One
of the great things about kid’s movies is that these days, they are one of the
few places where movie stars are willing to play to type. The rest of the time,
they’re too busy proving themselves actors, don’t you know, getting all Method
with fake noses and funny accents that allow them to ‘disappear’ into
roles. Whoever decreed that it is the
job of the star to disappear? But if fame turns humans into cartoons; cartoons
allow the famous to be themselves. Eddie Murphy may wish to put his days
playing the ass behind him, but literally playing an ass in the Shrek movies loosed some of his most
inspired shtick since Axel Foley hung up his badge. Tom Hanks may spend a good
proportion of his time putting dents in his nice guy image in movies like
Captain Phillips but seeing him snap back into his Dudley-do-right persona in
the Toy Story movies had the snug
satisfaction of an old well-loved pair of slippers. These
days, Angelina Jolie is
busy filling out her boots as movie director and philanthropist; but channeling
her inner momma grizzly onscreen in A
Mighty Heart and Changeling, she
unveiled a talent for over-acting that was barely hinted at in her previous
incarnation as action-movie dominatrix in films like Wanted, Salt, Mr and Mrs Smith, whose minimalist acting style
seemed to suit her down to the ground. Rumor has it that she wants to play
Cleopatra, but really she’s the Sphinx. A fame-enamelled Goddess who wears her
beauty like a mask, she’s a geek Dietrich, her contempt for the
male invertebrates who prostrate themselves at her feet, angling their cameras
up her torso, matched only by the self-control with which she hides it. Not
completely: a single raised eyebrow, a scintilla of a smirk, and the game is
up. (You thought she was a puppet of the male-gaze in the Lara Croft movies? She was taking notes.) If contempt is her key-note, then in Malificent she plays it like a flugelhorn:
face as white as parchment, cheekbones remolded into Max
Headroomish fenders, a pair of huge horns leaping from her head, like a cross
between a stag and a supermodel, she leaves Elle Fanning likea gnat-smudge on the windshield. It's Hannibal Lecter vs Tinkerbell. “There
is evil in this world,” sighs Jolie, in a dulcet English accent that plumes like a single drop of blood in water, “hatred and revenge”, before giving a
bashful giggle, as if the very idea of decency were fit for no more than
a smile. In an age when acting newbies apply darkness like eye-shadow or an
adhesive tattoo — yes, I'm talking you, Natalie Portman — Jolie’s velveteen perfidy is the real thing: Wicked Stepmother Interrupted. My favorite Jolie roles:—
1. Girl, Interrupted
2. Gia
3. Malificent
4. Salt
5. Mr and Mrs Smith
6. Kung Fu Panda
7. Playing by Heart
8. Wanted
9. Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
10. A Shark's Tale

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