Here are ten great actors that have been continually overlooked by the Academy.

Jim Carrey: This one is a
shock just when you consider the resume of Jim Carrey. Beginning in 1996 with Liar,
Liar, continuing in 1997 with The Truman Show, followed up in 1998
with Man on the Moon, and let us not forget his emotionally draining
performance in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind… To know that all
of those performances were ignored would be enough already, but the one that
really irks us is that Carrey—completely abandoning all pretense, shirking all
attempts at pandering to his fan base—gave his most complete performance as gay
conman Steven Russell in I Love You Phillip Morris, and he still wasn’t
nominated. Not only do we see Carrey going full “Brokeback” in a film as full
of heartbreak as it is uproarious laughter, but the sheer range and depth of
his performance shows that he’s capable of hitting more notes than many of his
award-winning colleagues. After being the only reason to see Kick Ass 2 (next
to Chloe Moretz) and going back to the well with the upcoming Dumb and
Dumber To, we hope Carrey re-establishes his industry clout enough to have
more chances to show us just how good he is.
Philip Baker Hall: Robert Altman
regular and Paul Thomas Anderson regular Philip Baker Hall is one of the great
veteran character actors of our time. He started briefly in 1970 with smaller
roles, until he was catapulted to a level of stardom with his performance as
Richard Nixon in director Robert Altman’s minimalist biopic, Secret Honor.
In it, Hall not only creates a convincing Nixon confessing to the camera, but
he provides his own command of emotion to elicit sympathy from the audience in
a way that causes us to feel for a man we still keep at arm’s length. Although
many smaller parts followed here and there, it was Altman’s understudy Paul
Thomas Anderson who saw the potential of Philip Baker Hall. Anderson’s first
film Sydney (later retitled Hard Eight against his wishes)
featured Hall in the title role of an assassin trying to repair the broken
lives of men he vicariously destroyed so many years ago. It’s an honest,
vulnerable performance of a man who seems to be in complete control until he’s
found out. Hall would later star in Anderson’s subsequent pictures, with parts
in Boogie Nights and as a television show host in Magnolia you’ll
never forget. Not unlike Tommy Lee Jones, Hall is a crusty performer capable of
great transformation and a keen understanding of how to project complex, deeply
felt emotions. And yet, this powerhouse veteran of an actor continues to only
appear in character roles devoid of any chance at ever being nominated for an
Oscar. Unlike Tommy Lee Jones, who has been nominated several times and managed
to win the Best Supporting Actor Oscar, Philip Baker Hall hasn’t had his fair
shot yet. The time has come to shine the light on this gifted actor with more
talent than half of the actors who have won or been nominated for their acting
abilities.
Michael Keaton: Let us ask a
perfectly legitimate question. How the hell do you not give an Oscar to f**king
Batman?! Keaton’s career kicked off with mostly comic performances, some
remarkable like Beetlejuice, others not so remarkable like Mr. Mom…
but hey, we all make mistakes. After Batman, it seemed certain that
Keaton would catapult into the stratosphere of stardom, but it just never
seemed to happen; his career petered along after shucking the cape and cowl,
popping up here and there in small supporting roles, like the nosy FBI agent in
Quentin Tarantino’s Jackie Brown. Until recent turns in Robocop
and Need for Speed, Keaton’s last major release as a headliner was the
2005 supernatural thriller White Noise. If you forgot about it, you
weren’t the only one. That same year, Keaton was also in the little seen Game
6, hitting a home run with a performance that should have gotten more
attention than it did. But it was a small film, with a screenplay by novelist
Don DeLillo, whose novels and subsequent film adaptations (Cosmopolis,
anyone?) have a known polarizing effect on audiences. We can only hope that
Keaton’s lead role in Birdman is everything early buzz says it is,
because how awesome would it be for Batman to win an Oscar for Birdman?

Alfred Molina: An
English-American actor of Spanish and Italian descent, Alfred Molina burst onto
the film scene in a bit part alongside Harrison Ford in the opening sequence to
Raiders of the Lost Ark. Since that day, he has earned his share of
memorable roles ranging from domineering Iranian father in Not Without My
Daughter to the cocaine addicted Rahad Jackson in Boogie Nights. But
it wasn’t until his portrayal of famous artist Diego Rivera in Frida that
Alfred Molina received major attention for his acting abilities. It didn’t take
long for Molina to land the role of the villain Doctor Octopus in Sam Raimi’s
critically lauded superhero film Spider-Man 2. Always versatile and
chameleonic, playing characters of numerous ethnicities and personal
backgrounds, Mr. Molina surely should have had a shot at the Academy Award for
Best Actor, right? Despite his massive
and continuing body of work in major films, the Academy continues to ignore him
even as he has appeared in several nominated pictures. As he continues to
appear in film, television and even providing voice work for animated films and
video games, it’s time for the Academy to start taking him more seriously and
shine a spotlight on one of cinema’s most prolific and underrated character
actors.
