Are you serious. Leo litteraly plays the same shit all the time. He is nowhere near the level of Brando or Daniel Day Lewis. He got destroyed and schooled by DDL acting in Gangs of New York.
@@BobyJooba DDL was magnificent, but Scorsese didn't really give Leo a substantial role and wasn't sure what to do with him there. They got more in sync over the years, but using Gangs against Leo isn't fair. Might as well start talking about Nine and The Ballad of Jack and Rose against DDL and his scanty filmography. The Departed is when Leo and Scorsese really fully meshed.
weird setup. you would think cinematic movie stars or perhaps the production team would be more conscious of environment and outfits. black on black...they look like floating heads are talking.
He’s fucking tired of you guys and fucking press tours same fucking questions in a day in 6 different interviews and I say that with experience cause I’m a journalist
I think also the topic may be a bit sensitive for the both of them and Brad looks like he is trying not to say anything that will make him come across as being egotistic. Instead of saying despite the fact I am good looking, I worked hard to give the audience a strong performance as an actor that is memorable. He was finding his way around having to talk about his good looks and how it impacts his career.
In my opinion, Brad Pitt is a better actor than Leo DiCaprio. Brad does does a better job at transforming himself. Leo on the other hand, while his interpretations are solid, most of his characters feel like the same guy. Leo is earnest compared to Brad
Riddle me this; after Denzel Washington, who's the 2nd best black male actor? Don Cheadle? Samuel L. Jackson? Will Smith? Morgan Freeman? Forest Whitaker?
I disagree. They're equally gifted actors, neither one better than the other, although they tend to play their roles as if the characters were them instead of them being those characters. I mean, no matter what roles they're playing, they sound (despite putting on accents for some roles), move, laugh, get angry, etc., the same way as when playing other roles, which is common even with the alltime greats, imo. Even Olivier, Brando and De Niro never really managed to change their voices, movements, reactions, etc., despite playing such wide variety of characters.