Acting range

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KJIM

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Sitting here on a Sunday evening watching "Ruthless People." (Been a **** week ... needed a laugh.)

Bill Pullman plays an utter dolt, and it got me thinking what a range the man has as an actor. The "Ruthless" character is the polar opposite of his role as the president in "Independence Day."

What are some more examples of wide acting ranges?

Tom Hanks springs to mind, from "Big" to "Captain Phillips."
Charlize Theron: Rita in "Arrested Development" and "Monster."
 
Kevin Kline. Regular guy in Big Chill and Silverado, raging loon in A Fish Called Wanda, and oh yeah he does Shakespeare on Broadway, too.
 
I always thought Brad Pitt showed a lot of range. He's played everything from a halfwit redneck serial killer to a smooth baseball executive, to an urban terrorist, to a pretty boy cop.
His early roles, especially, seemed like he was willing to take a lot of chances and do almost anything.
 
Spicoli- Dead Man Walking - Casualties of War - the Falcon and the Snowman - Taps - Carlito's Way.
 
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Kevin Bacon: started out tormenting Flounder as Chip Diller in Animal House; 30 years later he's Lt. Mike Strobl in the somber "Taking Chance."
 
Tom Hardy is up there for me. Guy disappears into every role.

Leo has a pretty broad range.

Amy Adams has a surprisingly broad range, with roles such as Mary in "The Muppets," Charlene in "The Fighter," Sydney in "American Hustle" and Louise in "Arrival."

Jeff Daniels is another good one. He can play the dumbest guy in the room or the smartest guy in the room equally well.
 
Michael McKean. From Lenny on Laverne and Shirley all the way to Chuck McGill.
 
Bruce McGill, D-Day in Animal House, has gone on to quite a varied career as a "featured character actor" / borderline marquee star. He doesn't headline movies but he's always recognizable.
 
Tom Hardy is up there for me. Guy disappears into every role.

Leo has a pretty broad range.

Amy Adams has a surprisingly broad range, with roles such as Mary in "The Muppets," Charlene in "The Fighter," Sydney in "American Hustle" and Louise in "Arrival."

Jeff Daniels is another good one. He can play the dumbest guy in the room or the smartest guy in the room equally well.


When this thread started, I said to myself, I've thought about this. There is one actor I thought exactly fit this description. And I couldn't remember who it was. Yes, Jeff Daniels.
 
Jennifer Anis. . . . oh, you said WIDE range.

Give an A for effort to Kevin Costner. His English accent in Robin Hood was god awful.

Did you ever hear his New England twang (if a New England twang is even possible) in "Thirteen Days"?
 
Dustin Hoffman -- Ben Braddock (The Graduate), Ratso Rizzo (Midnight Cowboy), Babe (Marathon Man), Ray Babbit (Rain Man), Michael Dorsey (Tootsie).
 
John Malkovich. The one area he has it over Hoffman is in the crazy, dangerous area. (In the Line of Fire; Rounders). Hoffman didn't much convince me as a tough guy in Billy Bathgate as Dutch Schultz.

Of Mice and Men, Dangerous Liaisons, Red, ConAir. Being John Malkovich. That's a lot of range.
 
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Also, Johnny Depp has a pretty wide range: Whitey Bulger, Hunter S. Thompson, Donnie Brasco, Keith Richards' son, Ed Wood, Blow
 

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