In Praise of Subtle Performance

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  • Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2022
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    Big, intense performances are the ones that get a lot of the recognition and praise (often for good reason!). But a lot of my favorite moments of acting are tiny, subtle expressions. In this video I highlight the power of some of these subtler moments of performance, and acknowledge that talent is about much more than intensity.
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @erzarose2082
    @erzarose2082 Год назад +49229

    "It's sad to watch people cry, but it's far sadder to watch people try not to cry."
    Biggest lesson I've learned as an actor

    • @RamonaGelosi
      @RamonaGelosi Год назад +205

      Omg that’s so true

    • @andrewkiefte376
      @andrewkiefte376 Год назад +46

      Who is that a quote from?

    • @rafabar6652
      @rafabar6652 Год назад +302

      Margot Robbie - I, Tonya - Mirror scene :P

    • @stryomberg
      @stryomberg Год назад +176

      @@andrewkiefte376 Pretty much any good acting teacher :) it's one of the essential principles.

    • @erzarose2082
      @erzarose2082 Год назад +7

      @@andrewkiefte376 my dramaturg lmao

  • @justincain2702
    @justincain2702 Год назад +18569

    When I was younger, I tried to do this kind of thing because I wanted to portray realistic emotion. Then I realized, I'm doing a school musical, no one is gonna even be able to see this kind of subtlety. It's great that film lets us explore quieter moments.

    • @AngelinaX23
      @AngelinaX23 Год назад +1635

      Stage acting is so different from film acting.

    • @teakettlebynatalie
      @teakettlebynatalie Год назад +444

      @Justin Cain That last sentence is wonderful
      that film lets us explore quieter moments
      I enjoyed your comment :)

    • @JupiMeow
      @JupiMeow Год назад +216

      Yep. Know your medium!

    • @FinOsin9
      @FinOsin9 Год назад +31

      did you try/are you gonna try acting some days?

    • @KTxtonguextied
      @KTxtonguextied Год назад +181

      same here! when i got to college & did my first screen acting class i tried to express anger through Trying Not To Cry and heard some ppl in the back of the class whisper “omg is she really crying oh no what happened” like no besties i’m okay 😅

  • @janiholtshausen13
    @janiholtshausen13 10 месяцев назад +5914

    this is why i love the quiet romantic moments of period dramas. The very subtle facial expressions during a proclamation of love is just everything

    • @p_roduct9211
      @p_roduct9211 9 месяцев назад +116

      Pride and Prejudice. Matthew McFadden, rain scene. 😢

    • @pastelsumimasen
      @pastelsumimasen 9 месяцев назад +47

      @@p_roduct9211 Colin Firth in the 1995 BBC miniseries is phenomenal with this. You should give that a shot if you haven't already! Darcy wasn't much like MacFadyen's portrayal, imo

    • @bubbleguppy6715
      @bubbleguppy6715 9 месяцев назад +15

      @@pastelsumimasen colin firth was great at subtle acting in Girl With A pearl Earring as well!

    • @kaviarnciggarettes
      @kaviarnciggarettes 9 месяцев назад +21

      @@OskarHersch what is bro chatterin about

    • @thomaswilliams2723
      @thomaswilliams2723 9 месяцев назад

      Barry Lyndon :)

  • @tony9146
    @tony9146 9 месяцев назад +4060

    Florence Pugh is absolutely among the greats with her performances so far in her career. Such a talented person.

    • @hannahyalea
      @hannahyalea 9 месяцев назад +99

      Highly agree. Midsommar in particular, her performance absolutely floored me.

    • @Spiderdancing
      @Spiderdancing 9 месяцев назад +26

      She’s extraordinary in Lady Macbeth

    • @livedeliciously
      @livedeliciously 9 месяцев назад +24

      She is my favorite. Her talent is out of this world.

    • @ruthisgone
      @ruthisgone 8 месяцев назад +12

      her parents live rlly close to me lmao, she seems lovely but god her dad is annoying

    • @bobstephens5599
      @bobstephens5599 8 месяцев назад

      As Rowan Atkinson says, she has a face like playdough.

  • @dramaqueen465
    @dramaqueen465 Год назад +27282

    Florence Pugh’s micro facial expressions are truly something to behold. Face acting at its finest. She doesn’t even have to say a word and you know exactly how she’s feeling. It’s incredibly powerful.

  • @somebody_else8243
    @somebody_else8243 Год назад +7484

    There's a Brazilian movie critic that once said that Florence Pugh is someone that knows herself so well, has such a strong confidence of who she is, that it allows herself to become empty and leave enough space so the character can easily take control, there's no conflict between the real Florence and her roles, you can see when shes fully transformed into another person, she gives everything and i completely agree with that

    • @Nellielsp
      @Nellielsp Год назад +197

      Isabela Boscov, love her!

    • @Lowlandlord
      @Lowlandlord Год назад +208

      Interesting, that starts to sound like some Japanese philosophy, specifically mushino no zen, "zen thinking" where you just lose conscious thought and do without thinking, without overthinking or over analyzing. Also a bit of Miyamoto Musashi and his Void chapter, which is related. In a less weeabo sense, we call it "the zone" in English, or at least there is some overlap in the concepts.

    • @oikawascursedplushie9912
      @oikawascursedplushie9912 Год назад +14

      @@Lowlandlord this was Interesting to read :o

    • @nandax4936
      @nandax4936 Год назад +50

      Isabela boscov, she's a big fan of florence

    • @leviamorim9785
      @leviamorim9785 Год назад +88

      Yeees, love Isabela Boscov. She also said that Florence lends her breath so the character can breathe through. For me it's like she gives all the necessary space for a new person to come to life, and that is such an amazing skill!!

  • @MrTrymon
    @MrTrymon 9 месяцев назад +4443

    This was one of the things that made Arcane so great. The animators nailed the subtle performances of all the characters in a way i've never seen in animation before. The quiet scenes stood out just as much as the big action scenes.

    • @yuniakibona7267
      @yuniakibona7267 9 месяцев назад +228

      Not a single scene us wasted in arcane. Truly exceptional work 🙌🏿

    • @scottfitzpatrick1939
      @scottfitzpatrick1939 9 месяцев назад +25

      Out of curiosity could you share what Arcane is to me? On netflix there seems to be various versions of it. I tried watching one and it was an insufferable kid level story witch a character that started every sentence in the 3rd person. But I keep hearing people talk about it. Are there multiple animated series called Arcane?

    • @esthermartell5369
      @esthermartell5369 9 месяцев назад +101

      ​​@@scottfitzpatrick1939just one-arcane league of legends. it's based off from the game. if I'm not mistaken the thumbnail is jinx, one of the protagonists, has blue hair and is staring somewhere off camera.

    • @scottfitzpatrick1939
      @scottfitzpatrick1939 9 месяцев назад +64

      @@esthermartell5369 thank you so much I found it and it is good. I couldn't find the other ones netflix must have dropped them. I dont know if they were spinoff or just had the same title but they were horrible lol. I kept asking myself why are people talking so much about this haha. Thanks for helping me find it.

    • @FrelanceEQ
      @FrelanceEQ 9 месяцев назад +22

      @@scottfitzpatrick1939 algorithm abuse, yep

  • @Crosshill
    @Crosshill Год назад +1805

    i love it when big plot twists are foreshadowed not just by logic and reasonings but by those tiny little 'huh' feelings of very subtle acting

    • @Sleve-McDichael
      @Sleve-McDichael 8 месяцев назад +61

      Think about this next time you see something like that: it's not just the acting, it's the directing, camera work and editing. If a character is speaking to someone (e.g. husband explaining to his wife why he was late) and then the camera cuts to someone else reacting what they were saying (e.g. a teenage son) they could convey that the husband is lying just by showing the teenage son frowning slightly at the statement. A frown is not a complex action for someone to pull off but you wouldn't necessarily have noticed the frown or it's implied meaning unless the camera cut to him at that point.

    • @mikaylaholland5536
      @mikaylaholland5536 7 месяцев назад +22

      I loooove when you learn things throughout the movie and suddenly the little tensions you noticed in peoples’ expressions make sense. Not sure why but thinking about that makes me think of Toni Collette. Like I can see her hearing someone say something and a little look passing over her face where you can tell she HATED that before smiling like everything’s fine. You might not know why but immediately you’re like, oh there’s HISTORY here, got it 😅

  • @samsepiol6151
    @samsepiol6151 Год назад +10481

    Olivia Colman's character in Fleabag is one of my favourite examples of this kind of acting. She rarely raises her voice. She doesn't need to. Every line, every snarky comment she makes has such venom to it. Certain ways of on-screen communication can only be done in this subtle way. The evil stepmother's judgmental comments hit so much harder because of the subtlety that Colman achieves. Amazing performance

  • @sitcomchristian6886
    @sitcomchristian6886 Год назад +6950

    An acting teacher I had years ago, had an exercise where you would literally walk onto the stage, sit on a bench, and do nothing. He said it was the most difficult acting exercise he knew. And he's onto something: it's much more difficult to "not perform" than it is to put on a big show.

    • @juliachandler2909
      @juliachandler2909 Год назад +540

      oh yeah! I had a great acting teacher do similar things…I had this one classmate who was really into accents and silly characters, and he made that dude sit on a chair “on stage” in front of the rest of the class, and just count change in his hand. Made him look very human all of a sudden! He’d also have us “wait for the bus”/train etc. a lot. Great exercise.

    • @meghannichole3806
      @meghannichole3806 Год назад +73

      @@juliachandler2909 do you study the meisner technique by chance? because it sounds like “the activity” part of it!

    • @juliachandler2909
      @juliachandler2909 Год назад +61

      @@meghannichole3806 Maybe I did a little without knowing it! Haha. It was a general acting class mostly for voice over actors, but the teacher is a stage/screen actor so I’m sure he’s got Meisner in him! :)

    • @ALBINO1D
      @ALBINO1D Год назад +79

      On a similar note, in yoga one of the hardest poses is "savasana", which is also called "corpse pose". It requires being absolutely still and relaxed, which is much harder to do than it sounds. The body is scanned for tension of any kind, which is released with intention as it is found. This includes relaxing the mind too. It's hard to be in that state of true and complete stillness.

