Thank you guys so much for the love on this one! I really enjoy making these videos, so if you liked this one, please consider subscribing! 🍻
@susannemcarlisle5 күн бұрын
I've had 5 actors that made me stop in my tracks with just sheer talent and presence: 1) DDL in A Room with a View, 2) James McAvoy in White Teeth, 3) Romany Malco in Baby Mama 4) PSH in Twister, of all things--and 5) Paul Scofield in anything.
@BadEnglish-y6m4 күн бұрын
Good Job!
@LaineyTsang4 күн бұрын
This one got me right here ❤ I didn’t realize there are so many films of his I haven’t seen yet. Doubt is one of them. Thanks 🙏🏽 🙏🏽🙏🏽❤️
@donallen28193 күн бұрын
Gary Oldman's only quality is his ability to screem, unless it's to whisper unintelligibly in Lost in Space.
@auntsally27042 күн бұрын
Just am now ❤❤❤
@BarcodeOC9 күн бұрын
Hoffman was one of those actors, like Gary Oldman, where if you saw him in a movie,you knew you were going to see an amazing performance.
@ComedyBros59 күн бұрын
Yes, Oldman is phenomenal at really becoming the character he's playing. Daniel Day Lewis as well, but he's retired unfortunately. Leonardo DiCaprio and Jake Gyllenhaal are the only two "younger" guys to compare.
@AW_20008 күн бұрын
@@ComedyBros5 Christian Bale too imo
@ComedyBros58 күн бұрын
@@AW_2000 Ah yes I don't know how I forgot about him. He was really something else in his early years. However, he hasn't had a "knock out" role in a long while. Ford v Ferrari was his last great movie, but he wasn't a huge standout in it.
@Johnconno8 күн бұрын
Oldman? Ha!
@evanm72368 күн бұрын
Facts
@immortanleo38689 күн бұрын
One of the few actors that I miss like I actually knew him. So many phenomenal actors but Phillips’ acting truly stands out among even the greats. I hope he finally found peace
@Larry_Sportello8 күн бұрын
same, totally!! I feel like I miss him truly, profoundly, as if we knew each other...I only have the same thing with Norm Macdonald...just sad
@mikebasil48327 күн бұрын
So do I. Philip was excellent in many roles. Including those I remember him best for which were Owning Mahoney, Doubt and of course Capote. I remember rumors that he would be the Penguin in the Dark Knight trilogy and he would have done great justice for that role.
@cagneybillingsley21657 күн бұрын
he was/is overrated
@cmaden786 күн бұрын
He definitely was someone who, watching his art, made a difference in my life. Such an amazing talent. So tragic to have lost the way we did. I have a way too long list of people I enjoyed having in my life that passed in similar circumstances. His name is on that list, because even though we weren't friends, his presence made a difference in my life and affected what kind of person I grew up to be. We miss u dude🖤
@utkpo6 күн бұрын
@@cagneybillingsley2165Yeah? Still caught your attention to have you even keeping an opinion about his professional career on a video dedicated to him?
@ilikecaprisun5 күн бұрын
there's an essence of guilt in not appreciating his work when he was still here. growing up and realizing how phenomenal his work is, but feeling like you've missed the window to tell him how it's moved you and impacted the course of your life.
@cagneybillingsley21655 күн бұрын
he was just a hollywood liberal. he would have wanted to muzzle you and force you to inject substances into your body at the threat of being fired. being a good actor is just about being good at lying. it's really not something society should be celebrating.
@alexarias57175 күн бұрын
That's the beauty of the work of the preformer, especially actors like him. Their passion for their craft will carry on forever regardless. He never did it for appreciation though I do get your sentiment. I too wish I could appreciate his work more when he was alive. I always heard people gushing about him when he was still alive though so I'm sure he had plenty of it :)
@tyson314153 күн бұрын
"You don't know what you've got till its gone." - Joni Mitchell.
