How did Stephen Lack not win a Razzie for this?
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Legendary_Badass — 11 years ago(March 09, 2015 10:20 PM)
Agreed.
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SloppyJ30 — 10 years ago(July 02, 2015 07:50 AM)
I don't know how much sense this makes, but even though his acting wasn't "good," it fit right in with the movie, for me. The overall off-kilter, surreal tone of the whole enterprise was actually enhanced by Lack's stoned, deer-in-headlights performance.
If Cronenberg had wanted an actorly, "professional" performance, I'm sure he could've found someone to deliver one.
Besides, I would reserve Razzies for actual actors. Lack's a painter that was in a few movies. I wouldn't give him a Razzie any more than I'd give Michael Jordan a Razzie for Space Jam.I have meddled with the primal forces of nature and I will atone.
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ma_marcil — 10 years ago(August 17, 2015 11:42 AM)
I really do not get all the hate for Lack's performance. I have seen the movie several times now (my first time was as a young teenager and my last time was last night) and I never had any damn problem with Lack's portrayal of the character. He is described from the get-go as a social misfit and eventually as an almost 'non-human',so the fact that he is barely expressive completely fits the role. Furthermore, I would add that for me, Lack was actually quite convincing in the role, especially when you see him being affected by his scanner abilities, and that the movie, which really holds up well still today for me, benefits from everybody's performances here. Of course, you could say that Michael Ironside, an actor I have always liked since Total Recall (I saw Scanners after that), steals the show in the movie, but I think the movie just would not work like it does if the acting was weak around him. Ironside had a sinister but more flashier role than basically everybody here except perhaps for the actor who was playing Benjamin Pierce, who was barely several minutes in the movie.
So for me, Lack does not even deserve to be nominated for a Razzie as his performance was on the money for the specific role that he had here.
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bornskeptic — 10 years ago(September 05, 2015 01:31 PM)
That Lack was not a trained actor and not totally dedicated to acting as a career is obvious. He made 10 movies total and one in the last 25 years.
But i also cannot defend his performance in Scanners as anything more than he was as perfect for the role as Ahnuld was for The Terminator. Lack's stunted, awkward, monotone delivery and odd body language could be excused for all the reasons other posters have commented on already - that he was a loner and outcast living on the periphery of society.
Or that maybe that's all he was capable of, and Cronenberg saw him as a perfect fit for the role of Cameron. -
franzkabuki — 10 years ago(September 26, 2015 12:54 AM)
So you're denying Lack's character was a mentally disturbed, apparently homeless outcast and a misfit loner - in which case his strange awkwardness would be understandable?
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marblewife — 9 years ago(April 06, 2016 02:39 PM)
I agree, I'm sorry, but this is bad acting, plain and simple. Lack wasn't a trained actor and it shows, but really, it's fine. It doesn't ruin the film, in my opinion at least.
I there have been plenty of great actors who've played androids and emotionless beings and pulled off good performances: John Malkovich, Leonard Nimoy, Douglas Rain as HAL 9000, Zachary Quinto as New Spock. Maybe the character is supposed to be emotionless, but the character's job is still to make the audience feel something. I think Lack's performance is just not evocative; it seems like he's overthinking the lack-of-emotion aspect of his character to an extent that doesn't feel natural.