Imagine the reaction if Bryan Cranston had been cast as Lex Luthor in Superman Returns prior to Breaking Bad. "The goofy dad from Malcolm in the Middle!? What the fuck!?"
I don't get the Cranston thing. Just because a guy can act and is willing to shave his head, it does not necessarily follow that he would be a good Lex Luthor.
If that's the only qualifier, how about Patrick Stewart?![]()
Cranston is capable of doing vicious and intelligent very well and that would be perfect for Luthor. He's also the perfect age for the character. Patrick Stewart is too Shakespearean for the part. The problem we have with Eisenberg is that we're afraid he's going to portray a young, hip, cruel, and geeky Lex rather than an older, reserved, and brutal Luthor.
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iizKYUNY3I[/yt]
Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
I doubt many people would have been clamoring for Bryan Cranston if he'd never shaved his head for Breaking Bad.
Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
As an aside, here's a trailer for The LEGO Movie that spoofs the trailer for Man of Steel:
I don't get the Cranston thing. Just because a guy can act and is willing to shave his head, it does not necessarily follow that he would be a good Lex Luthor.
If that's the only qualifier, how about Patrick Stewart?![]()
Cranston is capable of doing vicious and intelligent very well and that would be perfect for Luthor. He's also the perfect age for the character. Patrick Stewart is too Shakespearean for the part. The problem we have with Eisenberg is that we're afraid he's going to portray a young, hip, cruel, and geeky Lex rather than an older, reserved, and brutal Luthor.
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iizKYUNY3I[/yt]
Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
The Lex Luthor of the Bruce Timm animated series was a great take on the character, but it's not the only viable way to approach the character.
Yep, as with any part. As good an actor as Cranston is, he was a pretty dull villain in Total Recall given the material and the direction.Depends on how the character is written.
Depends on how the character is written. Michael Rosenbaum played "young, hip, cruel, and geeky" Lex for years on Smallville.
Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
That's a meaningless question, because they're not remaking that story in that continuity with those versions of the characters. Their job is to create a new version of the story, one that reinterprets the characters and concepts in ways we haven't seen before. They know what their version of Lex Luthor is going to be, and they've chosen the actor that they think will best suit that character. Once we see the movie, maybe we'll understand why.
What about Snyder's past work tells you that Luthor will be "young, hip, cruel, and geeky" and will be written like Zuckerberg in Social Network? I've only seen Eisenberg in the Social Network and Zombieland and nothing tells be he's a one trick pony type actor.Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
That's a meaningless question, because they're not remaking that story in that continuity with those versions of the characters. Their job is to create a new version of the story, one that reinterprets the characters and concepts in ways we haven't seen before. They know what their version of Lex Luthor is going to be, and they've chosen the actor that they think will best suit that character. Once we see the movie, maybe we'll understand why.
It's the new version of the story where they reinterpret the characters and concepts in ways we haven't seen before that we're commenting on. Based upon Eisenberg's casting, and Synder's previous history, we can speculate on what Luthor will be like and how his character will fit into the film.
Really.Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
That's a meaningless question, because they're not remaking that story in that continuity with those versions of the characters. Their job is to create a new version of the story, one that reinterprets the characters and concepts in ways we haven't seen before. They know what their version of Lex Luthor is going to be, and they've chosen the actor that they think will best suit that character. Once we see the movie, maybe we'll understand why.
It's the new version of the story where they reinterpret the characters and concepts in ways we haven't seen before that we're commenting on. Based upon Eisenberg's casting, and Synder's previous history, we can speculate on what Luthor will be like and how his character will fit into the film.
It's the new version of the story where they reinterpret the characters and concepts in ways we haven't seen before that we're commenting on.
Based upon Eisenberg's casting, and Synder's previous history, we can speculate on what Luthor will be like and how his character will fit into the film.
Do I really need to play the Heath Ledger card once again? At the time he was cast as the Joker, he was known as a pretty-boy actor and fandom exploded in outrage because they couldn't imagine him being any good in the role. Before that, it was Michael Keaton as Batman -- "how is Beetlejuice going to play a serious action lead?" Fans keep making the same mistake because they forget what acting is.
I don't get the Cranston thing. Just because a guy can act and is willing to shave his head, it does not necessarily follow that he would be a good Lex Luthor.
If that's the only qualifier, how about Patrick Stewart?![]()
Cranston is capable of doing vicious and intelligent very well and that would be perfect for Luthor. He's also the perfect age for the character. Patrick Stewart is too Shakespearean for the part. The problem we have with Eisenberg is that we're afraid he's going to portray a young, hip, cruel, and geeky Lex rather than an older, reserved, and brutal Luthor.
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iizKYUNY3I[/yt]
Ask yourself who would be better for a live action version of that scene. Bryan Cranston or Jesse Eisenberg?
I doubt many people would have been clamoring for Bryan Cranston if he'd never shaved his head for Breaking Bad.
(See: Everyone who complained about Hugh Jackman's casting as Wolverine, instead crying for Glenn fucking Danzig.)
Anyway, Mark Zuckerberg as Lex Luthor is pretty nifty.
and honestly Cavill has a disturbing lack of charisma
There are a lot of really good actors with tremendous range. Not many of them have recently starred in a critically acclaimed show playing a morally ambiguous character with their head shaved.For me, it's not the shaving of the head, it's that he's a really good actor with a tremendous range.I doubt many people would have been clamoring for Bryan Cranston if he'd never shaved his head for Breaking Bad.
Something, honestly, I have yet to see from Eisenberg.
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