@squirlmy3 күн бұрын
Did you know him personally? Because, I feel like that about every good actor I've ever seen: for the most part they're completely untouchable, and I think it's good not to disturb them just to express that feeling as a fan, at least not in an obtrusive way.
@41illusion8 күн бұрын
Philip Seymour Hoffman never seemed to play the same role twice while always realistically making characters stand out drastically within stories without standing out too much to distract from the story and quite possibly being the most versatile actor I've ever seen in film. His influence within the medium of acting in the 21st century has no parallel amongst his generation of extremely talented acting cohorts.
@imjustaguyintheworld8 күн бұрын
he did! and he was incredible in making you forget you were watching a movie, that it was *him*. he made his roles entirely into real people and that's talent
@TheDreadPirateRoberts-jr2fk7 күн бұрын
That’s an interesting point. He really didn’t play the same character twice that I remember off the top of my head.
@carollflanery97238 күн бұрын
My favorite actor. He left us way too soon, but he does leave a body of work that is treasured.
@mjharris4206 күн бұрын
Can't imagine being this talented in an industry that gives zero fucks about talent. To have to hang around such ignorant and vapid people while choosing art over everything else.
@paulm7494 күн бұрын
The thing about Hoffman, was that there was a period of years where, if he was in the cast, you knew that you would get to see at least one very good performance in that movie. You made a fine tribute to this great actor. Well done.
@lauralouwhooo4 күн бұрын
I truly miss him. I was devastated when he died, which is saying something because he didn't have a "celebrity" persona I was attached to. I watched him as Lester Bangs in Almost Famous when I was a kid & kept watching. I was so enraptured with his work. I was excited to see everything he was in. It was devastating to find out how he struggled. He was so good.
@wowflower7 күн бұрын
i'm just grateful he kept so busy / had PTA to cast him whenever he wanted to hang out with his pal phil. RIP to one of the greatest actors of the 20th and 21st century
@alexhopewell4497 күн бұрын
He's honestly so good in Twister. If there's a lesson I take from Hoffman, it's that you always bring your a-game to a project, regardless of the project/size of your role. He's by far the most memorable part of that movie.
@matttttttk46985 күн бұрын
The 2 main things i remember from that movie are that red 2nd gen dodge and his role. It was such a fun character
@fiarandompenaltygeneratorm50444 күн бұрын
I honestly think he steals "Boogie Nights" away from everyone else's pyrotechnics. When Scotty cries in the car...That's the character I want to follow.
@CadillacJak3 күн бұрын
Yup
@tanimal39648 күн бұрын
My coworker told me he wasn't a good actor because he was never in the leading roles. I don't talk to him about movies anymore.
@wfd877 күн бұрын
isnt there a whole category of actor that specializes in playing supporting roles lmao
@keysburntgucci90167 күн бұрын
And i support you in your decision man
@NewYork-ly9yy7 күн бұрын
I wouldn't talk to him at all!
@unclehollywoodshouseofther9957 күн бұрын
Clearly he's never seen Capote
@maxpaynethehero7 күн бұрын
Well you need to tell your coworker to watch Capote.
@pearl5597 күн бұрын
I am obsessed with his performance in The Big Lebowski, such a small role but such a funny, deep character study in like 10 mins on screen
@tingtang93027 күн бұрын
Necessary means
@sirg-had88217 күн бұрын
This is our concern, dude.
@JoeMama-yd1ve7 күн бұрын
My brother and I always quote him obsequiously saying “marvellous!”
@danielgbgibson7 күн бұрын
Wonderful, warm woman.
@slonique7 күн бұрын
Her life is in your hands
@OBGynKenobi5 күн бұрын
His Capote was a masterclass in dramatic acting. Just brilliant!
@sunnyd41253 күн бұрын
Ditto.
@glazdarklee16839 күн бұрын
My favorite role of his was in "The Talented Mr. Ripley." It was also the first role of his I ever saw, so perhaps it was the shock of the new.
