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RE: I agree with what you are saying....

"You say Depp is a character actor and then compare him to guys you say are leads."

I compared them to illustrate the differences. Depp plays many difference characters, Stewart and Gable, basically the same. In reviewing Gable's filmography, I have seen 'It Happened One Night', 'Mutiny', 'San Francisco', 'Test Pilot', 'Gone with the Wind', and 'Run Silent, Run Deep'. There are variations, but the variations are basically off the same character. The same would apply to Steward, Bogart, et al. Depp certainly has demonstrated more range in his roles.

"As an aside, I wouldn't characterize Jackson as a lead actor. He hasn't had a lead in any major film but rather shared it in many, including his most famous roles which both were in Tarantino films."

Philip Seymore Hoffman defined a "lead actor" as one who plays essentially the same character in every film. According to his definition, which, if I must define the term, I think of him as something of an authority on the subject, it has nothing to do with the size of the role, or whether there is another lead. There is no rule, that I am aware of, which mandates that there be only one "lead actor" in a film, though there may be a "lead role", which I think are different.

You must also consider that the system was very different when those actors were making films. Actors were contracted to the studios, and the studios controlled them, and the films they appeared in. Popular actors were cash cows for studios. So, for example, the studio to which Bogart was contracted carefully chose his co-actors so as to keep Bogart on the screen, and the top billing. They did not want another actor taking the attention from Bogart. Which is why you rarely saw two high powered actors in the same film.

With the studio systems gone, actors are free agents, develope their own projects, and the result is that many films will often star more than one lead actor. The Ocean series would never have been made in 1950 because the studios would never have let Clooney, Pitt, and Damon all share the screen in the same film.

"Whom would you cast in any role Mitchum, Bogart, Cooper, Stewart, or Gable played?"

I guess that depends on the film. The corollary is which of those actors would you substitute for Depp, in, oh, Pirates or Willy Wonka? I doubt any of them could have pulled it off. Of those actors, I think Stewart is out of place. He generally did not play a tough guy. I think Hanks is often compared to him, and indeed, I can see Hanks playing some of his roles.

At the end of the day, I think that the actors of yesteryear generally lived harder, drank more, cared less about their physical health. I remember a story in which John Wayne appeared on Laugh-In. You may recall the episode. His pay? A bottle of Bourbon. My guess is that actors today do not live as hard, care more about their appearance, and therefore their craft reflects these realities.

"As far as who could kick who's ass... that's how you rank greatness?"

No. You posited that yesteryears leading actors were "tougher." I posited that they were no tougher than many of today's leads. As I have written before, Bogart is my favorite actor. Would I call him a great actor? No. I would call him a great, unique personality that I love to watch on the screen. But what I see of Bogart (or Mitchum, Wayne, Gable) on the screen is what I think you got off the screen as well. Depp, on the other hand, appears to be completely different off the screen than his characters, which are all over the map. To me he is a great actor.

"I can't think of any actors now working that have that "honesty.""

I would put Bruce Willis in that camp. I do not know what "honesty" means in a business that, by its nature, rewards dishonesty - your ability to convince someone you are something you are not. Maybe integrity is the better word? What you saw is what you got. But then with California preoccupied with no smoking, eating healthy, clean air, etc., I am not sure where they fit in. I venture to guess that most of those "honest" actors you admire were Republicans.

Gable was a member of the right wing Preservation of American Ideals, and was a known homophobe. Jimmy Stewart was a staunch Republican. Robert Mitchum addressed the Republican National Convention in 1992, John Wayne in 1968. Although, to be fair, Bogart and Tracy were Democrats. Perhaps liberal California has softened our actors? Ironic.


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