    • @stevecarter8810
      @stevecarter8810 Год назад +1

      I think you out your finger on why it's often so easy to spot fake vox pops... The actors are 'doing normal' rather than being empty

  • @germen2631
    @germen2631 11 месяцев назад +1566

    Just a tiny add, I wanted to point out this can be done in voice acting as well. I've revisited the Spiderverse movie a few times lately, in hype for the sequel, and something that gets me everytime is Miles' dad trying to tell him about his uncle, you can feel so much of him cracking from below the facade, it's beautiful

    • @abigailcowling-smith3532
      @abigailcowling-smith3532 9 месяцев назад +101

      The voice acting in the sequel is just as stellar, too, particularly for Hailee Steinfeild as Gwen. The way which she can shift between a tough Spider-woman to a frightened teenager is spectacular, especially when those two aspects are intermingled

    • @buteobuteo
      @buteobuteo 8 месяцев назад +12

      Absolutely, and I love that scene. great comment

    • @tatumgallahair7729
      @tatumgallahair7729 4 месяца назад +8

      The Justice league and Justice League Unlimited animated shows do this so well, it feels like real people talking especially Batman’s va

  • @rosemendez6391
    @rosemendez6391 8 месяцев назад +735

    that's why fleabag is my favorite show. its a quiet look into someone's unraveling, little things in actions and looks and interactions tell a whole story. it's so real and soooo incredible.

    • @maidofthemisty
      @maidofthemisty 7 месяцев назад +12

      That show broke my heart

    • @Kiwimarauder
      @Kiwimarauder 6 месяцев назад +4

      Agreed, its fantastic

    • @akshitamittal9813
      @akshitamittal9813 5 месяцев назад +7

      Fleabag is just the best show ever made…I’m so glad it exists

  • @criswebb7470
    @criswebb7470 Год назад +4603

    I cannot get over Florence Pugh's range. She's so believable and good portraying grief in Midsommar, but ... also amazing in her comedic scenes as Yelena Belova in Black Widow and Hawkeye. SUCHH a talent!

    • @calowenby1654
      @calowenby1654 Год назад +43

      She was also really good in this movie called Malevolent, which gets way too much hate in my opinion. I recommend it if you haven't seen it.

    • @potato-whiz
      @potato-whiz Год назад +126

      She stole the whole movie in Black Widow lol

    • @calowenby1654
      @calowenby1654 Год назад +8

      @@potato-whiz Personally I thought both the parents were great too.

    • @kaihamasaki9307
      @kaihamasaki9307 Год назад +40

      She's insane in The Wonder.

    • @__ZANE__
      @__ZANE__ Год назад +24

      I just saw that she got the part for Princess Irulan Corrino in Dune! Woohoo!!!

  • @ohitslikethathuh5107
    @ohitslikethathuh5107 Год назад +4141

    Realistically portraying "feeling an emotion while pretending not to" has always been the kind of acting that most impresses me, and is way more effective on me than outbursts of emotion, so I'm happy you made this video showing it some love!

    • @KatieT97
      @KatieT97 Год назад +66

      Or rather why acting is more difficult than it seems: pretending to feel an emotion while your character is pretending not to. To pretend that youre so overcome with anger or sadness or pain that you’ve turned numb or hide it to act strong

    • @indiefairy09
      @indiefairy09 Год назад +3

      Sarah Snook in the closing shot of the s3 finale of succession

    • @halatiny6537
      @halatiny6537 Год назад +21

      Exactly because humans may always feel but don’t always express. Acting isn’t just expressing things sometimes we just have to sense it in their face like humans do in real life.

    • @gummy5862
      @gummy5862 8 месяцев назад

      Outbursts can be moving when there’s enough build up. An out of context outburst is just cringy and uncomfortable (not in a way that constructive to the storytelling).

    • @TomCruz54321
      @TomCruz54321 6 месяцев назад +1

      🔖Some subtle performances I'd like to add. These are some of the best face acting and eye acting that I can recall. One look at their face and you can tell everything they're feeling:
      Ken Watanabe - The Last Samurai
      Jake Gyllenhaal - Nocturnal Animals
      Amy Adams - Nocturnal Animals
      Leo DiCaprio - The Aviator
      Jeremy Brett - Sherlock Holmes
      Robin Williams - Good Will Hunting
      Patrick Stewart - Star Trek TNG
      Claire Foy - The Crown
      Evan Rachel Wood - Westworld
      Will Smith - The Pursuit of Happyness
      Colin Firth - The King's Speech
      Jodie Foster - Silence of the Lambs
      Tom Hanks - Cast Away
      Nicole Kidman - The Others
      Johnny Depp - Edward Scissorhands
      Song Kang-ho - Parasite
      Helen Hunt - As Good As It Gets
      Hugh Bonneville - Downton Abbey
      Judi Dench - The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

  • @oscarshmuck5416
    @oscarshmuck5416 10 месяцев назад +576

    I think it should be said that Adam Driver belongs in that “subtle” group for “Marriage Story”. The nuance and subtleties of his performance in that film are what make it one of the all time greats. Not the yelling and crying scene; that’s what can be so easily misinterpreted. What’s the achievement is everything he does in the lead up to it. How he somehow made a scene as operatic as that somehow feel earned and organic for his character. Nothing in the editing room can create that. Only a masterful actor crafting a layered, authentic performance.

    • @Gregorio416
      @Gregorio416 9 месяцев назад +28

      Thanks for writing this. I was going to say something similar until I saw someone else already did

    • @medha4961
      @medha4961 9 месяцев назад +2

      Very true!

    • @anonymousme3632
      @anonymousme3632 9 месяцев назад +17

      The scene where they serve him the divorce papers.

    • @kurlykayla9013
      @kurlykayla9013 7 месяцев назад

      Thank you

    • @blooddragon805
      @blooddragon805 6 месяцев назад +4

      It’s why I love the movie Paterson. The whole thing is focused on his ability to act minimally and subtly.

  • @elliart7432
    @elliart7432 3 месяца назад +118

    An emotional scene where the character's trying NOT to cry and failing will always get me more than a character just freely letting out their emotions. It's just such a human thing to do. One of my favorite portrayals of this is David Tenant playing Crowley in the end of Good omens season 2, when he tries to go through with a love confession even after the plan for it has completely fallen apart in the worst way possible. There's this moment when his voice breaks and he immediately makes this really irritated humming noise, like he's not not only failing to keep his composure but angry at himself for it. That is SO fucking relatable, there is literally nothing more embarrassing and rage inducing then crying in front of someone when you _really_ don't want to

    • @whysomy
      @whysomy 3 месяца назад +7

      david tennant is a master at his craft for this exact reason! i also thought of this scene when thinking about ‘subtle’ acting, and i think it’s also evident in michael sheen’s performance as aziraphale as well-especially after crowley leaves the bookshop and he’s trying to hold back everything that just happened to talk to the metatron. he’s utterly devastated yet composes himself. that moment where he turns around, his face settles into a pleasant expression, and he talks to metatron like nothing happened always kills me a little inside.

    • @GenomulUman
      @GenomulUman 2 месяца назад +1

      Come back and thank me after you've watched "Manchester By The Sea". Casey is simply fabulous.

  • @mollie_b
    @mollie_b Год назад +3984

    My favorite scene in Midsommar is when she's tripping and having a decent time, and the word "family" immediately brings her out of that bliss and into a nosedive bad trip. The acting was so incredible

    • @potato-whiz
      @potato-whiz Год назад +253

      Midsommar was a brilliant portrayal of what it’s like to be living with deep grief and despair and trying to continue living your life and not think about it but it’s always there waiting to bubble up and it just hits you and you can’t control it. And Pugh portrayed that perfectly.

    • @La_Horca
      @La_Horca Год назад +63

      @@potato-whiz Yeah, is incredible how Pugh made such a perfect job. Her constant effort to keep on the line is noticeable on the whole movie.
      One of my favorite parts is when she sees the two elders jumping from the cliff and dying. We can see the impact and terror on her face while also the feeling of interest and attraction to the ritual. Is just another example of subtle acting that will blow anyone's mind.

    • @Nah_I_Would_Plummet
      @Nah_I_Would_Plummet Год назад +10

      @@potato-whiz lmao that movie wasn't that good, characters don't make any sense especially the leading female character. Ari Aster fans don't want to hear it but it's true. Aster seems like a guy that has zero life experience. His characters have no agency and are just mere puppets in a game where they're perpetually doomed no matter what. Also the part where a grown mature women in Midsommar just loses all her moral beliefs & rationality in a course of a day because bad boyfriend lol. Also, using autism and body deformity for creepy effect is just...😐

    • @moonchild5713
      @moonchild5713 Год назад +73

      @@Nah_I_Would_Plummet the irony of perfectly describing what makes Midsommar a horror film while failing to understand the reasoning behind her actions seems to be completely lost on you. It's okay to say that you don't understand the depth of her character, but to say she makes no sense is simply foolish.

    • @Nah_I_Would_Plummet
      @Nah_I_Would_Plummet Год назад +4

      @@moonchild5713 Well, she doesn't have any depth. She seemed like a character with deeply held beliefs and integrity judging by her reaction from the horrific rituals and her boyfriend's abuse also the cut that didn't make it into the movie, I just can't imagine how a complete 360° flip is "deep" or meaningful in any capacity lol. It's like a completely different character. None of her actions make any real sense towards the end. Not to mention she's doomed anyway lol.

  • @forthehomies7043
    @forthehomies7043 Год назад +4053

    The hardest and most impressive part about micro expression is not only knowing when to do it, but being able to avoid doing it. You have to be completely comfortable and in the moment, to avoid awkwardness and to not make it seem like you're trying to do it. Body language, posture, facial expressions, we all do them subconsciously. Being able to control them and time them is incredibly difficult, let alone in front of an entire camera crew

    • @elliekristine4156
      @elliekristine4156 Год назад +133

      I agree with you to an extent but I also think acting is about letting go of control. It’s believing what you are saying and doing to the point you become the character. I don’t think actors like her even consider what their expressions look like, because they are totally immersed in the scene and in their emotions

    • @elexene
      @elexene Год назад +1

      very well said

    • @GreyException
      @GreyException Год назад +67

      @@elliekristine4156 This. I envision it to me more like getting into a "mental zone" rather than forcefully contracting specific muscles in the face to illicit specific expressions.

    • @GreyException
      @GreyException Год назад +23

      I think you'd be surprised at how much acting we do subconsciously and how good the average person is (without accounting for range of roles).

    • @LoveJungle420
      @LoveJungle420 Год назад +58

      It'a not about control. In fact it's the exact opposite. You have to give up control to give a detailed performance. It's not about delivering the right micro expression at the right moment. That's too conceptual. Life is not conceptual. A concept will never give you the nuance of reality. We all have a natural ebb and flow of emotions, reactions, movements, thoughts etc going through us at all times. The trick is to maintain this natural flow of living during the unnatural process of acting. Normally we are unaware of living. If we are trained to maintain awareness and relaxation while we keep this flow of organic living and live in the circumstances of the film, the performance will be full of micro/macro expressions, full of life and very nuanced.