@agomezjunco8 күн бұрын
Superb performance.
@johnbigelson74718 күн бұрын
Same - surprised he didnt mention that more - that was the strongest rebuttal of the notion that he couldn't play the "broish chad everyguy".
@lennonslemons49348 күн бұрын
"Tommy, how's the peeping?"
@FilmThePoliceFTP8 күн бұрын
Mine is along came Polly. Leaves me in stitches everytime. That movie needs more Sandy Lyle.
@MattyAg136 күн бұрын
Great movie. Mine is his role in Cold Mountain.
@MarthaWoodworth-f9s3 күн бұрын
I still miss him. So many of us mourned his passing as a huge loss. What a talent! One of those actors you would never miss in any new film.
@Acladiere9 күн бұрын
Please Renzy, never change. These video documentaries are AMAZING. The rest of the internet can't hold a candle to you.
@kdddneely6 күн бұрын
First video I’ve seen from this guy, but I thought it was an excellent tribute to one of the greatest, Phillip Seymour Hoffman.
@ZonamaPrime5 күн бұрын
Yup, same here, subscribing.
@dmndxdave9 күн бұрын
i can't believe it's been a decade. he was so sincerely excellent in everything i ever saw him in, truly one of the best to ever do it.
@Hedgestone7897 күн бұрын
Philip Seymour Hoffman played the villains role in Mission Impossible so well ❤
@dudetheman37 күн бұрын
I agree! MI3 is my favorite of the series, largely because of him.
@DanielJohn-xr7ly6 күн бұрын
Cold. Going for the gf.
@rickysrockinreviews5 күн бұрын
"I'm gonna hurt her."
@zerocoolcat5 күн бұрын
Amazing villain. No fun, no glee, no psychopathy, just a cold merchant of death.
@joewas22255 күн бұрын
I'd argue Hoffman & Sean Harris are the only good villains in the Mission Impossible franchise. They're the only memorable ones to me.
@allfasten7 күн бұрын
I think Jesse Plemons continues in Hoffman's path rather nicely. Another brilliant actor to keep an eye out for.
@lunarlightasmr46607 күн бұрын
Jesse Plemons reminds me a lot of him in the way he acts, I can def see this
@Yupp-k8l7 күн бұрын
That´s exactly what I was thinking too! When I saw Kinds of Kindness it became so obvious for me, he nailed all three charcters like PSH would have done it.
@Bfg123276 күн бұрын
I first read that as Jessie pinkman… lol.
@dh65235 күн бұрын
Very astute observation. I had never considered this until now. Thanks
@lordbill51115 күн бұрын
matt daemons meth cousin
@j-schwizzy9 күн бұрын
No mention of Synecdoche, New York? Crazy that you carry the point well without even showing Hoffman as the main character in easily one of the greatest movies of all time
@mattsmith22227 күн бұрын
Amen
@NattyIce1007 күн бұрын
A-FREAKING-MEN
@CorkyMcButterpants7 күн бұрын
Good point. Maybe didn't know how to pronounce it... or spell it... or both. Masterful film on every level.
@unknown63907 күн бұрын
Yeah I'm surprised about that too. That had to have been in his top 5 hardest roles period. Playing a man going from middle age to the end of life, morphing and changing subtly, holding back such emotion, being damaged slowly over time. Its just incredible
@PhrenicosmicOntogeny6 күн бұрын
I was looking for this as well. I tell people about this movie all the time, but I've never met another person who has even heard of it before I tell them.
@mr.whatsittoya5338 күн бұрын
I’ve never watched an actor that possesses such a unique combination of range, emotional depth, presence and raw intensity quite like him. He understood all of his characters from the inside out and never shied away from celebrating every layer his character had. It didn’t matter if the character was calm, cool and collected or frantic, insecure and pathetic. He always made sure the audience saw the vulnerability and the humanity of whatever character he was playing. He was fearless and uncompromising in his commitment to his craft. There will never be another like him. RIP.
