Monday, November 5, 2012

AN ODE TO ACTORS ON THE MOVE: "WHOA, LOOK AT YOU GO!"

Actors fight, dance, leap from great heights. They creep with style, shimmy and even walk better than you or I do. They may be privately shining with sweat from the effort of making these moves, but up on the screen they're dusted with stars. Here I'm going to concentrate on four famous ways of covering ground.

JOHN TRAVOLTA  owns one of the best walks in modern movies. He shows it all in his street-strut through the credits in SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE. He steps out in his 70's regalia,  pointy-toed red shoes which match his flare-collared red silk shirt. The infatuated camera admires him from the ground up, lingering on the billowing cuffs of his black polyester slacks and the magnificent aggressiveness of his proudly popped collar. I love this scene a lot more than the later ones in which he gets up to his ice-cream-suited, dancy-dance nonsense.

Travolta also delivers a satisfying moment when he climbs stairs in a busy fern restaurant to vent justice. In GET SHORTY he's been insulted by a gangster standing on a landing. Wrong move, goon! Travolta heads up the stairs with that brisk can-do set of his shoulders. He's unhurried, with a confidence so serene he doesn't even look cross. He collects the nasty guy like a bad debt and heaves him down the stairs like manure off a pitchfork, all without missing stride. Travolta is the Walk King of his
generation.

In my opinion, RICHARD GERE is never convincing in Good Guy roles. Maybe it's too much of a stretch for him, who knows? But he did surprisingly well in INTERNAL AFFAIRS as a cheating, lying, betraying, wife-seducing bad guy. He was also very effective as a shameless sleazebag of a celebrity lawyer in PRIMAL FEAR. Which brings us to his walk. Maybe it's not his fault. After all, babies learn to walk around a year of age. But Richard Gere walks like a drag queen. He walks as if he's thinking about his hips a lot more than men usually do. There's a seductive little hitch in his get-along, to put it mildly. This fits with his dark and ambiguous roles, but is one of the reasons we can't believe him in the saintly ones.

JOHN WAYNE walks with his whole bulky body, something like a sasquatch would do, as if he were holding the sky up on his big shoulders and the earth down with his feet. He plows ahead no matter what the plague or disaster. In THE SEARCHERS, for five long years he never ceases to search for his kidnapped niece, by sunlight, moonlight, firelight, through storms and floods, under attack and threat of death. He searches mainly by horseback, but also in large part by the almost demented concentration and forward impetus of his walk. We never doubt that walk will find her, and it does.

For me, the most endearing walk is that of ROBERTO BENIGNI in the Italian movie THE MONSTER. Through his usual series of disastrous misunderstandings, Roberto's gentle character Loris is suspected of being a mass murderer. Nicoletta Braschi is the tough-minded undercover detective assigned to his case. She shadows Loris constantly, and gradually becomes fascinated by the wildly eccentric little man. Now, as for his walk: in an early scene, with typical Roberto reasoning, Loris has decided he'll avoid the notice of his landlord, to whom he owes money, if he crouches down and walks like a duck below the man's line of vision. He does this more or less successfully, but rather sadly. There is something very lonely about a man walking like a duck all by himself. But Nicoletta sees this ruse of his. By this time she's realized that, contrary to the evidence, he's an innocent at heart. She gently crouches down beside him, and as they duck-walk away together, his face lights up with a shy man's happiness.

8 comments:

  1. Travolta and Wayne, both have very distinctive walks, that would stand out in a crowd, that's for sure!

    I was thrilled to see a comment from you and was hoping that meant you had posted. Yay!

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  2. I second what Ms.A said. It's GREAT to see you again, Margaret. Thanks for stopping by my blog.

    You're a fantastic writer. I hope you've been writing. I love the way you describe the Travolta scene as much as I love the scene itself.

    xoRobyn

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  3. This is very true re Richard Gere - in films like Unfaithful where he is meant to be the good guy he seems creepy - yes he was fab as a bad guy in Internal Affairs.
    David

    http://britsintheus23.blogspot.com/

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  4. Ms A -- I always admire your blog. The pictures in your Halloween post were great. My oldest son had a brown (faux) fur "bear" coat complete with furry hood when he was a toddler. Cub suits forever, Yay! :^)

    Robyn--I enjoy your blog's combination of spirit, wit, and questing intelligence so much. Thank you for your Comment. I'm fascinated by the way a truly charismatic actor can make his personality felt without a word.

    David Macaulay--You're right, Gere was creepy in Unfaithful. Even his horn-rimmed good-guy glasses were creepy. IMO his actor's skills were best in focus in American Gigolo--and of course his walk was perfect in that part!

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  5. I heard that John Wayne's walk was due to a back injury he suffered playing football in college, not an acting choice. Who knows how much that injury contributed to his becoming a movie star?

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  6. Professor Chaos--A back injury--that's interesting to know. It also makes a lot of sense. It's hard to imagine Wayne as a toddler having any version whatsoever of his adult walk!

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  7. I see you are posting about as much as I am these days. As you were describing Travolta's strut. I can visualize it and even hear the music from Saturday Night Fever. Classic...
    We used to have a big old tom cat (RIP Batman) that had the same walk as John Wayne. Everyone commented on it.

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  8. I'm glad you're posting again. The new pictures of your travels are so good!...In regard to the tomcat who walked like John Wayne, you are lucky. That would be a pleasure to watch.

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