  • @richie-3485
    @richie-3485 9 месяцев назад +253

    i'm so glad you brought up Daniel Kaluuya because he was one of the first actors that came to mind for me lol. he's INCREDIBLE at subtle performances, obviously showcased fully in Get Out and Nope. and it's painful to see some people call his acting in those movies "boring" because they expect big emotive expressions of terror in a horror movie and they're completely missing all of the depth that he's giving us in a quieter package.

  • @juvenileanomie357
    @juvenileanomie357 9 месяцев назад +327

    I loved Yeun's performance in burning. We are introduced to Ben as this charismatic and handsome guy, who irl would be generally well liked. Although at first we can tell that Jong-Su disliking him is because he sees him as a romantic rival, who he believes has a much better chance with Hae-mi than him, as the movie progresses Ben starts to slowly allow Jong-Su to look behind his mask and it turns into a completely different dislike. As the movie moves forward Ben becomes a very sinister and actually kind of terrifying person in the eyes of the viewer while within the fiction he maintains the front of being "good". We can also see a sort of fascination from Ben towards Jong-Su who even though being complicit to Ben's true nature has chosen to continuously remain a silent bystander. Ben is constantly poking Jong-Su to see if he will ever do something aka Jong-Su has become his new favourite toy.

    • @Bjhorn279
      @Bjhorn279 8 месяцев назад +7

      Perfect reading!

    • @kevinc.cucumber3697
      @kevinc.cucumber3697 5 месяцев назад +12

      I don’t think you really got what the movie was about. It’s not a straightforward movie where John soo is the good guy and ben is the bad guy. Although there are tons of hints, there is absolutely 0 proof that Ben is a bad person. Meanwhile, the movie is also hinting that Jong soo has potential for mental illness. Also the girls that worked with Hae Mi said that it’s normal for women to run away and disappear to get away from debt. The ending is meant to be ambiguous. Jong Soo murders ben, but we will never know if Ben is truly a bad person or if Jong Soo is just a mentally unstable person

    • @juvenileanomie357
      @juvenileanomie357 5 месяцев назад +28

      @@kevinc.cucumber3697 never said it was as simple as good guy vs bad guy. We never really find out if Hae-Mi is alive and Jong-Su believes she is dead or if she was truly murdered by Ben. What we can see, and I choose to read as reality, is how Ben is uninterested in "normal" social interaction. That can indicate a disorder such as narcissism and sociopathy. Ben uses the people around him for amusement, discarding them when he no longer has a use for them and doesn't seem to have an actual connection with anyone. Also it is a movie that opens itself to interpretation as you said so both of our interpretations are just as valid.

    • @LoneVocalist
      @LoneVocalist 2 месяца назад +1

      This movie is unforgettable. Yeun's best performance to date imo.

  • @PetiteMouse
    @PetiteMouse Год назад +3956

    Steven Yuen continues to be a vastly underrated actor. I see him access certain roles, but he seriously does not get enough performance opportunities from what I can tell. Hollywood is sleeping on him (except for you Mister Peele, bless). Riz Ahmed is another. Every role is a piercing performance.

    • @yamahrahda
      @yamahrahda Год назад +87

      peele grasping on to steven and daniel as he should😭😭

    • @brigittahegarini7162
      @brigittahegarini7162 Год назад +13

      All hail Peele

    • @daretoliveee
      @daretoliveee Год назад +73

      Yuen has that incredible ability of being able to play innocent, heartwarming characters and then shift to the complete opposite and play cold, conniving ones.

    • @IllusionmanJB
      @IllusionmanJB Год назад +4

      I think Steven Yeun is much much better... ;)

    • @LemmyKBrinkwood
      @LemmyKBrinkwood Год назад +9

      he is such an amazing actor, his bit on "i think you should leave" as the person who made a mudpie, didn't wash his hands and refuses to admit it is an oscar worthy, dramatic performance, opposed to a comedic take, wich makes it so much more hilarious

  • @twilight79010
    @twilight79010 Год назад +3742

    Emma Thompson is another great master of this particular skill. I've seen Love Actually a million times, and the part where she's opening the Christmas gift from her husband just breaks my heart. The way she tries to conceal the heartbreak in front of her children, and the cut to the scene of her standing alone in the bedroom rubbing her wrist (a lot of us absentmindedly do little physical things like this when we're trying not to hysterically cry) and fluffing the blanket on the bed...it's just so real.

    • @Featherpen0517
      @Featherpen0517 Год назад +104

      A lot of that is from her theater background. Emma + Shakespeare = perfection. She knows how to work with nothing but her own body and the props she’s been given and really block a scene the way you would on stage. That love actually scene smacks of theater acting ❤❤❤

    • @zeetuslupeedus
      @zeetuslupeedus Год назад +15

      A great example of her wonderful acting is in King Lear as well. Stellar cast all around as well.

    • @markotandara3845
      @markotandara3845 Год назад +42

      I believe Kit Harrington said that his favorite piece of acting is that scene

    • @ProfessorFlex825
      @ProfessorFlex825 Год назад +34

      i was a teen when i saw love actually and the scene of her in the bedroom just trying not to lose her shit blew me away

    • @gracebonifabulous
      @gracebonifabulous Год назад +13

      oh my goodness, she is so wonderful in that movie. my favorite and least favorite part.

  • @bewtifulfreak
    @bewtifulfreak 9 месяцев назад +86

    I call this Gandalfing, after the poignant reaction of Ian McKellan's Gandalf in response to Frodo declaring that he'll take the ring; his face paints a complex picture of relief, sadness, admiration, concern, and so much more, and I always think of that incredible wordless performance when I witness other such subtle but powerful perfomances.

    • @hanli2042
      @hanli2042 8 месяцев назад +3

      I love this way of putting it 🥲

    • @elisedasvin170
      @elisedasvin170 2 месяца назад +3

      When I read the neologism "Gandalfing" in your comment I immediately knew what moment you were referring to. 🩵

  • @Bakedcakeyyy
    @Bakedcakeyyy 11 месяцев назад +144

    I watched Midsommar and was entranced with how good Florence Pugh's performance was. That film has so many long shots and she nails it every time

  • @demeedee3247
    @demeedee3247 Год назад +1581

    The first micro facial expression I noticed was from Mads Mikkelsen in his Hannibal role. The way he always seems so poker-faced but you can just feel what kind of emotion he's actually conveying was amazing for me.

    • @idork7302
      @idork7302 Год назад +191

      Especially when hes around someone that he finds rude, and you can just see in his eyes that hes already planned how to kill them, and he barely moves his face at all

    • @emilymwaki7375
      @emilymwaki7375 Год назад +51

      I was just thinking “hmm Mads in Hannibal” and the next comment I saw was yours! I can’t wait to watch him win an Oscar one day. Incredible actor.

    • @jackiep594
      @jackiep594 Год назад +1

      Omg I was about to comment but you said it perfectly!

    • @josephinepapin8858
      @josephinepapin8858 Год назад +30

      He is incredible in Drunk. The scene at the restaurant when he looks at his friends and starts crying quietly is just so realistic yet so raw.

    • @idork7302
      @idork7302 Год назад +2

      @@josephinepapin8858 I've actually been wanting to watch Drunk, is it good?

  • @andrew12494
    @andrew12494 Год назад +4034

    The more I watch Midsommar, the more I think Pugh put on one of the best performances I have ever seen on film. The layers of emotion that she presents on her face is nothing short of amazing. Her ability to subtly show her trauma on her face while trying to hide it with a smile, or changing the subject felt like she wasn’t acting, but just tapping into something far deeper. Thanks for this video. You’ve articulated everything so well.

    • @rmdir
      @rmdir Год назад +48

      Yet many people dislike the film. I think it was a very jarring experience, because in a certain way it's a horror film without any horror trappings. We don't have darkness, ghosts, or vicious stalkers. The horror of this film is in the subtle emotions, as they build up towards the eventual breakdown, much like real life. Many viewers seem to have found this uncomfortable, but I agree with you it may be one of the best performances on film.

    • @neutralfog
      @neutralfog Год назад +8

      I agree. She's phenomenal.

    • @RamonaGelosi
      @RamonaGelosi Год назад +5

      Florence is my queen

    • @delpicsla65
      @delpicsla65 Год назад +35

      Even in “little women”, she had great facial acting, she showed hurt, anger, love, and even unbearable sadness. She was supposed to be a “side character” but she ended up being my favorite actor in the movie.

    • @mysmirandam.6618
      @mysmirandam.6618 Год назад

      I love that movie

  • @gpeddino
    @gpeddino 9 месяцев назад +67

    Rhea Seehorn's performance as Kim Wexler in Better Call Saul is a great example of this. She always manages to make her silence and stillness speak VOLUMES.

    • @Watch3rOfTheSkies
      @Watch3rOfTheSkies 3 месяца назад +5

      Yes, and the way she sometimes fakes a smile, or the tone of her voice sounds a little low and choked up when she’s telling a white lie to Jimmy or someone else.

  • @greenolly
    @greenolly 5 месяцев назад +55

    I love that: "Most acting, not best acting." You articulate so much I've never been able to communicate. This video was incredibly well written. Bravo. :)

    • @smshh33
      @smshh33 3 месяца назад +1

      Agreed!

  • @colinburleigh306
    @colinburleigh306 Год назад +2919

    Daniel Kaluuya's recent performance in Nope I think fits this bill to a tee. He has zero moments of "ACTING!" in that film and yet you know exactly what he's thinking and feeling at all times. His facial acting and what he does with looks is miles ahead of a lot of actors loudest performances. I think he's a generational talent, and while he can have bigger performances that still blow everyone else out of the water (Judas & the Black Messiah), I think his quieter performances take the cake for me in terms of ability.
    Edit: Typed this out before you got around to mentioning Kaluuya in the video. Great minds.

    • @jrmurph
      @jrmurph Год назад +154

      I love the moment when he yells and slaps hands with his sister. It was so unexpected because he so far had such a subdued presence and it was great to see a moment of high emotion.

    • @johnnyrivas2619
      @johnnyrivas2619 Год назад +65

      I came here to bring up Kaluuya's performance in Nope as well, he was nothing short of magnificent. It's a prime example of subtlety in a performance, an almost minimalist approach. He says very little and yet conveys so much.

    • @Mia-lw9xh
      @Mia-lw9xh Год назад +39

      Yes! I loved his role in NOPE and I think he did a great job elevating the “quiet cowboy” trope ❤

    • @mycollegeshirt
      @mycollegeshirt Год назад +30

      Yeah totally, I remember all of the dialogue at the beginning with the horse was unsaid, and how he conveys his relationship with his sister, and the father's role he's trying to take over, it was really done so seemingly effortlessly.