@cane60749 күн бұрын
The most inglamorous star in Hollywood ever, and I mean that positively!
@ShadeNinja29907 күн бұрын
Dude I miss this guy. Only had bangers, every role he nailed effortlessly.
@janel342Күн бұрын
It might interest you to know that in the UK bangers is the word for sausages 😂
@shibity8 күн бұрын
One of my favorite actors of all time. Had that special "it" factor that made him amazing to watch.
@desmond-hawkins9 күн бұрын
Congrats on this beautiful portrait, he was incredible. I watched The Master in theaters when it came out, and remember how this movie was on my mind for weeks afterwards. It was such a shock to hear of his passing…
@NYchristofferflowers9 күн бұрын
Hoffman's characters were real and raw and unique, a difficult task to reinvent for every movie - while many leading men are one dimensional ridiculously fictional stereotypes playing the same easy role over and over. I wish he lived longer to see what new great roles we all know he'd have mastered.
@heyheytaytay7 күн бұрын
The Master is Anderson's best film by far, and Hoffman was absolutely robbed of a deserved Oscar for his performance. He was incredible.
@camtron5 күн бұрын
I mean. Daniel Day? Not really a robbery when you lose to the greatest actor ever.
@marcob21374 күн бұрын
@@camtronuh, sweetie, Phillip Seymour Hoffman didn't lose to Daniel Day Lewis. He lost to Christoph Waltz that year. And not for Best Actor, but for Best Supporting Actor.
@tirkentube8 күн бұрын
his son, Cooper hoffman, who is only 21 years old now, has a movie out (among others) called Licorice Pizza. HIGHLY recommend. he does a phenomenal acting job in the film. his co-star is one of the members of HAIM, a music group consisting of three sisters (the other two also appear in the film). they all do wonderful acting jobs in this film, which will give you an emotional/nostalgic ride quite literally the entire time. i say this as an adult male. it's just an awesome film.
@herojh7 күн бұрын
Oh man, I had no idea he was his son. But I was SO mesmerized by his performance. That movie was so captivating, I was stunned. Thanks for mentioning him. I hope to see much more of him.
@cwlim627 күн бұрын
Licorice Pizza 👍👍👍
@SMacCuUladh6 күн бұрын
I refuse to watch it. I'm a big PTA fan (he put PSH in a lot of his films), but he's in a relationship with that Haim girl and directed a bunch of their music videos. She's a bad actress, I hated the trailer, watched the first five minutes and nope, not watching that.
@MrPrtyMrthn6 күн бұрын
Didn’t ask.
@tirkentube6 күн бұрын
@@SMacCuUladh The first 5 minutes are not indicitave of the entire film, and in fact, her perosnality changes after that 5 minutes. in fact, the first few minutes are literally designed to give you a wrong impression of both characters. They become a business team in the movie. Also, you're wrong. He's been with Maya Rudolph since 2001. Alana Haim was seen with a mystery date (unidentified) in september (who ironically does look like PTA, but it's not PTA), but as of october has reportedly been dating Joseph quinn, another young actor.
@lztrfilms82503 күн бұрын
S-tier actor ! And everything felt so effortless with him. He made acting look easy.
@geolaw8797 күн бұрын
This hit me right in the feels, I think about Phillip Seymour Hoffman and his character roles very often. Great vid Renzy
@austins.24958 күн бұрын
PSH seriously one of the greatest artists/actors of our time. I get emotional every single time I see him in a film. The man just had it, he had what was needed inside. RIP king
@ultraviolettas7 күн бұрын
It breaks my heart just to think about him. Sweet sensitive Phillip 😭💔
@cmaden786 күн бұрын
This was very well done. Thank you for reminding us how much he gave us.
@cmaden786 күн бұрын
This was very well done. Thank you for reminding us how much he gave us.
