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The Essentials: Kevin Spacey’s Best Performances

Seven, Kevin Spacey, Se7en4. “Se7en” (1995)
Perhaps the most profound decision made on “Se7en” was keeping Spacey’s name off the casting roster and all promotional materials for the film. As John Doe, the perpetrator and mastermind whose exploits have been the bane of Detectives Mills (Brad Pitt) and Somerset (Morgan Freeman). Andrew Kevin Walker’s script brilliantly outsizes Spacey’s villainy by showing us the sheer dedication Doe has sunk into his pet project. When he finally makes an appearance, he does so in a genuinely jaw dropping scene – walking into the police station with blood all over his starched white dress shirt, hollering “DETECTIVE! You’re looking for me.” The third act of “Se7en” belongs to Spacey and he runs with it, severely downplaying the more maniacal elements that a lesser actor might have seized onto. Doe acknowledges his violence as an afterthought, the direct logical outcome of a world gone to shit. His final stroke of horrific genius is unforgettable and Spacey’s fevered pleadings for Pitt to “become vengeance” are timelessly chilling. Effectively a supporting role that grows to dominate and loom over the film, it’s a compliment to Kevin Spacey that John Doe stands out as so much more than a crazed baddie, but a misanthropic puppet-master whose plan is impenetrable and unstoppable.

L.A. Confidential Kevin Spacey5. “L.A. Confidential” (1997)
Adapting the dense, dark crime novel by James Ellroy should never have worked. The book is close to unfilmable (look at De Palma’s atrocious “The Black Dahlia” for a hint of how it could have turned out), the cast were near-unknowns — a faded Kim Basinger and Danny De Vito being the biggest names involved — and the behind-the-scenes talent didn’t suggest it would be worth a damn, being Brian Helgeland, writer of “Nightmare On Elm Street 4: The Dream Master” and Curtis Hanson, director of “The River Wild.” But sometimes, a special alchemy occurs, and “L.A. Confidential” turned out, against all expectations, to be one of the very best films of the nineties, as good a Hollywood crime picture of its type as any since “Chinatown.” And at its rotten center; Kevin Spacey, giving one of his very best performances. He’s at his most movie-star like (Hanson told him to channel Dean Martin) as Jack Vincennes, the detective more interested in courting stardom and feathering his nest than catching criminals. He starts the movie as all surface, a man with a hollow where his heart should be, but even Vincennes becomes aware of the corruption all around him, and his conscience is finally pricked when a young actor (played by “The Mentalist”) ends up dead. Spacey plays the growing uneasiness beautifully, topped off by his final, shocking scene; coming to his superior, Captain Dudley Smith (James Cromwell) with his suspicions, he gets a bullet in the heart for his troubles. Even for a man who was pivotal to most of the gut-wrenching twists of the mid 1990s, the actor’s look of shock, and relief, as the pieces come together as his life slips away (even as he sets a trap for Smith with two words — “Rollo Tomassi”), is one of the finest single moments of Spacey’s career.

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8 COMMENTS

  1. Kevin Spacey is such a fantastic actor.

    Every great actor who had long career had a period of time when the film choice’s was not great.I think probably Kevin is not exception..But now he is just fine.I\’m even sure in the future it is highly possible Kevin would win third Oscar and second Tony. He is one of best actors working today.

  2. @cirkusfolk Only if you are omitting the theatre portion of his career, which has actually been longer than his film career. Also, considering the fact that he\’s still working, it seems a bit premature to consider his entire career prime being summed up in a 5 year, 5 performance span. And even if once he stops working, this turns out to be his best film work in total, that\’s still a hell of a lot more than most actors can brag about. Most actors are lucky if they get one powerful, memorable performance that holds up over time.

  3. Good list with some great performances/movies.

    I\’m always a little bummed when I read about American Beauty these days because people seem to be in agreement that it hasn\’t aged well, wasn\’t worthy of a many awards, only featured one great performance. It\’s not to single you out since it seems a popular sentiment but that movie still ranks among my favorites off all time.

    Spacey, Bening, Cooper, Janney, Gallagher, and the younger actors like Birch and Bentley all give terrific performances even if some moments are ridiculously overwrought, I can\’t help but be mesmerized by the mizture of humor, melodrama, and suspense.

  4. These are obviously his best, and I agree with the former poster in that nothing is missing. In fact, you could\’ve dropped The Ref and had a nice round Top 5. Still, it\’s kinda sad that an actor\’s career prime is summed up in a 5 year, 5 performance span (94-99).

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