Kurt Russell: We are just as
surprised as you to see this name on the list. Was there another actor in the
80s who created as many genre icons as Kurt Russell? Snake Plissken, R.J.
MacReady, Jack Burton… okay, Kurt Russell really owes John Carpenter a beer.
When you hear about actors who embody that “everyman quality,” make every
performance look natural, and still manage to exude a palpable charisma—Kurt
Russell has all of those attributes in spades. And beyond genre fare, Russell’s
dramatic turns in films like Tombstone and Dark Blue only got so
far as “talk” of awards contention. Things died down with his career for a
while after the poorly received Soldier, but then in 2007, he gave us
Stuntman Mike in Quentin Tarantino’s “big limp dick movie” Death Proof.
Even if the only part you liked was the car chase, no one could deny that
Russell still has the stuff. Next year we can look forward to him reuniting
with Tarantino in The Hateful Eight, and maybe—just maybe—the director
who gave John Travolta a second chance at life—and an Oscar nomination to
boot—could do the same for Russell?
Alan Rickman: Who said the
Academy were terrorists? We did. Because they have never once paid proper
tribute to one of the greatest bad baddies of all time. It’s not often that a
summer blockbuster also has an award-worthy performance in it; as Hans Gruber
in Die Hard, Alan Rickman not only put his own stamp on what has since
become a cultural landmark, but did so with the kind of style and substance
that transcends the material he was given. After all, without great acting from
Rickman and Bruce Willis, Die Hard would have just been another action
film from the writer that scripted Commando and The Running Man.
Since then, Alan Rickman has been one of the best go-to British actors around,
whether he’s making us laugh our asses off as the Metatron in Dogma,
trying to give true weight to Kevin Costner vehicles like Robin Hood: Prince
of Thieves, showing true emotional complexity as a tempted husband in Love
Actually, or getting under our skin as the slithery Professor Snape in the Harry
Potter films. Having Alan Rickman in your film ensures it has a touch of
class, even when it is the remake/sequel/whatever the heck that new Alice in
Wonderland thing was. Oh, and did I mention that he can sing? Yep. Right up
until he gets his throat cut.
Donald Sutherland: Is there any
good reason why one of the most reliable and likable character actors of all
time has never been nominated for an Oscar? Donald Sutherland’s career reads
like a veritable catalogue of essential film history. Be it in genre classics
like Invasion of the Body Snatchers, villainous turns in the recent Hunger
Games series, dramatic heart-wringers like Ordinary People, or stretching
his comic sidekick muscles in throwaway pleasures like Space Cowboys,
Sutherland has done it all, and continues to show actors how it’s done right.
But we can all agree that his best performance was as the grieving father in
Nicholas Roeg’s masterpiece of psychological terror, Don’t Look Now.
It’s very easy for an actor to play it crazed and get recognized for it as
“acting,” but true acting is when we can see the emotions withheld by someone
who needs to be strong for the other person in the room, and that’s something
Sutherland has always been a master of: Subtlety. Perhaps he was a little too
good at it. I hope that after he’s done with The Hunger Games,
Sutherland finally gets a role that he can sink his dentures into. The man has
one of the most recognizable and distinguished voices in the business—let him
put it to good use, and give him his long overdue reward for it.
Ray Winstone: British character
actor Ray Winstone is one of mainstream Hollywood’s most prolific and familiar
faces. Often cast in the archetypical role of hardened tough guys or gangsters,
the stocky veteran character actor has also had his fair share of difficult
characters. Beginning as a youngster opposite Phil Daniels in Franc Roddam’s Quadrophenia
and Alan Clarke’s Scum as a juvenile delinquent, Winstone would cite
the influence the late Clarke had on the direction his career would take as a
resident bad boy. Appearing in numerous roles in television and film throughout
the early 80s, his first major break came in Nil by Mouth as a wife
beating alcoholic, for which he was nominated for the BAFTA Award. His ability
to play both detestable characters in films like Tim Roth’s The War Zone paralleled
his equal talent for softer, gentler roles. It wasn’t until his leading role in
the gangster drama Sexy Beast the actor began receiving both
international attention and was soon frequently cast in major Hollywood films
such as The Departed, Beowulf, and most recently, Tubal Cain in Noah.
Now a veteran appearing regularly in the mainstream, one wonders just why this
versatile and intensely physical actor hasn’t been recognized by the Academy as
one of the most important and dependable talents in modern cinema. With so many
lesser talents walking away with the coveted golden statue, it’s time for Ray
Winstone to receive his fair shot at proving to the Academy and industry as a
whole his place in film history.
- Andrew Kotwicki
- Blake O. Kleiner