@cmaden786 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this. Thank you for reminding us how honoured we are to have had this man use his talent to be a part of our lives. You did it well, and it is appreciated.🤗❤️
@Netsuko6 күн бұрын
This man had an aura around himself. You really felt that he WAS the character he was portraying, not just playing him.
@Vrir169 күн бұрын
What an awesome tribute to an absolutely incredible human being. Gene Wilder and Robin Williams are the only other actors I wish we could see more from.
@math9259 күн бұрын
Beautiful video. I guess I want to single out Hoffman's performance as Allen in Todd Solondz's "Happiness". I don't think that describing his role, nor the reasons why it personally resonated so strongly with me, are appropriate for the youtube comment section. I just want to say that the internal turmoil that Allen fought, the pain and sickness that Hoffman expressed so beautifully, were a profoundly important piece of art for me. I don't think I could have understood my own hurt nearly so well nor so early in my life had I not seen Hoffman's portrayal of Allen. Anyway, I love your channel. I agree with your whole video, I just wanted to throw a "Yes, and..." in there. Have a happy holiday, Renzy.
@SquirrelNutkinsКүн бұрын
Special mention too for Happiness and Magnolia. Just perfection.
@haaa9119 күн бұрын
One of my favorite actors ever, great to see a video on him
@Ampampas8 күн бұрын
goated actor
@pingidjit9 күн бұрын
He was a treasure and I am so glad we got to experience him.
@TacticalReaper567 күн бұрын
He absolutely hits all the classical notes, and his own strides perfectly. The man was born to act.
@Seanobb6 күн бұрын
Had the pleasure of working on a film he did, "Jack Goes Boating", which was his directorial debut. It was the first film I had ever worked on coming out of school. It was also the most cherished, memorable experience I've ever had.
@alexanderclaylavin5 күн бұрын
You are blessed
@bagongscrive9 күн бұрын
Beautiful video on a beautiful man. I've always found him so physically riveting, precisely because he had more of an 'everyman' look. He always knew how to use his eyes, and what pretty eyes they were, to convey his characters at their most fragile and vulnerable. And don't get me started on his smile...
@mehjauw28106 күн бұрын
Thank you for a beautiful homage to an incredibly talented and transcendent actor.
@AndrewFloydWebber7 күн бұрын
He was an immense pleasure to watch, a true treasure. I was going to say that he and Vincent D’Onofrio are my favorite modern actors after Daniel Day Lewis but somebody mentioned Gary Oldman and I’ve got to put him right in there too. Great video!
@PatrickEtheridge19837 күн бұрын
This was beautifully done. Thank you for making it. I still feel his loss.
@MorganEdgy9 күн бұрын
I remember some people commenting on how in MI:3 he was "not memorable or intimidating". Like... Bro, did we not watch the same movie? WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU?
@pankajprasad94519 күн бұрын
That was the first impression of him for me. And he was the Boss in the film. The helicopter scene was the best bad guy moment for me.
@tonyattardo93509 күн бұрын
That is certified retarded. Pardon my language.
@MorganEdgy8 күн бұрын
@@pankajprasad9451 yeah, blud was about to be dropped from like 300m of height and he didn't flinch. And when he was put back in he even had Ethan's name, dude was cold as steel
@bjcutter50867 күн бұрын
He fn saved that franchise, and not enough people speak about it!
@joewas22255 күн бұрын
He was the best villain in the franchise. But Sean Harris comes extremely close. They're the only memorable villains in the franchise. & Sean is in my favorite one.
@beanotraffini6813 күн бұрын
I was a huge and sincere Philip Seymour Hoffman fan. Once, when I was down in the village some years ago, I ran into him near Christopher Street: Although he was obviously in a hurry to get somewhere, as I said: "Hey, what's up...?" I got a genuinely warm response from him, as he slapped my shoulder, said : "Hey, man....", and then continued on his way. A class act, through and through.
@romanxkostan9 күн бұрын
You're actually that good.
