Oscar Got It Wrong!: Best Actor 2007

Posted on the 25 June 2018 by Sjhoneywell
The Contenders:
Viggo Mortensen: Eastern Promises
Tommy Lee Jones: In the Valley of Elah
George Clooney: Michael Clayton
Johnny Depp: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Daniel Day-Lewis: There Will Be Blood

What’s Missing

2007 was a fine year for actors, exemplified by about half of the nominations. Off the top, I’d have preferred to see Tommy Lee Jones here for No Country for Old Men, rather than his actual nomination. In the “never nominated” world I’d include Thomas Jane in The Mist and Simon Pegg in Hot Fuzz as well as Charlie Cox in Stardust. Casey Affleck has rightfully fallen out of favor, but he’s awfully good in Gone Baby Gone, while a film like The Man from Earth was probably too small to get any notice for David Lee Smith. Since the winner of Best Actress was a non-English speaking actor, the nomination for Mathieu Amalric in The Diving Bell and the Butterfly was probably a longshot. Another odd longshot here is Emile Hirsch in Into the Wild, a film that was widely admired while Hirsch was generally ignored. Along the same lines, James McAvoy didn’t get a great deal of play for Atonement; neither did Philip Seymour Hoffman in The Savages. While I like a lot of these possibilities, the ones I would push for are Jake Gyllenhaal in Zodiac, Ryan Gosling in Lars and the Real Girl, and Richard Jenkins in The Visitor.

Weeding through the Nominees

5. I think like a lot of people, I’ve more or less had my fill of Johnny Depp. That shouldn’t affect how I look at 2007, but it might be impossible for that not to happen. My favorite part of Sweeney Todd is Alan Rickman, not Depp or Helena Bonham Carter, and beyond that, I didn’t love the film that much. Depp is fine in the role…and that’s it. He’s fine in the role. With the people who were ignored here, I can’t imagine why Depp was nominated aside from the fact that in 2007, a lot of people really liked Johnny Depp.

4. I like George Clooney well enough, but I don’t have a really strong opinion on Michael Clayton. It was a good enough movie while I was watching it, but Clooney has done much better and more important work in his career. Much like Depp, I think this is a function of Clooney’s general popularity at the time and the fact that he’s generally well-liked. It’s not a deserved nomination in my opinion. Clooney is fine; the role is fine. But there were better performances in better roles from this year.

3. I said at the top that I think Tommy Lee Jones was nominated for the wrong film, and that’s the case. That might, in fact, be why I’ve moved him all the way up into third for his role in In the Valley of Elah, which seems to be a fine performance in a good role in a completely forgettable movie. Honestly, based on the other two nominations, even with a nomination for No Country for Old Men, Jones would probably still end up in third place for me, but it would feel like a much better third place.

2. So let’s talk about Eastern Promises and Viggo Mortensen. I think I can say that had Eastern Promises been released in just about any other year of this decade, Mortensen would have been my choice for Best Actor. This is not just the fact that I like Viggo Mortensen (which I do). This is a tough and muscular performance, one that has traces of the force of many of his other performances but with a huge helping of violence. It’s an exploration of walking in deep shadow while attempting to maintain a sense of justice, and Mortensen is just about perfect.

My Choice

1. But, sadly for Viggo Mortensen, Daniel Day-Lewis was in There Will Be Blood in 2007, and I don’t think that there was any way possible for someone else to win this Oscar. Truth being told, I’d love to see Viggo Mortensen walk across the stage and claim one, but in 2007, there was no one going to stand in the way of Day-Lewis getting a second Oscar. Having Paul Dano to play against him didn’t hurt, but Day-Lewis takes this screenplay by the throat and rules over this movie like a goddam monarch. This could only be his Oscar.


Final Analysis