When Russell
Crow added a great deal of weight to accurately play the true-life role of the
whistleblower in The Insider, he began receiving attention. Christian Bale lost
a ton of weight for his role in The Machinist, but still had the critics eating
out of the palm of his hand. Charlize Theron made herself unattractive in
Monster, Nicole Kidman added to her nose to play the famous author in The Hours
and even Tom Hanks received attention for his fluctuating weight in Cast Away.
The bottom line seems to be that the more unattractive attractive actors are
able to make themselves for the sake of a performance, the more positive
critical attention they will likely receive. Jared Leto has proved no different
with his performance in chapter 27, for which he gained 60 pounds to play the
man who killed John Lennon.
Based on the
true story of Hawaiian drifter, Mark David Chapman (Leto), Chapter 27 follows
the path of the disturbed fan as he comes face to face with ex-Beatle John
Lennon during the three days leading up to their encounter in December of 1980.
Chapman at first just seems to be a socially awkward fan, waiting outside of
Lennon’s home with a group of ordinary fans waiting to get the Lennon’s
autograph, but his interactions with others around him hint at something
unnerving in him. He awkwardly makes conversation with an attractive young fan,
Jude (Lindsey Lohan), who convinces him to buy Lennon’s new solo album. When
the young girl and her friend ask Chapman to join them at the movies, however,
he begins spouting angry ideas that come word-for-word out of the text of J.D.
Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye ,
which is the book the infamous killer had in his possession when arrested.
In the first
moments of voiceover Chapman explains his belief in the words of Holden
Caufield, the narrator and protagonist in The Catcher in the Rye . There are twenty-six chapters in
Salinger’s book, suggesting that Chapman believed his visit to be a
continuation of Caufield’s visit to the city of “phony people” in the book.
Caufield’s hatred and anger towards many things, including movies, is then
adopted by Chapman as he wanders the city in a similar fashion, clutching his
book of Catcher in the Rye
and Lennon’s latest album as though they were all that mattered.
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