@sheli96777 күн бұрын
Agreed
@pamelah64317 күн бұрын
1:40 the desired height, jawline, toned physique... None of this has ever hindered Jack Black from kicking butt.
@TheGreatSalsaMan6 күн бұрын
But just imagine how many actors it DOES hinder though who can’t catch the same break or match their energy and fall through the cracks. This is the problem that i can only think of about maybe a dozen or so actors off the top of my head who are either plus sized or not hollywood ‘pretty’. Look at the recent successful The Penguin. Oswald is supposed to be a bigger villain with a short stature but they opted to cast Colin Farrell wearing a fat suit instead of an actual plus sized actor that could play the role…
@christianjohnson22755 күн бұрын
@@TheGreatSalsaManI can’t take your argument seriously if your using the word plus sized lol. Just say fat.
@TheGreatSalsaMan5 күн бұрын
@ well thats a you problem then because calling someone fat is offensive like calling a black person the N word. Big and tall, plus sized, overweight, etc but I wont degrade someone who is bigger because of a medical condition or injury. Fat is those 400lbs people you see on scooters at Disney who cant walk because they’re so overweight from excessive overeating
@christianjohnson22755 күн бұрын
@@TheGreatSalsaMan did you seriously compare calling someone fat to the n word lol. Your so soft
@joewas22255 күн бұрын
Jack Black doesn't have any talent & yes it has hindered him.
@doodedoodotdotdeedooyeah6 күн бұрын
This is great. Hoffman was truly the greatest actor of his generation and his character portrayals are timeless. Nice job and thanks for recognizing this cinematic genius.
@actuallysalad41029 күн бұрын
I dont know why the algorithm loves you or if you found a way to control it but thank goodness these videos are amazing and very well done! Keep it up subbed from the first vid I saw
@ranovee26827 күн бұрын
This is a great video. Hoffman is unquestionably my favorite actor and he has been as long as I can remember. He also died on my birthday. So in some strange way it makes me feel this sort of kinship with him. He just overwhelmed the screen when he was on it. I remember when I was younger and getting into film and he would just keep popping up left and right in everything I watched and I was amazed at how he could move from being so sinister, to so hilarious, to so goofy, to so smooth. Truly a legend and it saddens me always that I know his best performances were ahead of him when he passed.
@vafixer8885Күн бұрын
Probably the most overlooked/under-rated actor imo
@mdillinger20106 күн бұрын
I owe ya for this one. I went on a Philip Seymour Hoffman binge back in the early 2000s. I saw a wild Philip Seymour Hoffman movie where he was huffing gas. I saw it so long ago all I remembered was that and it was an indie film. When I watched this clip I learned the name of that movie. It was "Love Liza". Time for a rewatch. I also enjoyed Owning Mahoney if anyone has a chance to see it.
@MichaelPlochmannКүн бұрын
Love Liza is one of those films that isn't talked about enough. Thanks for spending time with it and giving due credit.
@ninajames84339 күн бұрын
I remember that sad day in February 2014. He was only 46 years old and at the peak of his career. He had checked himself into rehab for alcohol and drug abuse at least twice throughout his career. The conclusion is this: it is better to never start anything harmful to your health.
@kileyrowe80919 күн бұрын
I highly agree but I think that is a really unhelpful way to look at it for anyone actually struggling with addictive tendencies, especially ones that are genetic. The conclusion should be: helping people identify their struggles, loving them through it, and getting the help one needs is vital to everyone's life experience.
@BulletToothboo9 күн бұрын
@@kileyrowe8091🙏
@benf11119 күн бұрын
Don't be afraid to address and get help for the underlying issues that make you want to cope in that way is mine.
@misanthropicservitorofmars21169 күн бұрын
@@kileyrowe8091and what is all the help they need? Who’s doing the labor for that? See this is the problem. People have their own lives. Who’s supposed to put their lives on hold to “help them with whatever they need?”
