"Time 100" is Oscar-Obsessed
Magazines may be a dying business but the few mega magazines that remain all have annual traditions to entice buys. And so it is with the "Time 100" an annual list of "Most Influential" though as with any such list it's highly subjective.
Here is a list of the movie & television people who made it this year in one of their five sections (the only section that does not include at least one actor is "Leaders")
Pioneers Aziz Ansari and Gina Rodriguez
Titans Dwayne Johnson, Wang Jianlin, and Kathleen Kennedy
Taraji is the modern-day Bette Davis, touching audiences with her honesty and intensity. When you are on set with Taraji, she listens, but she also questions. She challenges everyone to go the extra step to get it right. She has a deep understanding of the human condition, and she displays it with her eyes—the pain, the happiness, the love, the laughter. She probably would have been a great silent actor, but then the world wouldn’t have had Cookie.
Before Empire, she was underappreciated by white America and Hollywood, while African Americans heralded her as our Meryl Streep. I’m so proud that Cookie has moved her into the zeitgeist. What Taraji has done with the role made the world finally appreciate who she is—quite simply, a tour de force on and off the screen.
-Lee Daniels on Taraji P Henson
I offered Mark Rylance a significant supporting role in 1987 in my film Empire of the Sun—and he turned it down. A play had caught his fancy, and anyway, I sensed he was suspicious about film acting. Who could blame him? For actors who have given their lives to theater, making movies must be like lurching in the backseat of a car while the driver keeps working the brake. When Mark does a play, nobody says, “Cut,” only “Curtain” after a few uninterrupted hours. Legions of young thespians look to Mark as their muse and inspiration. From Boeing-Boeing to Jerusalem to Twelfth Night, the impact he’s had on classical and contemporary theater is the stuff of legend. A winner of three Tony Awards, two Olivier Awards and now an Oscar, Mark glimpses these honors with gratitude and humility, but his heart belongs to a good story. His soul is pure. He just loves to act.
-Steven Spielberg on Mark Rylance
Artists Gael García Bernal, Taraji P Henson, Melissa McCarthy, Ryan Coogler, Idris Elba, Oscar Isaac, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Mark Rylance, Charlize Theron, and Priyanka Chopra
Icons They went full Revenant here honoring both Leonardo DiCaprio & Alejandro González Iñárritu
What's the takeaway?
It always amuses us when people call the Oscars "irrelevant" since the very fact that people get so up in arms about them every year is quite the indication that they remain the most relevant of movie institutions (even if movies themselves aren't as central to pop culture as they once were). They matter to people. Even the act of rising up against The Academy is underlining their stature as the house of the definitive golden idol of Hollywood. Time's movie lists are extremely unsubtle about sticking it to the Academy yet again over #OscarsSoWhite. Note that they ignored all but three Oscar nominees (the three big male winners) while honoring both Ryan Coogler & Idris Elba. Not that Coogler and Elba aren't worth honoring as they did have great years! But if they weren't trying to shame the Academy yet again they might well have considered Cheryl Boone Isaacs for this list since she's in the media so much of late and has been trying so hard to make a difference on the issue of diversity in Tinseltown. On the other hand, even as Time slaps Oscar's hand, they're embracing its other status quo #OscarsSoMale (in a manly back-patting kind of way) since they included all three of the Academy's most high-profile male winners (Rylance, DiCaprio, and Iñárritu) and neither of the big female winners.
Do you think of all these people as influential? Whose part do you suppose Spielberg wanted Rylance to play in Empire of the Sun?
Reader Comments (10)
My guess is he wanted Rylance to play either the John Malcovich or Joe Pantaliano role. I don't know what else in that film is significant.
Clearly making Spielberg wait almost 30 years was smart because Rylance is Spielberg's actor of choice - now. Although I don't think Mark Rylance ever had that in mind.
I think it was the John Malcovich role.
Taraji is a modern Bette Davis I thought Streep or Blanchett had dibs on that.Ridiculous piece.
Uh...I don't think Taraji is the African-American equivalent of Streep.
I was so shocked and delighted to see Rylance on that list. Hell yeah baby!
On another note, I totally thought that Alicia Vikander would be on the list too considering the incredible year she had.
As much as I love Taraji, that Lee Daniels piece is cringe-worthy.
I knew as soon as I read those white women's names were associated with Taraji, comments were gonna come fast and loose. She was akin to Meryl Streep to African-Americans, is what he said. Taraji was visible to us before Viola and was working steadily when Angela Bassett wasn't and Alfre Woodard was taking simple roles. The only other black actress that was regularly seen but low profile to the black community was Sanaa Lathan. So, yes, to the African-American movie goer, Taraji was the chameleon. Baby Boy, Hustle & Flow, Talk to Me, Boston Legal, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Smokin Aces, Person of Interest, I Can Do Bad All By Myself, Think Like a Man. Every role was different and she was making the most of it. But mostly unnoticed.
She ain't no Bette Davis.
Why does anyone have to be compared to anyone else? Lee Daniels was being silly is all I can say.
Who are these bitches trying to be me ?
Or the new me ?
There's only one Bette Davis.
Queen Priyanka though!