‘Being John Malkovich’ – what does it mean? Who knows. Anyhow the actor
himself affirms that in the noted Spike Jonze’s picture, where his head
was being turned into a virtual portal, he just played an odd role of
the character with such a name, no way related to him.
Malkovich
played over 70 various parts in cinema, including the noblest Athos in
The Man in the Iron Mask, but gained great recognition after vicious
Vicomte de Valmont in Dangerous Liaisons, and for the psychotic
political assassin from In the Line of Fire he was nominated for the
Academy Award and the Golden Globe. It might be said that his range
stretches between judicial Dr. Jekyll and ominous Mr. Hyde from thriller
Mary Reilly, but Malkovich confesses: "I'm drawn to a character with a
lack of humanity. People give reasons for being cruel or sadistic but I
think it is just a lack of humanity and concern for others. I think I'm
good at them because I don't like them”. Paradoxically enough -
audiences are attracted to those roles played by Malkovich which he
deeply hates. Maybe this makes him agree to participate in the projects
where he can parody his dramatic type.
The actor indulges portraying
a burlesque of those villains and rogues which made him public’s
favourite, with special delight picturing his character’s abasement.
As
Malkovich recalls, his first teacher in acting taught, that the worst
sin was to be boring. With this lesson in mind he daringly takes up
inconceivable tasks always presenting something an audience won't have
seen. Nowadays public at large not only in Italy, Germany, Australia or
Austria, but also in St. Petersburg and Moscow came to know his operatic
talent as he toured with the opera The Infernal Comedy: Confessions of a
Serial Killer. His performance of Jack Unterweger, who strangled 11
women, arose a controversial reception; some spectators reproached him
of glorifying the monster. But this impression is deceitful: charming as
usual in this part, Malkovich just shows that moral monsters often have
human face and that the evil may appear very attractive. But his own
sympathy wins another charming operatic personage – famous womanizer
Casanova in The Giacomo Variations where he plays against Ingeborga
Dapkunaite.
Nina Tsyrkun
24-06-2011
John Malkovich received a world cinema contribution award
Published in
Festivals