Mickey Caesar
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 57
- Location
- Grand Rapids MI
Its official. According to imdb.com, Carey Mulligan will be playing Daisy in the planned remake of F Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby". I wonder who'll play Gatsby?
Just like Mia Farrow in the original GatsbyShe got her big break in "Pride and Prejudice" a few years ago, got an Oscar nomination this past year for an excellent performance in "An Education," and she's currently on screen in "Never Let Me Go." So far she seems to specialize in big-brown-eyes innocence.
Tobey Maguire has bagged the part of Nick, according to the Telegraph, with DiCaprio negotiating for Gatsby.
Count me as underwhelmed. What will this add to the earlier film adaptations?
Other than Robert Redford being too darn handsome, I think that the original was a very faithful and successful adaptation of the book.
Edward, we agree on many other things, and it's fine to disagree on Gatsby. I know my view is - to put it mildly - unpopular!
So it goes...
I like DiCaprio as an actor-- I think he's done incredibly well since he got past the teenybopper phase-- but again the powers-that-be are falling into the trap of making Gatsby into a super stud. Remember that he does not stand out in a crowd-- not only does nobody recognize him at his own parties, but he is so average looking as to simply blend into the crowd with all of the revelers. Unless they make DiCaprio look less movie-star, it doesn't befit the character to make him so conventionally attractive.
That being said I hope they get a better Tom. God bless him, Bruce Dern did a bang-up job, but he was just not the beefy picture of all-star masculinity that Tom is made out to be. There was something too... vermin-like... about his characterization. There was no way to believe that Daisy would stick with him.
)
In some ways, I think Tom is a harder part to cast. I think Brad Pitt would make a good fist of it, but he's too old, if we're being picky. I really hope they do make him true to the book, though - a great brute of a man, disgusting white supremacism and all. The biggest danger, it seems to me, is that they will tone down Daisy to make her a more sympathetic character instead of the vain, shallow, selfish and ultimately rather vile young woman whom she actually was in the book.
I don't think Pitt is thuggish enough. Even in Fight Club, where 75% of his entire point of even being in the movie was to beat people up, there seemed to be something strangely effeminate about him. I think he's a good actor, but "brute" is not a trait I'd ever assign to him.
I, too (now that you mention it) am worried about what they may do with Daisy- try to turn her into a tragic character trapped in her marriage to Tom, rather then willfully staying in it. I'm reminded of the adaptation of "Vanity Fair" back in '04 wherein they turned the anti-heroine of the novel into the main character and tried to spin her manipulativeness and shallowness as being "proto feminist" rather than... well... manipulativeness and shallowness.
DeCaprio would not be a bad choice but I think there are so many other young actors that could pull off the roll. How about Joseph Gordon Levitt? Younger and he seem to have more of an air of vulnerability.