In David Cronenberg's first prime (1986-1991), he would use somber, bug-eyed, off kilter actors like Jeff Goldblum and Peter Weller to tell bugged out, off kilter, somber tales – tragedies predominantly. In his second prime (which humbly began with 2002's Spider and gained steam with 2005's A History of Violence) he began using soft featured, handsome
Not really, though I believe he is enjoying the attention.
His last two films, both starring Mortensen, revolve around men skilled in doling out physical pain and death, who live deeply embedded within a lie. Almost to the point of completely vanishing.
Both films involve crime families and the ties that bind. Eastern Promises is an expose of the Russian mafia operating with reckless abandon in contemporary
A testament to the directionlessness of the film is the wasted talents of Naomi Watts. Here is a woman capable of accomplishing anything on screen and yet she is required to do nothing other than appear mildly concerned. Her character delivers the baby of a young girl exported in from
Eastern Promises is diverting, but it hardly lives up to its pedigree. Mortensen is sleepwalking through a convoluted plot and not because he isn't trying, but because the character, as written, is bland and emotionless.
However, his resume can forever note that in Eastern Promises the actor evaded two murderous thugs in a bathhouse and viciously turned the tables on them – while naked. The only stand out performance is turned in by Vincent Cassel as ambivalent, insecure mafia prince, Kirill, who seethes self-disgust and mayhem.
For whatever reason, Cronenberg only hints of the homosexual relationship between Nikolai and