@i2ottenBannana8 күн бұрын
Shitty way to look at that lmao
@The-Dom8 күн бұрын
Possibly the greatest actor of all time. Top 3 for sure. DD Lewis, Robin Williams, PS Hoffman. My heart is forever touched.
@resipsaloquitur137 күн бұрын
We'll never forget it, Phil. Dude was one of the few truly great. Like one of those for all time great...
@gdnygma4907 күн бұрын
when he died my friend phoned me up to break the news … that’s how much of a fan i was and still am …. amazing the best actor i’ve ever seen
@acreking96807 күн бұрын
That Capote performance is still one of the craziest transformations on screen. A performance truly worthy of its oscar
@classiclife72046 күн бұрын
After he died, I sort of gave up on movies, certainly new ones. A guy like Hoffman is not replaceable, as time has shown. And for those of us who grew into adulthood watching his work, we've already seen the best. For me, at least, the heart was taken out
@smohan1239 күн бұрын
Beautiful piece for a beautiful soul. PSH captivated me before I even knew what good acting looked like. It took awhile (and more than one explainer video like this one) to really put words and meaning to what I had experienced. Thanks for doing this. I hope others who chance upon your video will also learn to identify with his mastery the way that I did some years ago.
@jeffreybane55876 күн бұрын
Excellent piece. I would suggest that his greatest moment was in Boogie Nights, after his failed pass at another character. His solo performance in the car with his shame and regret is something that will never be repeated. Amazing.
@slightexag8 күн бұрын
His performance in Big Lebowski is so underrated and one of the funniest in the movie
@daviduhr49412 күн бұрын
Phillip Seymour Hoffman was one of the finest acting talents of ours, or any generation. He truly became the role he was playing and he made every film he was in better. The first occasion I remember watching him was The Talented Mr. Ripley… then The Big Lebowski. What a tremendous talent he was. I lived in NYC and worked as a bartender in the West Village at the time of his passing. He was a well known figure there and held the respect of many of those who served him, myself included. His passing, as well as the passing of Robin Williams, in the same year was difficult, as both were beloved in the neighborhood. I still see his performances in films like The Master and Capote and wonder how anyone could ever discount this man’s ability to transform film. Rest in peace, Mr. Hoffman.
@89volvowithlazers7 күн бұрын
Hoffman to me carries the skills of the great actors that we never forget. A high bar for actors and for all passions
@gregorymelia65646 күн бұрын
Amazing range with incredible quality every time. You are always compelled to watch him no matter what.
@becksimilian29556 күн бұрын
One of my favorite actors... he was memorable in 👏every👏single👏role
@davidbusby14754 күн бұрын
That's a nice one. A nice tribute to this fantastic actor. One of my all time favorites. We miss you, Philip.
@jimhays27728 күн бұрын
I saw Love Liza after my divorce and Hoffman brought out very raw feelings and made them real. It stuck with me.
@williammccormick9842 күн бұрын
His turn in Along Came Polly is still one of the funniest comedy performances I've ever seen.
@vayull71634 күн бұрын
I was waiting for you to mention his physical acting. So glad you did. He was masterful at human micro-actions that convinced the viewer of the authenticity of the character.
@rudibach7 күн бұрын
Beautiful tribute to a towering figure, and deep soul.
@kngtrdr_8 күн бұрын
I've never met the man. But I was emotionally distraught when he decided to leave the planet. So absolutely talented, I'm glad he was able to show us just how good he was.
@Maddolis9 күн бұрын
PSH is phenomenal, my favourite actor - coincently yesterday I counted that I'd seen him in 18 films and that's not even counting Capote or Scent of a Woman. Up there with Day-Lewis and Oldman for sure. Unfortunately I'm familiar with the same struggle he was and even after 20 years it can come back and ruin or end your life. Taken too soon, but he left one hell of a legacy.
@woodstockorientalrugcleani4304 күн бұрын
I very much appreciate your effort. This is a beautiful watch. There are so many films of his that I have yet to admire. I’m partial to his performance in, Flawless.
