Yes, Branagh. I seem to have a block on his last name.Originally posted by C Elegans:
<STRONG>I think it's "Branagh" if we are talking about the same guy, Emma Thompson's former husband and also a former member of Royal Shakespeare company. He left RSC and went on to make Shakespeare films - Henry V was his debut, a masterpieceHe's also made very good adaptations of Much ado and Hamlet. If this is the man, I like him a lot too
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His films always feature Brian Blessed, btwAnd Christian Bale (famous from American psycho) actually had a small part in Henry V as a young boy
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By the way, you referred to "Yoshiro Mifune," above. It's Toshiro Mifune, and you're right: great actor.
He also employs as old men a favorite comic actor of mine, a fella who used to have one of the four leads in an excellent British comedy series, Good Neighbors--his name completely escapes me. I've seen him in all three of Branagh's Shakespearean films (including his relatively recent Hamlet).
If we're not just speaking about the living, I could add the following among favorite actors:
Peter Lorre: a lot more talented and diverse than his later Hollywood films lead people to suspect: Check out Fritz Lang's M.
Vincent Price: another highly talented, typecast actor.
Basil Rathbone (as above)
Mickey Rooney: despite the horde of bad films he was in after the 1950s, he had a truly ferocious energy and extraordinary focus in earlier years--even in those awful family comedies he made with Judy Garland.
Louise Brooks: extraordinary looks, combined with remarkable acting skills. She also had a great deal of intelligence, and apparently radiated an aura of pure sex in real life(judging from the fact that she had plenty of lovers into her seventies). It's her acting ability that takes her above the level of Davis or Bogart, always playing a version of themselves.
Conrad Veidt: This man not only added to film history, he *was* film history. He played the sonambulist in The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1918), the oldest surviving art film and an enormous impact on expressionist film making. He was still making films in the 1940s, where he played the villainous Colonel Stroesser in Casablanca. Wonderfully charismatic actor. In real life, despite the fiends he tended to play, apparently Veidt was a kindly sorta guy who was addicted to golf.