And no one is saying that using eyes isn't important when it comes to acting and expressing emotion, just that Burton was effectively able to do it anyway and that many of us had no problems whatsoever connecting with Geordi and his emotions in spite of not being able to see his eyes.
In your opinion.The eyes are their most important tool
The producers were aware of the importance of eyes in conveying emotion. They'd have to be - they're in acting business after all. So, if the addition of a character with obscured eyes was a mistake, why'd they include one?
Stage actors can't rely or even count on their eyes to sell emotions because only the front rows are close enough to read them. They must count a lot more on overall facial expressions and body language to sell the emotions.
If the OP finds the VISOR a barrier to connecting with Burton's performance, that's understandable, but let's not go so overboard as to say that it's an impediment to a good actor's ability to connect with an audience.
That's why "stagey" acting is not suited to TV/film.
Except I don't think it is going overboard at all. I generally feel that having obscured eyes is a huge impediment to connecting with an actor or a person in general.
And we're hardly talking Oscar-worthy producers here anyway.
I don't understand how the majority of you are saying that the eyes aren't one of the most important aspects of acting.
That's why "stagey" acting is not suited to TV/film.
True, but do you have difficulty identifying and connecting with characters in plays when you're not seated in the front row?
Which brings us back to asking you how you connect with real-world blind people who wear dark sunglasses? Ray Charles, how do you connect with him and his joy as he played his music?
People have also pointed out that there are other ways to connect with people other than their eyes and that eyes are not the end-all, be-all way to do it. People have also pointed out to have no problems connecting with Geordi with his VISOR.
As has been pointed out multiple times, what you refer to as "the eyes" are actually the parts of the face surrounding the eyes which move and change. The eyelids are the only part being hidden in Geordi's case. Eyelids are not an actor's "main acting tool".
People admit that eyes are important in conveying a performance and in connecting with a character, people have also said it's not the only way to do it. But you're here acting like it's eyes or nothing at all.
This^I remember an interview in which Burton admitted to being nervous about acting behind the visor. If memory serves, he said he had always felt that his eyes were an integral part of expressing a character, and to lose the ability to "sell" the character with his eyes was daunting.
He saw it as a challenge. I think he met the challenge rather well.
Incorrect. The voice is the most expressive tool of an actor, in every type of acting but pantomime. If such weren't the case, then voice acting would never had existed on radio or in narration. You don't even need to see them to get their acting performanceWell yeah, fact of the matter is, if you do say that eyes are not the most important tool in acting, expressing emotion or connecting with someone then you ARE categorically wrong. Its as simple as that.
Incorrect. The voice is the most expressive tool of an actor
By no definition is it an "agenda". Sometimes you just have to call people out for being straight up wrong and stop trying to convince them. I've proven ample evidence that the eyes are considered the most important feature in an actor. Its fine if you feel that you connected with Geordi despite his obscured eyes, but pretending like eyes don't express emotions or that eyes are not an actor's most important tool is actually just ignorant and downright incorrect. Anyone who thinks that has an opinion that is completely at odds with the consensus in the dramatic community and needs to recognize that.
Those are the facts.
The voice-actor argument is compelling one.
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