    • @Fanpirecullenists
      @Fanpirecullenists Год назад +16

      I’m so glad we’re all in agreement with what an amazing actor Daniel is

  • @2kooldancin
    @2kooldancin Год назад +3565

    I think Daniel Kaluuya’s performance in Nope is a masterclass in subtle acting. So many people didn’t get his performance and that he wasn’t just some boring character. He’s so expressive in his eyes! And that’s honestly what denotes a genuine performance, the eyes.

    • @recoveringintrovert717
      @recoveringintrovert717 Год назад +207

      Yeah, he's a cowboy. He's stoic and strong. I thought Nope was such a perfect movie

    • @ziggystatdust6008
      @ziggystatdust6008 Год назад +125

      Thank you. Daniel Kaluuya has become one of my favourite actors who excels in subtle, emotive, non-verbal acting. Nope, Get Out, Black Mirror, JATBM, heck even the Jonny English movie, he does his best.

    • @nahumkhokhar3441
      @nahumkhokhar3441 Год назад +54

      The eyes Chico, they never lie!

    • @Mizraab2912
      @Mizraab2912 Год назад +16

      @@ziggystatdust6008 Watch his episode on Black Mirror as well. He will blow you away

    • @semicolon.advocate
      @semicolon.advocate Год назад

      yes!!

  • @Hidinginyourcupboard
    @Hidinginyourcupboard 3 месяца назад +16

    And in fact you rarely see people in real life having a melt down. Most people keep their real feelings hidden

  • @Argeaux2
    @Argeaux2 2 месяца назад +10

    I like watching those actors who act “behind their eyes”.
    There is stuff going on in their minds. You can see it in their eyes.

  • @tommytwo-times9053
    @tommytwo-times9053 Год назад +1447

    it makes me almost jealous as a writer, that i come up with all of these ways to let the dialogue speak for what’s going on and these actors can just..show it. perfectly and without explanation

    • @user-pt5cl2ro6f
      @user-pt5cl2ro6f 11 месяцев назад +22

      I love writing these moments more than dialogues ngl 😅

    • @elcar659
      @elcar659 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@user-pt5cl2ro6fi like writing moments of internal pain while seemingly normal dialogue is going on

    • @christopherfeatherley
      @christopherfeatherley 10 месяцев назад +11

      When I was taught literary writing techniques, we were taught it was just as important what *isn't* said just as much as what is said. In a way, it's the equivalent of subtle acting in writing terms -- knowing how to refrain information, or to create a lack of what is obvious to the reader, to create a profound scene

  • @moshambles
    @moshambles Год назад +1859

    Florence Pughs performance in Midsommar is one of the best I've ever seen. I could really feel everything the character was feeling and it made for a powerful, uncomfortable but worthwhile experience

    • @MedusaWay
      @MedusaWay Год назад +110

      She was great. While she totally sells her subtle scenes, her cry in the first act felt so real and heart-wrenching. I wanted to cry just hearing it which never happens to me.

    • @cellokid5104
      @cellokid5104 Год назад +12

      Nah. Not really

    • @addie8080
      @addie8080 Год назад +55

      @@cellokid5104 yes really

    • @zZiL341yRj736
      @zZiL341yRj736 Год назад

      Too bad piece of shit movie I didn't really notice.

    • @sarahbearbabygirl
      @sarahbearbabygirl Год назад +47

      for real. even when she’s in subpar movies playing poorly written characters (ala Don’t Worry Darling) she somehow brings that character so much more life than it ever would have had if any other actor had been chosen. give her the worst script and she can do the impossible, granting those characters the depth and emotion they don’t deserve. you can’t help but fall in love with her and want to see more of her.

  • @NuttyMongrel
    @NuttyMongrel 9 месяцев назад +67

    This is one of the reasons I love Good Will Hunting. Lots of really close-up shots of the actors' faces so you can see subtle facial expressions.

  • @binzplaystheukez
    @binzplaystheukez Год назад +33

    You said 'range' and I immediately thought of Tom Hiddleston, but when you reframed the word to mean 'range in intensity' I think Tom does an even more fabulous job. He's an underrated actor, one of the finest of this generation.

  • @scarletmoon95
    @scarletmoon95 Год назад +1640

    I think this is why I fell in love with Pattinson's Batman. He barely says anything, barely allows an emotion to be free, yet you can _feel_ with him anyway. His eyes were so entrancing.

    • @mekaylaowo1928
      @mekaylaowo1928 Год назад +100

      YES exactly he does so much acting with his eyes and it’s insane

    • @RyanKaufman
      @RyanKaufman Год назад +93

      I saw The Batman multiple times. Which is a marathon of a task because it's a very long film. But I feel like one of the main reasons I kept going back was because of the opening (in total, not just the technical intro). Part of why it's so good to me is the end of it, with Pattinson observing the son of the first victim of the Riddler. It's not a simple staredown in any facet. You can feel him go through many things -- the son found the body, the son is now an orphan, the son is now alone, the son is *still* alone, the son sees him too. His eyes push through all of this without even really moving or twitching or showing much. But it has everything still.

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 Год назад +28

      If you like subtle performances, George Mackay in 1917 is really good at it, and honestly one of my biggest reasons for recommending that movie. That, and how intimate it feels for what's supposed to be a war movie, it's the combination of the one-shot look and the over-the-shoulder POV we're given for a good chunk of the movie that really does it. The audience is stuck with this man while he's just doing his job, it's just that his job is very dangerous.

    • @mark-nm5hi
      @mark-nm5hi Год назад +7

      You could feel the stress he was portraying in Good Time as well

    • @bootao1671
      @bootao1671 Год назад

      @@tenoch5589 so what, enough to make a point

  • @SamuraiMujuru
    @SamuraiMujuru Год назад +2884

    Daniel Kaluuya is so damned good at this kind of performance. Get Out, Judas and the Black Messiah, Nope, man's a legend.

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  Год назад +135

      Absolutely agree.

    • @brittanybelo1361
      @brittanybelo1361 Год назад +121

      I think about Daniel’s performance in Nope at least once a dayyy… so subtle & quiet but so much reverence and power

    • @theautisticguitarist7560
      @theautisticguitarist7560 Год назад +71

      @@brittanybelo1361 All he does is change is eyes slightly and it somehow perfectly conveys his emotions. straight up GOAT

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Год назад +48

      Daniel Kaluuya can go either way--his role in Judas and the Black Messiah is more obviously intense, which is why he won the Oscar. He is incredible in it, but I still think Get Out is better. When he nods his head at the brother and just says, "Cool," I realized I would follow his career for life. Haven't seen Nope yet, sadly.

    • @davidmckesey7119
      @davidmckesey7119 Год назад +15

      Watch him in Widows too

  • @zwrulez185
    @zwrulez185 3 месяца назад +16

    As someone who’s been acting for over half my life now, there’s two things I’ve learned that have really stuck with me. It’s different for every person, but these were my personal discoveries.
    1. The type of immersion you describe here is so crucial, yet so hard to achieve - and it’s not something that can happen consciously. It can take months to begin to develop a character’s voice, posture, general behavior, memories, etc. Eventually, it becomes second nature, but you have to work for it. Sometimes that can mean method acting, sometimes it can mean buying a raw chicken breast, putting it in your shower, turning the water on, turning the lights off, and then entering your apartment and stabbing it through the curtain. (That’s not something _I_ have done, but I know someone who has.) But anyway, once you get to the point where you genuinely feel everything the character does, you can achieve both those subtle expressions and also the breakdowns and outbursts. They should come from the same place.
    2. Anyone can mimic someone else’s performance, and anyone can just put on a mask and play the role. But if you’ve been cast as a role, it’s because there’s something that only _you_ can bring to the character. You can visualize it by imagining that there are hundreds of dials, each for a different trait that you have. Becoming a character means adjusting those dials, finding the things you need within you, not conjuring out of thin air. Intensify the extroversion a little, amplify the neuroticism, tone down the cynicism, play up the nerdiness. Don’t try to make yourself into the character, make the character into you.

  • @user-pf6ko7xw2d
    @user-pf6ko7xw2d 2 месяца назад +7

    Andrew Scott in All of Us Strangers was incredible…he was so subtle in his expression of grief and trauma. Watching his refrain in certain scenes with his parents absolutely broke my heart.

  • @amritadas8225
    @amritadas8225 Год назад +1098

    Fleabag is a great example of what you're talking about. Not just PWB, but I think everyone in that show exhibits such subtle acting skill. The screenplay demanded it as well.

    • @GemmaJohnshat
      @GemmaJohnshat Год назад +79

      fleabag is the epitome of subtle emotion

    • @ChloeBarker-mv3sw
      @ChloeBarker-mv3sw Год назад +49

      olivia coleman was amazing at thus in the series

    • @queenawesum
      @queenawesum Год назад +1

      @Herstory yeah

    • @herbonfires
      @herbonfires Год назад +3

      Brilliant! All of them!

    • @gecko7167
      @gecko7167 Год назад +2

      YES! I immediately thought of Fleabag when he gave these other examples of subtle performance.

  • @valeriyav2149
    @valeriyav2149 Год назад +881

    I love Mads Mikkelsen because his acting is so subtle and he uses a lot of micro expressions.

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Год назад +33

      Especially in The Hunt.

    • @amemocci3580
      @amemocci3580 Год назад +123

      in hannibal too! hannibal lecter is this super stoic, mostly expressionless, restrained character yet mads manages to communicate so many subtle emotions through micro expressions, its amazing

    • @sanna9062
      @sanna9062 Год назад +2

      *Mikkelsen
      I love him too!

    • @OsirisMawn
      @OsirisMawn Год назад +2

      Proven by all the women in this comment section

    • @shadybutnotslim
      @shadybutnotslim Год назад +10

      The movie Another Round reflects Mikkelsen's subtle acting skills very well

  • @sprich3200
    @sprich3200 8 месяцев назад +19

    For someone who grew up watching Asian tv & movies, Subtle Performance is in fact one of the greatest acting an actor will be credited on. Given how most Asian production are really heavy on emotions. That is why when I transitioned to watching Western production at a later age, I always find it so different; louder body language, more flamboyant, bigger set, etc. Steven Yuen always give me such comfort. Best of both worlds.

  • @mr.duck1248
    @mr.duck1248 3 месяца назад +5

    I feel the same way about musical performances, such as singing. Whenever you see a “best singing” compilation, it’s all people belting at the top of their longs, doing over the top riffs, and whistle notes. All of these take talent, yes, but there’s so much complexity and emotion that people can put into singing. When a voice sounds like it could fall apart at any moment but it never does, when just the tone of a voice tells a story without needing the lyrics, singing is so much more than belting, riffs, and whistle tones.

