For the premiere entry in the series, I've chosen one of my favorite actors: Academy Award winner Nicole Kidman. The main question I want to explore in this blog is: what's been the main theme of Nicole Kidman's career if there is one?
While Kidman gained recognition during the beginning of her career with films like Days of Thunder and Billy Bathgate, To Die For was really the first time she was the protagonist. As Suzanne Stone, the dangerously ambitious news anchor, Kidman began her lifelong goal to deconstruct her own porcelain beauty and inhabit characters on the verge of breakdown. Her performance in this media satire/dark comedy is biting and menacing. It's a clear indicator of the quality of work Kidman would be giving out in the future.
This was the film which won Kidman the Academy Award and, while she's done better work since, it's still one of her most riveting performances. The Hours finds Woolf writing her classic novel Mrs. Dalloway while battling depression and suicidal tendencies. Kidman plays Woolf as desperately trying to cling to mental stability and living in fear of what her disease will do to her. But this performance is also about the intertwining demands of mental illness, maintaining a family and pursuing a creative career, something I bet really intrigued Kidman.
3. Moulin Rouge! (2001; Baz Luhrmann)
Considered by many to be one of the best musicals in modern times (and earning the #25 spot on the AFI Best Musicals list), Moulin Rouge! has also become one of Kidman's most iconic roles. She plays Satine, the star courtesan longing for love and a better life. Playing Satine gave Kidman another opportunity to find the hidden turmoil beneath her beauty and status as an A-list movie star. Men all around Satine desire her and desire to possess her when in fact Satine is succumbing to tuberculosis. But it's at the end when Satine finally experiences reciprocated true love and her death is its own act of self-defiance against societal expectations.
4. Bewitched (2005; Nora Ephron)
While Bewitched is probably not the shining achievement of Kidman's career, it deserves a spot on this list. Nicole Kidman and mainstream cinema don't really mix all that successfully. Sure, Moulin Rouge! found mainstream success but its manic-jukebox-living collage aesthetic separates it from other musicals. Bewtiched is one of many examples when Kidman has tried to make films like a true movie star and the formulaic Hollywood system failed her. Of course, Kidman does her best with the material and certainly looks the part of the perfect 60s wife Samantha Stephens. But there's no opportunity for her to dig deep and find the flaws and the cracks of the character like she's done in the past.
5. Rabbit Hole (2010; John Cameron Mitchell)
For the maiden film out of Kidman's production company Blossom Films, she chose the Pulitzer Prize winning play Rabbit Hole. She plays a mother grieving over the lost of her child. Kidman plays Becca as icy, biting and sarcastic, distancing herself from her loved ones by refusing to grieve in their approved ways. For me this is Kidman's finest performance, as she shows incredible restraint and subtlety, letting her eyes and body language convery her despair and longing. It doesn't hurt that Aaron Eckhart and the rest of the cast support her tremendously or that the script and direction are wonderful as well.
Other remarkable films starring Nicole Kidman
1. Cold Mountain
2. Eyes Wide Shut
3. The Interpreter
4. Margot at the Wedding
5. The Others
I hope you enjoyed the first entry of my new blog series. Please look out for the next one with Jake Gyllenhaal (probably!).
2 comments:
So glad Rabbit Hole made your list! She is so beautiful & amazing, you definitely did her justice!
Thanks Lin, I'm glad you liked the list. Rabbit Hole is a really great film
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