Paul Giamatti in "Lady in the Water" and "Safe Men". Some my disagree but I think he is a great character actor.
I do agree about Daniel Day-Lewis, he elevates any film he is in.
I'll disagree. Not because I didn't like Paul Giamatti but because I thought
Lady in the Water was a great movie.
Gotta agree about Daniel Day-Lewis in
Gangs of New York. It was just your run-of-the-mill revenge movie before he appeared in it.
I don't think
There Will Be Blood should count though. It's not a bad movie that was elevated by Daniel Day-Lewis being in it. Daniel Day-Lewis WAS that movie.
Have any of you ever seen
London? It's this excruciatingly painful melodrama starring Chris Evans as a coke-addicted loser who won't stop whining because Jessica Biel dumped him for being a loser. The movie is only barely made tolerable by Jason Statham, who gives the performance of his life as Evans' troubled drug dealer with a respectable day job. Even before
The Bank Job, this was the movie that proved that (1) Jason Statham can act and (2) not only that, he can do comedy really well too! (Granted, he still beats someone up. I think Statham has it in his contract that he has to beat up at least one person in every movie. It kinda makes me want to see him spice up some
Masterpiece Theater now.)
Take Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, & Brian Cox out of the
X-Men movies and you end up with...
Fantastic Four basically.
Even though they really bend over backwards to retcon his non-suicide in the 1st movie, Kris Kristofferson is half the reason to see
Blade II. (It's too bad he & Wesley Snipes were just phoning it in in
Blade Trinity.)
Gene Hackman acts circles around Ray Romano's obnoxious performance in
Welcome to Mooseport.
And while it's not an acting performance, there were many times where John Williams' score prevented the
Star Wars prequels from appearing to be the pathetic farces that they actually were. He deserves a friggin' Congressional Medal of Honor for that Herculean effort.