. Bakshi in The Party (“Birdie Num Num”). His role as Chance, the Magritte-like gardner in the film Being There, nearly won him an Oscar. Oh, and he may be one of the greatest comedians every to act in front of the camera.

1. Daniel Day Lewis - His resumé may not be as deep as some of the others on this list, but I do believe Daniel Day Lewis to be the single most versatile actor ever to grace the big screen. He is like the Olympic athlete of acting, the one who no-one can beat. I can imagine he inspires as many actors as he frustrates, simply out of sheer talent. He pops on the scene every few years to collect more accolade, and perhaps an Oscar or two. And Daniel Plainview was every bit as gripping as any leading role I’ve seen to date.
Fixation of Belief
French Curves, Sharpies and Patience
The Traffic Sea



A book I started, and never finished. I’ll finish it one day. It’s 150 pages complete, though still very first draft-ish. You can view a twenty page sample, if you like.
Quote of the Week #007
“Starving men take a hard view of priests too fat to walk.” –Tyrion the Imp
The Failure of Sarcasm

Sometimes there aren’t words. But if the attempt was to make light of the opposition’s opinion of Obama, I’m afraid it didn’t work out the way it was planned.
Bad Word Pairs #009
“Ownable Look”
This is a mostly trite and redundant term used by those in the creative field who maybe wish they could have been stars in the advertising world.
It’s some sort of buzz word which suggests to your client that you understand them better than they do, and that you want to make something stand-out, something that pairs a unique aesthetic with the brand.
But, isn’t that the very point of creative advertising? To make something that stands out, that people will remember, that will sell more product?
It’s kind of like telling a customer at a bakery that you’re going to make the bread tasty and doughy.