  • @benjenstarkk
    @benjenstarkk Год назад +708

    Saoirse Ronan is also great in doing micro expression. Her act in Hozier's music video is amazing, it was really short, she was mainly sitting in front of a mirror and didn't say anything yet you could catch what happened and what she's feeling

    • @karmasauce2323
      @karmasauce2323 Год назад +18

      Agreed! It remains one of the most powerful on-screen performances I have ever seen.

    • @devilinthedetails3751
      @devilinthedetails3751 Год назад +27

      Lady Bird is a prime example of her acting prowess.
      Little women has been on my list for awhile now

    • @schan4713
      @schan4713 Год назад +6

      Agreed!! was thinking of her this whole time!

  • @lulinavone
    @lulinavone Год назад +1490

    Nobody mentioning Jodie Comer? She's just so good with micro facial expressions and how she can say everything with her eyes too. You can see it either on Killing Eve with Villanelle or in The Last Duel with Marguerite de Carrouges. Well, I must say in every role she has done certainly nails the subtle expressions. She's so complete and versatile actress. Which it's crazy how underrated she is.

    • @elsam8695
      @elsam8695 Год назад +39

      Omg yes I was looking for the comment about Jodie Comer!!!

    • @lulinavone
      @lulinavone Год назад +16

      @@elsam8695 Glad to know I’m not alone in this one!!

    • @rakadoni8403
      @rakadoni8403 Год назад +5

      Haha I was thinking this too

    • @jodiecomercompilations1699
      @jodiecomercompilations1699 Год назад +43

      yes yes yes!! I hope he does a video about Jodie because she's soo good but still so incredibly underrated! the fact that she was barely recognised for The Last Duel still baffles, me she was miles better than a lot of the nominated performances that year imo.
      What's so insane about her especially, is that you can see 2 pictures of her in full costume side by side as villanelle for example but you know instantly which is in character and which is not because even without a transformation physically she changes in every other way from the way she holds her face to her posture, she's like a completely different person, like she somehow knows how to change her entire aura, but yet at the same time, seamless switches between the character and herself like its nothing, dropping and picking up the accent and the persona in a split second none of that "getting in to the role" stuff you hear of,
      It really is fascinating to watch when you get to see behind the scenes footage.

    • @lulinavone
      @lulinavone Год назад +5

      ​@@jodiecomercompilations1699 Indeed, yeah, it would be great an analysis of her. She has to be studied lol

  • @Daninilahdia
    @Daninilahdia Месяц назад +2

    That's why i love Tony Leung.. His expressions are high level.. So subtle, but we felt it. His silent still can make me cry

  • @almafely8040
    @almafely8040 14 дней назад +1

    Richard Madden as Lieutenant Blake in the movie 1917 is a prime example of, "there's no such thing as small parts..."
    He goes through a range of very real emotions all in the span of two minutes; from joy to grief to a soldier's restraint . As humans, we are so complex, and his portrayal of these emotions is so moving. I cry every time I watch that scene.

  • @PlanetADiM
    @PlanetADiM Год назад +1770

    So glad you talked about Riz Ahmed in Sound of Metal. The subdued desperation, frustration, shame, and sense of loss he portrays (often all at once) is absolutely crushing. Paired with the subtlety of Paul Raci, they performed one of the most heart-breaking scenes I have ever seen.

    • @PetiteMouse
      @PetiteMouse Год назад

      Great point!

    • @hawk2million
      @hawk2million Год назад +27

      Riz Ahmed is so good. One of the saddest scenes I've seen is his goodbye to his wife in Four Lions.

    • @odallard
      @odallard Год назад +6

      I first saw him in The Reluctant Fundamentalist and he was powerful in his characteristic understated style.

    • @lynxcore
      @lynxcore Год назад +1

      riz ahmed is amazing

    • @rairai7991
      @rairai7991 Год назад

      Why am I crying 🥲

  • @zxbc1
    @zxbc1 Год назад +1351

    Riz Ahmed is one of the greatest actors of his generation. He is so good at the big acting as well as the subtle acting, and he has this really calm and complex demeanor to him, it's not just facial expressions, but also body language. He reminds me a lot of a young Robert De Niro or Dustin Hoffman. He's in a whole other league compared to 99.9% of today's actors.

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  Год назад +111

      More people should watch The Night Of for his work! Totally agree.

    • @johnreznik3713
      @johnreznik3713 Год назад +6

      He's in this small movie encounter, which probably won't get much notice but his performance is great and he makes what should be a bad movie great.

    • @RoamingAdhocrat
      @RoamingAdhocrat Год назад +11

      can still remember Bohdi's face as he reflects on the grenade thrown into the ship he named Rogue One

    • @DetectiveTrupo203
      @DetectiveTrupo203 Год назад +25

      He's excellent in Nightcrawler

    • @blackbird8837
      @blackbird8837 Год назад +6

      Tomy Dalton as Lalo Salamanca sitting in a chair listening to some talker for straight 3min not moving a muscle and just turning from zero expression into a smile is peak lowkey acting.

  • @Lina-lf7ly
    @Lina-lf7ly 8 месяцев назад +11

    The subtle emotions and „face acting“ is one of the reasons Heartstopper works as a show.

  • @lauraroth6630
    @lauraroth6630 9 месяцев назад +41

    I love this video. And I personally think that Joaquin Phoenix and Leo DiCaprio got their Oscars because of what they did for the role, and not necessarily because of their performances. And Rami Malek got his because it was a biopic (and since then, many actors have been getting biopic flack for their performances bc Rami won). You showed Heath in The Dark Knight, and I think that he truly gave one of the best performances ever, even though it wasn't a subtle performance. And I also think he gave one of the best performances of all time in Brokeback Mountain, which was an incredibly subtle performance.

    • @heysatan8
      @heysatan8 3 месяца назад +2

      Yes! Heath Ledger in Brokeback is one of my favorite examples of good acting. The movie is too depressing to watch again but I'll never forget his performance. His character is so repressed that it even affects how he speaks; as if holding back his entire self, which results in this tense mumbling. I had such respect for him as an actor I was really sad when he died.

  • @lemonlazer5687
    @lemonlazer5687 Год назад +561

    Florence Pugh is so good in Midsommar it makes me feel anxious and sick feeling her despair. She conveys all the emotions you would expect from severe trauma perfectly

  • @ilikebeanies3499
    @ilikebeanies3499 Год назад +2990

    I know Breaking Bad has been analyzed to death, but the subtle performances from each actor is really mesmerizing. Especially Walt, of course. He had outbursts, but also small moments too.

    • @veronicaevans2246
      @veronicaevans2246 11 месяцев назад +60

      I actually was scrolling to see if someone commented about breaking bad and I'm so glad you did.

    • @damienx0x
      @damienx0x 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@veronicaevans2246 Scowling is the wrong word.

    • @veronicaevans2246
      @veronicaevans2246 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@damienx0x Oh my bad lol. Thanks for telling me, I'll fix it.

    • @carolineyuen3247
      @carolineyuen3247 11 месяцев назад +26

      The pizza frisbee belongs in the acting manual

    • @gaelzane9276
      @gaelzane9276 10 месяцев назад +48

      And speaking of which - RHEA SEAHORN's Kim Wexler in BCSaul is an amazing and unsung example of what he talks about in this video.

  • @userSchlonsch
    @userSchlonsch Год назад +28

    If you want to talk about subtle performances, you have to talk about Thomasin McKenzie. Her acting in Leave No Trace, Jojo Rabbit, Life After Life and The Justice of Bunny King especially is truly impressive. She acts so naturally and can tell so much about her character, even in smaller roles and with only a few lines. My favorite performances are those that make me forget almost completely that what I am watching is staged. And the small details, be it facial expressions or body language, are what you know and understand automatically and almost subconsciously.

  • @animesuki05
    @animesuki05 4 месяца назад +10

    I don't know why the algorithm took me here but I really enjoyed this content. Acting is one of my biggest interests and I'm so glad you highlighted something I've always relished in. This subtle performance that you describe is what I call the moment when and where the actor disappears and the character becomes alive. There is the method acting which I feel is more calculated and the performance satisfies the eyes and brains of the viewers but there is also this natural involuntary acting which speaks to the heart. It may appear clumsy, diluted or subtle like the examples here, but it delivers a huge story and feeling and shapes the role into a real-life human that I am watching.

  • @sofiebachhofer9184
    @sofiebachhofer9184 Год назад +961

    For me, Moonlight is one of the best examples for this kind of subtlety in acting performances. The whole point of the movie is Chiron constantly containing his emotions and his true self.

    • @kimaya4503
      @kimaya4503 Год назад +45

      My favorite film. So MANY amazing performances in one film.

    • @missmimi610
      @missmimi610 Год назад +13

      Absolutely!

    • @nevaxh
      @nevaxh Год назад +34

      Yup, Ashton and Trevante’s facial expressions display enough and I’m so glad that movie won an Oscar

    • @Locut0s
      @Locut0s Год назад +11

      Oops should have looked before posting lol said the same thing. Such a beautiful heart wrenching movie that’s so deeply relatable.

    • @rimun5235
      @rimun5235 Год назад +16

      This is the only movie I can think of where I actually watched twice and not to catch things that I had missed but because everything about it was beautiful to me. I just love how much of it is subtle. Such a freaking beautiful movie that leaves you melancholic without the drama.

  • @nayrw1092
    @nayrw1092 Год назад +872

    I’m surprised no one is bringing up Homelander from The Boys. He totally nails subtle acting. You never know what he’s gonna do and his performance constantly leaves you on edge!

    • @recoveringintrovert717
      @recoveringintrovert717 Год назад +88

      You are soooo correct. And not just at how subtle he is, but how fragile the subtlety is

    • @-PNGMAFIA-
      @-PNGMAFIA- Год назад +155

      he looks crazy not in the joker way, but in the way that he's just completely dead eyed while smiling, y'know, a subtle expression. antony starr gives an amazing performance

    • @neonovember3072
      @neonovember3072 Год назад +63

      @@-PNGMAFIA- oh god I forgot what season finale it was but when Homelander’s son chooses Butcher instead of him and he has this look on his face where you know he’s fully gone. It’s like a cry-half laugh and it’s so terrifying, it was scorched into my brain for days

    • @midnightfun1277
      @midnightfun1277 Год назад +14

      This. He was phenomenal. Just with his expressions you feel the atmosphere and how tense it is.

