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  3. Actor With The Best Career- Adam Driver, Andrew Garfield, Jonah Hill.

Actor With The Best Career- Adam Driver, Andrew Garfield, Jonah Hill.

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    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Jonah Hill


    timoth93 — 9 years ago(October 30, 2016 04:01 AM)

    These three actors I feel have had the best careers in their generation (Gen Y, born between 1980 and 1995). I should clarify that having the best career doesnt mean, being the best actor. There are other actors that may have delivered better performances. I consider the best career to be a balance between giving good performances but also being widely seen and having the opportunity to work with highly regarded directors and actors. What do you think?
    All three actors are born in the same year (1983) and each has been lucky enough to work with great directors. My opinion is biased towards American movies and I should declare that my favourite director is Martin Scorsese, so that is why I consider these young actors to be without peer as having had the best career in their generation. They have each been attached to franchises (Driver with Star Wars, Garfield with Spiderman, Hill with Jump Street) but have also found the time to work in critically acclaimed movies. In Hills case, he has used his public profi16d0le from the Apatow comedies to make interesting movies. In Garfields case, he took a risk to expand his popular appeal after critical acclaim by taking on Spiderman.
    Lets start with Driver, the one whose rise is perhaps the most recent. He worked with Clint Eastwood in J. Edgar, Steven Spielberg in Lincoln then the Coen Brothers in Inside Llewyn Davis, Jim Jarmusch in Paterson, Martin Scorsese in Silence and potentially Terry Gilliam in The Man Who Killed Don Quixote (assuming that gets made). He has also worked with good genre film directors, JJ Abrams in Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens and Rian Johnson in the upcoming Star Wars and is also set to work with Soderberg in Logan Lucky.
    Garfields early career had perhaps the strongest performance with Boy A directed by John Crowley. Unlike Driver and Hill, Garfield was elevated to leading roles quickly. He worked with Terry Gilliam in The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus followed by working with Mark Romanek in Never Let Me Go then David Fincher in perhaps his most widely seen dramatic performance, The Social Network for which he arguably deserved an Oscar nomination. His performances slowed with his appearance in the Spiderman series but he returned with 99 Homes by little-known director, Ramin Bahrani. This proved to give his career a much needed an injection and he now has leading roles in the Mel Gibson film, Hacksaw Ridge and Silence by Martin Scorsese (with Driver).
    Jonah Hill is the unlikely star. His breakthrough role in Superbad saw him get peoples attention, but not as fast as his co-stars Michael Cera and Christopher Mintz-Plasse whose star subsequently faded after a string of blockbusters immediately post Superbad. Jonah Hill worked steadily in Judd Apatow comedies. He tried his luck in the somewhat serious title role in Duplass-brothers directed comedy, Cyrus and raised his profile with the successful comedy Get Him To The Greek. He could have kept on doing comedy indefinitely, had he not chose to work with the acclaimed director Bennett Miller in Moneyball which earned him an Oscar nomination. Afterwards he got to be part of a franchise with 21 Jump Street yet he continued working with interesting directors such as Quentin Tarantino, in a small role in Django Unchained, alongside his regular comedies. Wolf of Wall Street directed by Martin Scorsese showed that his dramatic turn in Moneyball was not a fluke, as he got another Oscar nomination. He has since worked with the Coen Brothers (once again in a small part) in Hail, Caesar!. Hill looks set to reteam with his Wolf of Wall Street co-star, Leonardo DiCaprio in The Devil in the White City or The Ballad of Richard Jewell which are being eyed by Martin Scorsese, Clint Eastwood and David Fincher.
    Honourable mentions to Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Jesse Eisenberg. Oscar Isaac also deserves a mention, though he is slightly older.

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