MovieChat Forums > Written on the Wind (1956) Discussion > Why couldn't people act in 1956?

Why couldn't people act in 1956?


I know I can't expect old movies to be technically sophisticated---but I don't understand why acting and writing in old movies is always so laughably bad. Even in well-received movies, like this one. Jesus Christ---Dorothy Malone was handed an AWARD for her acting in this movie! How did Oscar voters distinguish between "good" and "bad" performances in the 30s, 40s and 50s? I'm not being facetious. This isn't a rhetorical question. Did they just assign winners randomly, like by pulling names out of a hat?

Before you start telling me about how filmmakers like Sirk were geniuses, and how their stylized use of color and light were brilliant, and how they were making all kinds of ironic commentary, can I ask: instead of concentrating so hard on making everything as fake as possible so he could delight in deconstructing it's fakeness, why didn't he instead concentrate on just telling good stories? And maybe have his actors deliver lines in a way that reasonably replicated actual human speech patterns? And why didn't other writers and directors of this era do the same thing? Shouldn't acting and writing be timeless arts? How come nobody in 1956 knew how to act?

I seriously doubt movie audiences in the 1950s, on the whole, were sophisticated enough to appreciate Sirk's use of irony. I'm sure they just took everything at face value. I mean, people of my grandparents' generation would laugh out loud at people like Danny Kaye and Red Skelton. Seriously. I mean actually laugh out loud. So I'm sure when they saw movies like "Written on the Wind", they would gasp when someone got slapped across the face, or when a word like "miscarriage" was uttered and dramatic music underscored it. So what's the deal---were these directors just thinking, "Some day, fifty years from now, when acting is realistic and moviegoers are a little smarter, I'll finally be appreciated for the genius that I am!"

Is that what we're supposed to believe? Or do you a think a time will come when movie fans---or even serious film critics---will stop romanticizing everything about the "golden age" of cinema, and finally identify these movies (or most of them, anyway) for what they are. Poorly written and laughably acted.



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It's not that people COULDN'T act in 1956. It's simply that the acting was different at that time. Not better or worse, just DIFFERENT.

Public performance in general was EXPECTED to be more theatrical and emotional, even when it came to giving a speech in front of audiences. I would imagine that all this originated in the time before amplified sound technology, when vocals and body language had to be exaggerated just so the audience could tell what was going on.

Today, "good" performances are expected to be a lot more subtle and low-key. But does it truly reflect how people behave in real life? I am amused when I see complaints of "bad acting" when actors in today's movies and TV programs show emotion, because I see people like that all the time in real life! So exactly why is that unrealistic?

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Things change over time and it's obvious in film. If you go decade by decade you see actors' different styles. It all depends on the director of course. The director is in charge and the times influence any decision a director makes. What is a good performance today, versus 20 years ago or more? People still like films and there are more films made today than ever.

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I thought Stack and Malone gave great performances in this movie!

Bacall and Hudson, less so...






"Your mother puts license plates in your underwear? How do you sit?!"

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I agree. Robert Stack and Dorothy Malone have the meatier roles. I was surprised by Robert Stack's intensity. Great performance.

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What you're looking at is stylized acting. I don't think it was meant to be as realistic as it was meant to be dramatic.

Do you really think that the acting in current movies looks like reality? It looks kind of soap opera-ish to me as if everyone has the same coach.

Yes, that's pretty much it, a stylized acting approach that was "in" in the '50s.

Younger audiences today are bombarded with modern movies where mostly a kind of posing minimalism is presented. It tends to read as just as phony and self-conscious, to say nothing of bland, but anything else is viewed now as "melodramatic."

That will eventually change, too, of course.

--
LBJ's mistress on JFK:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcXeutDmuRA


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[deleted]

Clearly, the OP is a troll, since he/she never returned.

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The musical score was also terrible. So there's that on top of that.

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I remember being a teenager.

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