    • @yilguy
      @yilguy Год назад +9

      Terrifying performance. He nailed it

  • @micasway
    @micasway 10 месяцев назад +2

    I agree with you completely! Growing up I've been exposed to media wherein the more you can cry the better actor you are. But it's a whole other ballgame to be able to showcase these nuances and nail those subtle actions and reactions and that's what I appreciate the most! I can't explain things very well but you laid it all out so perfectly, so I love your video! Kudos, will be watching more :D

  • @patmepin15
    @patmepin15 8 месяцев назад +6

    This is why I love 'No Country For Old Men'. It's full of these performances. It's impossible not to become immersed in the story due to the amazing acting, writing, and direction. Incredible film.

  • @neilbarnwell
    @neilbarnwell Год назад +110

    Emma Thompson's character in "Love, Actually" opening her present from her husband and realising he was cheating on her, and the following two minutes, is some of the best acting committed to film.

    • @leahmulligan2111
      @leahmulligan2111 Год назад +14

      This scene solidified Emma Thompson as one of my favorite actors. Absolutely heartbreaking to watch every single time.

  • @shyslayer
    @shyslayer Год назад +746

    Steven Yeun's performance in Minari during the scene when his wife asked for a divorce had me uncontrollably sobbing because he was trying to hold his own sadness in - it was like I was feeling everything he couldn't express.

    • @rrr441
      @rrr441 Год назад +8

      Yes he has very expressive eyes.

    • @bravetherainbow
      @bravetherainbow Год назад +3

      Yes! I thought about that scene as well when his name came up

  • @aciuschristophores7789
    @aciuschristophores7789 9 месяцев назад +2

    The fact that you are able to see into these things and bring them forth into words certainly conveys your own brilliance, Mr Thomas!!

  • @georgiagalaxy
    @georgiagalaxy 9 месяцев назад +1

    I really love how soft, smooth and slow your voice is, it’s so much easier to understand than the usual video format 💗

  • @VoidedMirror
    @VoidedMirror Год назад +395

    Heath Ledger in Brokeback Mountain. There was so much boiling under the surface of that character that was constrained by the society he lived in. An amazing, subtle performance from Ledger that should've won him his first Oscar.

    • @nonagrace8172
      @nonagrace8172 Год назад +15

      yesss he always seemed mysterious and reserved

    • @petertromp8786
      @petertromp8786 Год назад +14

      YES! That movie kind of sucked (it was very much of-the-time "prestige" Oscar bait", but Heath Ledger's performance penetrated through the artifice. It was genuinely unsettling watching such a total performative of someone who's so clearly uncomfortable in their own skin.

    • @atticstattic
      @atticstattic Год назад +1

      Good call

    • @PatrickLofstrom
      @PatrickLofstrom Год назад +1

      @@petertromp8786 I see what you did there

    • @mynameprivate7151
      @mynameprivate7151 Год назад +1

      This is 100% true! Ledger’s performance is so multi-layered in his silence and repression. It’s one of the greatest performances of all time.

  • @urainyum
    @urainyum Год назад +745

    Victoria Pedretti is pretty phenomenal with the subtle hard hitting emotions in her performances. especially in the haunting of hill house

    • @chelseaxoxo784
      @chelseaxoxo784 Год назад +33

      Yes yes yes yes yes and yesss

    • @chelseaxoxo784
      @chelseaxoxo784 Год назад +25

      Victoria is phenomenal!

    • @edithputhy4948
      @edithputhy4948 Год назад +5

      no the voice acting sounded very fake

    • @urainyum
      @urainyum Год назад +13

      @@edithputhy4948 ya mama

    • @khronicallykatt
      @khronicallykatt Год назад +31

      There's a few scenes in You where she is sensational at subtly conveying so many layers of emotion in just an expression or reaction. It's wild to watch

  • @jakecharles7511
    @jakecharles7511 3 месяца назад +1

    This dude gets it. When I watch a movie I really want to watch, I do it alone because I am constantly looking for that subtlety, those micro-expressions. I will run back a scene, a moment, over and over again to relish in the actor's adeptness. I live for that stuff, truly! Thank you for making this video!

  • @jpetersgoyanks
    @jpetersgoyanks 10 месяцев назад +6

    I love love love when a video essay makes clear they in no way mean to praise one to lower another. Thank you, for the content as well as the context.

  • @lnelson7397
    @lnelson7397 Год назад +583

    Dude. I am SO glad you talked about Steven Yeun's performance in Burning. When I first saw the title of your video, I immediately thought to myself, "Steven's performance in Burning would be a fantastic example of that," and then you opened with it as the first example! I've watched thousands of performances at this point in my life, but Yeun's portrayal of Ben is the best I've seen to date. That whole movie in general is a masterclass in subtlety. There's so much going on yet it's all so quiet and fleeting. I could analyze Burning for hours.

    • @mattmorgan7172
      @mattmorgan7172 Год назад +37

      Yep, was gonna comment much the same myself! Yeun is so unnerving and terrifying in Burning to me - he has such tremendous screen presence that I remember thinking he seemed so much more physically imposing, so much bigger than Yoo Ah-in's character, and was shocked when I rewatched it and noticed that he's actually a little smaller. Of course, part of that also comes from Yoo's fantastic performance in making himself come across so small and powerless, but god Yeun is truly doing some top tier work throughout that film. Definitely one of my favourite performances of all time.

    • @mayspark4536
      @mayspark4536 Год назад +5

      I started it but now I gotta watch. I loved him in the glass door scene in Walking Dead

    • @skygrl22
      @skygrl22 Год назад

      I'm adding this movie to my playlist. Never heard of it until now.

  • @iblame_nargles
    @iblame_nargles Год назад +1488

    It truly bums me out that so many people see “good” acting as something heavily emotional and super performative. As someone who loves writing/directing, seeing actors place themselves in a role to the point where minor actions speaks volumes is so fucking underrated. Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul are some of my favourite shows purely because of pacing but the performances the actors bring to their roles is unparalleled. You can tell so much about what a character is thinking based on subtle looks and small face actions and, while I think the writing in those shows are great, the actors are what brings those characters to life.
    Nerdwriter’s video on Anthony Hopkins’ performance in Westworld is why I love acting. The rhythm of line delivery, the way actors can say so much by doing so little; hell, the way actors can tell the audience one thing and tell the _characters_ another is so fucking rad. It’s such an impressive art that has SO MUCH subtlety.
    I’d also recommend Drew Gooden’s video on good acting; it’s a little more silly but also a fun watch.

    • @DetectiveTrupo203
      @DetectiveTrupo203 Год назад +7

      When I'm watching a film and see incredible and subtle acting it makes me think of that nerdwriter video. Watching that video made me feel like I understood what good acting was for the first time.

    • @rowanjoy419
      @rowanjoy419 Год назад +3

      mmm I do not think so... if actually look, most people prefer small acting because is "most realistic" is really annoying for me.

    • @11cylynt11
      @11cylynt11 Год назад +8

      Yes, Jodi Foster is one of my favorite actresses. I honestly can't think of any scene where she has an over-the-top emotional outburst. When I think of her acting, I picture calm, collected, compelling, commanding, etc. There were so many scenes in Silence Of The Land where it would have been appropriate for her to act hysterical and emotional. But it fit her character, Clarice Starling, better to be more calm and collected. As a result, the subtle and controlled acting presented is more believable.
      Those who become detectives have seen really disturbing things and therefore develop a tough exterior. It takes a lot to raise their eyebrows. She conveyed her desensitized subdued reactions in a realistic manner. A good detective would stay collected and cool in a tense situation. She pulled that off so well.

    • @ShinyPrimarina
      @ShinyPrimarina Год назад +4

      I agree, for films and TV shows, subtlety or at the very least not going over the top is the best way to go.

    • @sharingiscaring53
      @sharingiscaring53 Год назад +2

      I don’t think that’s the point what makes those scenes so good to people is because there are still subtle performances and personalities in the big emotional scenes still. It’s a combo of emotions and subtlety.

  • @lexagolsove1301
    @lexagolsove1301 9 месяцев назад +9

    As an actor, this was such a fantastic video to watch. "I don't want to watch you go through it, I want to watch you get through it and fight against it," is advice that I cling to, meaning that while big emotions may be fun, they're often not what we do. That clip of Amy Adams trying not to cry is a perfect example.

    • @ifyouknow2323
      @ifyouknow2323 8 месяцев назад

      Lol what have you been in?

  • @zoningout3028
    @zoningout3028 9 месяцев назад +4

    This subtle acting just shows how great actors are in digesting the script and picturing the emotions that go along the scene to be able to execute them very convincingly.

  • @EmZevSS
    @EmZevSS Год назад +728

    Everything about Rhea Seahorn's performance of Kim Wexler is so emblematic of what you talk about here. I find it rly interesting the way she describes her process, about feeling all the emotions of her character physically in different parts of the body, and then actively fighting against those emotions to bring them out naturally in a roundabout way. Feels connected to what you were talking about with Rooney Mara and the involuntary neck twitch

    • @MrOtistetrax
      @MrOtistetrax Год назад +16

      Totally agree. Incredible performance.

    • @vaovao1665
      @vaovao1665 Год назад +37

      Rheas performance is all the more impressive to me because of how restrained it is compared to the louder than life Jimmy as her companion. It would be easy to just go along with your fellow actor and chew the scenery (in a great way) but she genuinely blows me away with how much she conveys with such a minimalist speech pattern and body language

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  Год назад +56

      Absolutely agree! I talk about her performance a little bit in my latest video on "Visual Storytelling" in BCS.

    • @JaydevRaol
      @JaydevRaol Год назад +4

      Yeah, she was great!

    • @berkeleyisonline160
      @berkeleyisonline160 Год назад +8

      the part where another lawyer insults jimmy and she doesn't say anyhing but you can see her clench her jaw in anger is such a great moment of subtle acting

  • @Rubiecat
    @Rubiecat Год назад +631

    there's no actor more subtle than Mads Mikkelsen, the guy can convey 300 emotions with just a single eye twitch

    • @angelotrinidad6888
      @angelotrinidad6888 Год назад +15

      Poker Scenes in Casino Royale 🥴💀

    • @ToriHiragana
      @ToriHiragana Год назад +12

      The hunt😍

    • @vamp5169
      @vamp5169 Год назад +3

      So true! All of his performances are amazing!!

    • @Lunadish
      @Lunadish Год назад +18

      See the difference when he played Gridenwald. I love Depp and still preferred Mikkelsen.

    • @pscharnett
      @pscharnett Год назад +1

      Even in Death Stranding you could see it.

  • @LibbyRoseITM
    @LibbyRoseITM 10 месяцев назад +11

    I think this is really needed in animated movies as well. I love the subtlety in the father's sadness in Tangled before they fly the 17th lantern, there's so much in the look he and the mother share. Thinking that the lanterns are useless. Having to be king and queen when all they want to be doing is joining the search for their lost daughter. Wondering whether she's even still alive.

