Gutter Boy
Tim Sherwood
There's an interesting discussion about it here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001hg0t
This post coloured me intrigued and has been playing on my mind since although I still haven't seen the film in question.
Christian Bale played a very skinny character in the Machinist but did it by putting himself at risk, and did the opposite by playing an obese character (again at risk) in vice. Does that make it okay because he was genuinely skinny and fat at the time of filming? If anything isn't that worse because the actor damaged themselves by going to extremes on both ends of the weight spectrum?
I think I find the likening of blacking up to putting on a fat suit rather offensive, fat people make choices on the daily that make themselves fat. Blacking up is wrong for reasons beyond just pretending to be something one isn't, like in the case of putting on a fat suit.
There's an interesting discussion about it here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001hg0t
I also think there's a nuance between whether it is portraying a real or fictional character. So Gary Oldman using a suit to play Churchill (discussed in the above podcast) is more acceptable than giving Julianne Moore the role of 'fat friend #3' in some comedy instead of Melissa McCarthy.
An underlying thought is really that its just reinforcing Hollywood's view on what humans should look like, if only their narrow band of acceptable actors can ever get jobs.
I'm absolutely not an apologist for obesity. Personally I would take massive steps to regulate/tax processed food and sugar/salt levels in food. And I am really strong into social prescribing. But the targets need to be the exploitative corporations, not the individuals. And fatting up in films just usually feels like mockery and bullying.
There is a huge difference between a serious bit of writing about someone and their struggle to reach their family before dying from what is a global problem, lets be frank and a comedy where they just decided to make the cops fat or a character in friends fat for the sack of mockery. The Whale does not hit a mockery note, its a real story that thousands if not millions live every day, why should it not be made to life with this story?
By having these outrages at anything that might be outside the tramlines who do films then portray? Can't be fat, can't be short, can't be tall etc? Then Hollywood and the press complain that there are not enough films representative of the struggles that these people have?
Hoffman and De Niro from Rain Main and Awakenings next I imagine
Would you be happy if say John Candy was cast opposite Jennifer Lawrence in a straight adaptation of Romero and Juliette, and he was then CGI-ed skinny?
Would you be happy if say John Candy was cast opposite Jennifer Lawrence in a straight adaptation of Romero and Juliette, and he was then CGI-ed skinny?
It's a really boring film too by the way. And the ascension stuff was absolute nonsense (though I guess the Jonah reference in the title maybe flags it as a Christian film)
I think definitely the actor being at the real weight is much better than using suits to alter it. Though the ideal is just to cast an actor already around the desired weight.
I also think there's a nuance between whether it is portraying a real or fictional character. So Gary Oldman using a suit to play Churchill (discussed in the above podcast) is more acceptable than giving Julianne Moore the role of 'fat friend #3' in some comedy instead of Melissa McCarthy.
An underlying thought is really that its just reinforcing Hollywood's view on what humans should look like, if only their narrow band of acceptable actors can ever get jobs.
I'm absolutely not an apologist for obesity. Personally I would take massive steps to regulate/tax processed food and sugar/salt levels in food. And I am really strong into social prescribing. But the targets need to be the exploitative corporations, not the individuals. And fatting up in films just usually feels like mockery and bullying.
Respectfully I don't think you've addressed how or why it may be inappropriate to liken putting on a fat suit to blacking up - Discussion of how to combat obesity isn't really pertinent, people can choose whichever way they want to destroy themselves.
Do you really think it's better for the actor to undergo massive changes in weight like in Bale's case? There's an incredible level of dedication that has to be respected but it's also essentially self harm, when prosthetics can alleviate all the risks of massive weight gain / loss.
We've all done it.
My point is more that you hire an actor of appropriate weight, rather than get a skinny actor to transform, either through props or diet. It should be more authentic, rather than the tossy congratualatoryness for doing something to make themselves not so beautiful.
My point is more that you hire an actor of appropriate weight, rather than get a skinny actor to transform, either through props or diet. It should be more authentic, rather than the tossy congratualatoryness for doing something to make themselves not so beautiful.
I'm of an age were we listened to the wireless, I love radio drama and comedy, the actors can be any age, shape, colour or cross eyed it does matter.
I'm of an age were we listened to the wireless, I love radio drama and comedy, the actors can be any age, shape, colour or cross eyed it does matter.