  • @cynthiacharles9982
    @cynthiacharles9982 8 месяцев назад +2

    Finally! An intelligent, respectful critique. I love actors. They are my favorite artists. Your observation that awards are often given to “most “ acting instead of best is perfect.

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Год назад +645

    Subtle performances are just overall stunning to look at. It takes a certain level of skill to be able to execute it seamlessly. Not all actors have the capacity to master the art of subtlety.

    • @Raghy07
      @Raghy07 Год назад +5

      Looking sus but you're right.

    • @chasehedges6775
      @chasehedges6775 Год назад +2

      I love this comment because it’s so true

    • @packathonjohn4935
      @packathonjohn4935 Год назад +6

      I think that's why you can tell when someone is in inexperienced/unskilled actor or actress. It's like watching a high school play where it's sort of cartoonish and cringy, or watching one of those live action disney tv shows vs breaking bad.

    • @MrWater111
      @MrWater111 Год назад

      Nicolas Cage is the best for this :)

    • @moonlitshadows
      @moonlitshadows Год назад

      Oh my god you are everywhere!! Definitely a bot lol

  • @shadowranger125
    @shadowranger125 Год назад +699

    This exact reason is a huge part of why David Tennant's Doctor was so popular. He was his character, and everything that he felt you could see in his face. Every bit of excitement, grief, rage, awe, sarcasm, sadness, contentment showed up in expressions and transferred straight to the audience. Truly amazing acting.

    • @TheLittleFrenchy2
      @TheLittleFrenchy2 Год назад +46

      I’m not sure I agree. I adore David Tennant and he’s the reason I got into Doctor Who but he’s originally a stage actor and it showed, his Doctor was definitely more on the flamboyant side. He expressed so much and so well but I wouldn’t say his acting was particularly repressed.

    • @kenziemydear
      @kenziemydear Год назад +51

      I agree. Yes, he's playing a larger-than-life character who's flamboyant and hyper, but the scenes that make me cry are 100% credited to his acting. The Rose scene. The scene in "Midnight" when the he's now compelled to copy the entity. When he has to leave behind Donna after wiping her memory. All of these are sad and powerful situations, but there's a reason David Tennant's face was a big part of them. It's not easy to make an entire audience feel a fictional character's eternity of pain. It's been a while since I've watched the series, so I'm sure there's tons more examples.

    • @AmethystCobain
      @AmethystCobain Год назад +14

      I'd say, DT in everything else actually. The detective show with Colman, they ARE the show, and you can see this micro things in last summer in Scotland. He doesnt get as much credit as he should

    • @writerchick94
      @writerchick94 Год назад +24

      @@TheLittleFrenchy2 he was big when it needed it and quiet when it needed it. Those quite subtle moments come across even more when they contrast the big ones.

    • @kenziemydear
      @kenziemydear Год назад

      @@AmethystCobain I haven't seen him in anything else personally but my mom watched Broadchurch (I think that's the name) and said it was fantastic. He really is a great actor.

  • @prizmic3448
    @prizmic3448 9 месяцев назад +1

    This stuff is the best. You said it, I love the big bursts of emotion too, but gosh I love just hanging on someone and you can tell they're feeling a lot with only the subtlety and the tiny changes from how they might normally act to indicate that something is amiss.

  • @darianamsanchez
    @darianamsanchez 10 месяцев назад +12

    I think the cast of Succession is great at subtle acting and representing repressed emotions. Especially on Shiv, Tom and Kendall.

  • @Strega_del_Corvo
    @Strega_del_Corvo Год назад +524

    Daniel Kaluuya is immediately who came to mind when I saw the topic of this video. Him and Pugh are amazing at this. When he is trying to hold on emotionally while remembering his mother in Get Out tears me up every time.

    • @stephengrigg5988
      @stephengrigg5988 Год назад +15

      His performance in Judas and the black messiah was also amazing. Probably the best accent performance(I don't know what it's called) I've ever heard. I also think that that same character could have been done very over the top by a different actor.

    • @dazem8
      @dazem8 Год назад +19

      He melts into every character. The bit in Get Out where he has that paralyzing breakdown with the mom is still one of the best scenes in a film ever imo.

    • @brianaguilar8283
      @brianaguilar8283 Год назад

      @@dazem8 watch more films

    • @Clairembify
      @Clairembify Год назад +10

      He’s fantastic. It’s so remarkable in Nope : he doesn’t have much dialogue, and yet he manages to pull focus with this very strong inner intensity. OJ in that movie felt like an old-school taciturn cowboy archetype, I loved it.

    • @rocko5766
      @rocko5766 Год назад

      @@brianaguilar8283 There are no wrong opinions. Whether that person has watched 1,000 films or just the one, if they like the scene, they like the scene.

  • @milkyshakes
    @milkyshakes Год назад +777

    I couldn’t be more happy when you highlighted Florence. Her performance was so scary good. Her begrudging disgust and hurt was translated so well and it was so raw and authentic. My favorite movie and performance.

  • @aukhairyote
    @aukhairyote 4 месяца назад +2

    Every single person shown in the video nailed those subtle expressions and I know many are commenting about Florence pugh but the way she said that 'oh' sent chiils through me, total goosebumps.

  • @fullmoonracoon9584
    @fullmoonracoon9584 9 месяцев назад

    Subbed, I love the discrepancy between the AMOUNT of quality takes in your videos and the calmness of your voice. This video helped me realize that, ironically

  • @mssfuu
    @mssfuu Год назад +532

    Tony Leung in In the Mood for Love is one of the best performances I have ever seen. He speaks a lot without saying more, and he does this through masterful, subtle acting. I highly recommend his other films as well.

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Год назад +21

      His incredible acting elevated Shang-Chi so much! You make me want to go back and rewatch some of his Chinese films.

    • @camilaandreabecerraplata4550
      @camilaandreabecerraplata4550 Год назад +24

      Two words: "Happy Together"

    • @maxz4819
      @maxz4819 Год назад +3

      This is the correct answer

    • @kidcaptainwembri
      @kidcaptainwembri Год назад +15

      Yes! He is known for acting with his eyes, such an amazing actor

    • @SacredDaturana
      @SacredDaturana Год назад +9

      He is also excellent in Lust, Caution. Actually, that film is a masterclass in subtle acting, it feels like 80% of the film is wordless subtext. There are multiple scenes where the dialogue is a bunch of banal small talk but there is an additional layer to the scene that is all in glances and body language.

  • @misterkevinoh
    @misterkevinoh Год назад +370

    To Adam Driver's credit, he did a lot of subtle acting in Marriage Story. The scene where he asks Alan Alda's character whether he's paying to hear his joke is really good. We all remember the explosive scene but there was fantastic subtlety by Adam AND Scarlett leading up to it.

    • @alexlindstrom9971
      @alexlindstrom9971 Год назад +75

      Yes, It is completely absurd to focus on Driver's performance in a Marriage Story and is a comically bad example of what he is trying to criticize.

    • @mrbrightside3440
      @mrbrightside3440 Год назад +56

      @@alexlindstrom9971 tbf he wasn't criticising the entire performance, he was just criticising the notion that that scene is what good acting is, and that scene in particular went viral on social media for its acting

    • @neilvannatta2520
      @neilvannatta2520 Год назад +40

      @@mrbrightside3440 in context this scene works really really well. There's a reason it got to this point.

    • @d818581dd
      @d818581dd Год назад +6

      @@alexlindstrom9971 "completely absurd" okay, calm down drama queen!

    • @pawacoteng
      @pawacoteng Год назад +28

      @@alexlindstrom9971 You missed the point buddy - Driver's scene was an example of GOOD expressive acting. He never said he didn't also act subtly in the same film. I love his scene with the social worker observing dinner with his son. That was subtle acting on top of completely wild and ridiculous instances going on simultaneously.

  • @apersonwhomayormaynotexist9868
    @apersonwhomayormaynotexist9868 9 месяцев назад +8

    As a stage actor who occasionally does film work, the difference is night and day. A stage actor should be going full kylo ren. The audience can't see every twitch of your face, every subtlety of your performance. A small choice is a wrong choice. Pretty much every director I've ever worked with has, at some point in the process said "I'd rather you go too big and I have to pull you back in than you go too small and I have to tell you to go bigger"
    On the other hand, film is a very different story. It's far more personal, closer up, and more important to include subtlety. You don't need to be loud to reach the back of the audience. You don't need to have big facial expressions so that your face doesn't look the same the entire time to half the audience. You just need to act like a person would.

  • @jordan101096
    @jordan101096 3 месяца назад

    I love seeing this on screen! As someone who works on a psych unit, it's the little cues that are really telling of how someone is thinking/feeling.

  • @TwinkleStarLemonFruit
    @TwinkleStarLemonFruit Год назад +220

    Florence's performance in Midsommar is so raw and real. It's the subtle ways in which she reacts without uttering a word and how the people around her either don't acknowledge or notice it. We all know exactly what she's feeling and what she's thinking in those moments though. The performance is brilliant.

    • @notverynotoriousg5674
      @notverynotoriousg5674 Год назад +6

      Its also works to establish the uncomfortable contrasts in the film, her individualism vs her bfriend and his friends lack of self-awareness, and the cult's collective feeling

  • @SauronsAccntnt
    @SauronsAccntnt Год назад +381

    I recently rewatched 'Knives Out' and found myself really rediscovering how much I enjoyed LaKeith Lee Stanfield's performance as one of the accessory detectives. He knows how to play this sort of quiet, intense intelligence that is intriguing in even the shortest of scenes, and I feel like it embodies a lot of what this video discussed.

    • @neconeconeco
      @neconeconeco Год назад +25

      He's SO good.

    • @rimun5235
      @rimun5235 Год назад +19

      He honestly brings so much life to a lot of things I've seen him in.

    • @nondescriptbeing5944
      @nondescriptbeing5944 Год назад +10

      He's my favorite part of Atlanta, I think.

    • @rojelanogueify
      @rojelanogueify Год назад +6

      I second LaKeith Stanfield! He was my favorite part of Atlanta and this video immediately made me think of the Teddy Perkins episode. He's so under-appreciated!

    • @deadaccountsadly4137
      @deadaccountsadly4137 Год назад +4

      He also does this type of performance well in sorry to bother you. Amazing underrated movie.

  • @sabarblatoe
    @sabarblatoe Год назад

    Wow you are really good. Most people feel these scenes but have no clue why they do. You are able to catch exactly what it is thats causing that subconscious reaction. Well done.

  • @daviduribepava4631
    @daviduribepava4631 8 месяцев назад +4

    I got ta say Jonathan Banks playing Mike Ehrmantraut in BCS is my all-time favorite for his subtle performance. He's just so mysterious and profound. The way he achieves that not by yelling or crying earned him so many close-ups throughout the series.

  • @11cylynt11
    @11cylynt11 Год назад +193

    Anthony Hopkins is a prime example of subtle acting. His portrayal of Hannibal Lector is so errie because of his robotic like gestures, his ominous glare, and his calm yet intelligent manner of speaking. He never had any emotional outbursts or tried to make a creepy face. They made it a point in the film to relay to the viewer that even while he attacked a nurse, his heart rate stayed low. He simply fumed with tension just by standing and staring a certain way.

    • @zachr5779
      @zachr5779 Год назад +22

      The dinner scene he did in Season 1 of Westworld was downright incredible. Man goes through almost 6 emotions in the span of 12 seconds at one point.

    • @11cylynt11
      @11cylynt11 Год назад +1

      @@zachr5779 yes I agree. He's great in Westworld.

    • @commandercaptain4664
      @commandercaptain4664 Год назад +2

      A true test is when he's able to bring gravitas to a role in a movie like Freejack, an otherwise silly, over-the-top actioner, but when he shows up, the movie's energy simply changes and belongs to him.

    • @MartijnPennings
      @MartijnPennings Год назад +4

      @@zachr5779 You've probably seen this Nerdwriter video in which every second of Hopkins' expressions in this scene is analyzed (if not, watch it!): ruclips.net/video/4kSGkGKwp9U/видео.html&ab_channel=Nerdwriter1

    • @calgrump8458
      @calgrump8458 Год назад +4

      He did do a few creepy faces (for example, tereth clicking), but it was well timed

  • @Madamoizillion
    @Madamoizillion Год назад +1150

    Pretty different medium, but this is a big reason why I absolutely love Studio Ghibli's animation and in particular Miyazaki's direction. They've managed to portray these microexpressions on *animated* character's faces! These fictional, 2-dimensional illusions end up feeling like they're portraying someone more alive to me than many real actors do. Someone with a complex inner world, conflicting thoughts and emotions, hopes, dreams, all internally and showing only in the barest traces of facial expressions.
    Like I think maybe my favorite seen of any movie ever is the scene in Howl's Moving Castle where Howl checks on Sophie sleeping and sees that she's not actually an old woman, she's the young and timid girl he helped in the alley. This scene shows that the curse is mainly based on how Sophie sees herself, and that when she's not aware of her appearance she reverts to her original body. It also implies that Howl is a person she now feels safe with, that she found his castle somewhat accidentally but took a brave step in trusting him because on some level she knows they can help each other. Meanwhile, Howl's face on first glance looks frozen as he gazes at her, but he goes through, like, at least half a dozen different emotions as he processes what he sees and what this all means (shock, confusion, recognition, comprehension, tenderness, uncertainty in himself, the beginnings of resolve). That scene is like 5 seconds long and it communicates so much subtext that I nerd out about it every time aaahhhhh!!!

    • @redwolf481
      @redwolf481 11 месяцев назад +55

      Your really observant. Japanese storytelling values low stakes and the small moments in life in opposite to western drama that values high stakes moments of crisis and action. In Japanese dizlouge what's not said between two people is more powerful than what's said. Irl a Japanese married couple fan go their whole lives without saying I love you. They show it in their behaviors and the emotions and moments and shared between the two. It doesn't need to be verbzlized. You will see this in(you will sée this focus on the quiet moments and feelings shared between people vs verbal displays of affection and sex/kissing in many of Miyazakis films, Japanese anime and Korean dramas.
      Miyazaki had an interview with Roger Ebert where he talks about an aspect of this quality, "MA" if you Google their interview from 2002.

    • @redwolf481
      @redwolf481 11 месяцев назад +29

      Miyazaki is super famous for taking 5 years plus to make a movie because he spends so much time on small details and human behaviors

    • @awarlockunkindlyborn1353
      @awarlockunkindlyborn1353 10 месяцев назад +29

      I know exactly what you mean! There's another scene in Howl's Moving Castle worth mentioning. It's when they are with Madame Suliman in the palace and she is using magic to conjure the circle of dancing star children around Howl and Sophie (in order to force Howl to change into his bird form). Suliman says something like "let's show her what you really are," and Howl's expression at that part has just always really stood out to me. It's so subtle, almost neutral, besides a slight smile. But there's a look in his eyes that gives me chills. I have consistently failed in my efforts to put its meaning into words, but it's one of the most unnerving parts of the film. I love it.

    • @retrospade
      @retrospade 10 месяцев назад +7

      Takahata’s films too tbh. The expressions in Kaguya, Only Yesterday and GOTFF in particular are amazing

    • @cennin11
      @cennin11 10 месяцев назад +24

      I always liked the moment in Spirited Away when Chihiro starts eating and her eyes begin welling with tears while her cheeks are stuffed with food. It takes its time and is so beautiful and sad and healing.

  • @NoriMori1992
    @NoriMori1992 9 месяцев назад +20

    Probably my favourite example of subtle performance is a scene in _Memento._ (spoilers ahoy!) The scene where Sammy Jankis's wife tries to snap him out of his short-term memory loss (which doctors have claimed is purely psychogenic) by tricking him into giving her her insulin shot over and over, in 15-minute intervals.
    If nothing else, she knows for _sure_ that he loves her. And she also believes - needs to believe - that he can snap out of his condition with the right motivation. So how could this test not work?
    After he gives second injection, and is getting up to walk out of frame and return to his seat, leaving her alone in the frame, there's a look on her face that's completely burned in my memory. She can't believe this is actually happening. She can't believe this didn't work.
    She knew he loved her, and she "knew" he could snap out of his condition. Now she's being forced to confront that one of those things is false, and it's like she can't decide which one because she doesn't know which would be worse. This was the ultimate test, a test where failing would cost her life, and he still failed. She looks dumbfounded and confused and heartbroken and bitterly disappointed and utterly alone.
    I can't do it justice in writing (you should just watch it), but if I'd been the director I would have been fist-pumping after I watched that take. It's an incredibly subtle expression, but it says _so much._
    Frankly, the entire scene is full of great subtle acting. When she requests an injection for the third or fourth time, her voice goes a bit hoarse as she says "It's time for my shot", like she's trying not to cry. And it's obvious to us but it's subtle enough that you can believe even her husband would miss it if he lacked context. It's really, really good.

  • @jhjhjhjhjhjhify
    @jhjhjhjhjhjhify Год назад +419

    Weirdly, Robert Pattinson's performance in The Batman fits this criteria for me. There are times when you know exactly what his Batman is thinking even when he's behind the mask. A moment I always think of is during the bomb scene when Riddler says he's going to 'unmask' the city's corruption, and the way in which Batman says 'unmask?' in that quiet, distinctly nervous way tells you so much about his fear of his own identity being revealed. The way he uses his voice, the little looks he gives, his body language etc. are also subtle but again tell you so much.
    Side note, Burning's a great film, one of the few Murakami adaptations that works

    • @ThomasFlight
      @ThomasFlight  Год назад +218

      It's weird because it's a Batman film, but not weird because Pattinson is unironically a great actor :)

    • @neareed9241
      @neareed9241 Год назад +62

      Pattinson's performance in The Batman absolutely fits in this criteria for me. He's able to convey so much without any dialogue. It's absolutely incredible imo. In every scene, I feel like I know exactly what he's thinking. Some moments that really stick out to me, off the top of my head. When he keeps rewinding the recording of Selina back at the batcave. He doesn't say a word but you can just till he's utterly mesmerized and fascinated by her. Then there's the beginning of the entire funeral sequence. Bruce's surprise that Riddler has gained so much public support. His awkward smile for the cameras. Then his infatuation with Selina kicking back in when he thinks she's with Falcone. His pure tunnel vision, on his face, when he beelines towards Falcone and the woman. And then his reaction when he realizes that she isn't Selina. All done without a single line of dialogue. At that's just his Bruce Wayne. What he's able to convey behind the mask is even more impressive.

    • @ronanmaebee
      @ronanmaebee Год назад +5

      I think he's so good in that role

    • @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult
      @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult Год назад +5

      Oh, I remember that unmasking scene, too.

    • @Missjunebugfreak
      @Missjunebugfreak Год назад +17

      I agree. Pattinson's performance in that film is one of the best things about it. The scene with Riddler when he's scared that Batman's secret identity has been found out is so great due to how Robert expresses so much with his eyes.

  • @maggyxchuu
    @maggyxchuu 2 месяца назад +1

    Carey Mulligan in Maestro. Her micro expressions throughout the entire film were INCREDIBLE.

  • @HighFive212
    @HighFive212 9 месяцев назад +1

    As a person that watches everything with subtitles (except for RUclips videos, funny enough), this is super interesting and very informative. Great stuff! I was thinking about Nolan and then you brought him up and explained it. Never thought of what it means to turn Dolby Atmos sound, into what my phone or TV, with little computer speakers attached for a boost in quality, produces.

  • @katannep7798
    @katannep7798 Год назад +318

    First thing I thought of was the end scene of La La Land, where Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling make eye contact at the very end from across the room. Their expressions are so subtle, but speak volumes of love, loss, regret, acceptance, and “best wishes” all rolled into one. Brilliant.

  • @fredrikstaffansson4473
    @fredrikstaffansson4473 Год назад +388

    In Manchester by the Sea, Casey Affleck plays a depressed/grief-stricken character with such realism and sublety. There is only one scene in the entire movie where he cries.

    • @roseinivory5747
      @roseinivory5747 Год назад +13

      I came here to say this!! When he talked about Darjeeling in the video, I got flashbacks of the hospital scene at the beginning of Manchester. And that crying scene. So good.

    • @HankScorpio94
      @HankScorpio94 Год назад +2

      Yessss, came in here to say this.

    • @ThuyHoNYC
      @ThuyHoNYC Год назад +1

      It’s so good. That performance was excellent and I loved how music amplified his scene at the precinct

    • @majorpwner241
      @majorpwner241 Год назад +5

      Interesting. This video definitely made me think of his performance in The Assassination of Jesse James where he was fantastic as a more meek, almost background character even in spite of being one of the main characters. He's an incredible talent. Too bad it doesn't run in the family, haha.

    • @nondescriptbeing5944
      @nondescriptbeing5944 Год назад +1

      I just commented about this before I scrolled two lines and saw yours lol
      >Won best actor, but there aren't many huge emotional moments, just feels like dead resignation, smothered guilt, loss of a will to really live but not trying to actively die for the most part. I'm glad he got the recognition for it.