@chewy_bucca9 күн бұрын
The background piano music was used in House MDs best episode: Broken. Makes me cry everytime, just hearing it here made me cry, thank you
@garrettisbetterthanU5 күн бұрын
Fantastic video. Well done. Excellent tribute. He was one of my favorite actors. I really enjoyed Syndoche
@troelsfries56729 күн бұрын
Great videos, bruv. All of them. If you continue, you'll hopefully end up where ever that extremely well articulated mind of yours wants to be. Still thinking about your last one about Lars. Right in the feels. Thank you.
@nathangrund72167 күн бұрын
Oh bro (insert sniffle) He was absolutely amazing. RIP. I always loved how cool and arrogant he was in The Talented Mr Ripley. As a friend of mine said if you can be totally annoying or hated, and totally adored at the same time. You are obviously good at what you do. Just like your hated sports stars.
@HaiNguyen-ol6ey9 күн бұрын
Knew him firstly in Money Ball and in my eyes he was brilliant in that. The way he expressed his emotion, body language, facial expression, he didn't have to talk a lots for his character to show despite, looking down to Billy Bean(Brad Pitt)'s method in the movie. I was a fan ever since.
@jamesmcpherson58278 күн бұрын
I found this piece excellent(!) and it made me think of an anecdote of my own... About 20 years ago, around the time that Capote was making its way through theatres, I was listening to a local radio station interviewing him to promote the film. Towards the end of the interview the DJ asked him to "do the Capote voice" and Hoffman refused. His response was something very similar to, "I am not some monkey who can summon a character for cheap parlor tricks." That stuck with me. Hoffman then went on to clarify that he would not cheapen this character with reductionistic "impersonations" of his performance. My initial reaction was that Hoffman came off kind of rude in that exchange but that was almost immediately replaced by a sincere respect for the man for honoring the character in a way only he could. RIP PSH. We shall not see your like again.
@petsounds36129 күн бұрын
PSH is a top 5 actor of all time in my opinion. He plays so many different characters and yet each has a certain darkness and deeply human element that's utterly captivating and a little heartbreaking
@lohnjennon48868 күн бұрын
based profile picture
@HeathenHammer804 күн бұрын
Great video. I didn’t expect to cry so much!
@fiore3ky9 күн бұрын
God, I miss him so much!
@feloniuspunk70786 күн бұрын
I miss PSH. He was incredible. I think another reason i’ve always felt connected to him is that i was a heroin addict for almost 10 years Rest in Peace Phillip Seymour Hoffman
@Bbfishman9 күн бұрын
take a shot everytime renzy says "masterclass" in one of his videos
@Renzy_YT9 күн бұрын
Lmaooo I’ll pick up a thesaurus on the next one 😂
@Bbfishman9 күн бұрын
@@Renzy_YT just messin around. i look forward to your uploads everytime. you're one of the few channels i have upload notifications set for
@ThinkShift3 күн бұрын
A great retrospective on a remarkably talented actor, thank you for putting this together. I will admit to being surprised that one of his most understated and greatest performances was not mentioned, and that was "Owning Mahowny" from 2003, with John Hurt and Minnie Driver. A must watch for any fan of PSH!
@Tookieslam9 күн бұрын
Jesse Plemons reminds me a lot of him
@austins.24958 күн бұрын
Absolutely. In a way, I think he carries the torch (of course not a replacement).
@hoboringmaster80298 күн бұрын
@@austins.2495 was gonna chime in comments but couldn’t remember plemons name lol
@Tookieslam8 күн бұрын
@@austins.2495 exactly
@TPTurkey-x2i8 күн бұрын
Phillip Seymour Damon
@kittycatcat69628 күн бұрын
@@TPTurkey-x2iMeth Damon....
@Sklagmann13 сағат бұрын
Joaquin and Phillip are two actors that will always baffle the minds of scholars and that of the stage. Pure poetry.
@jacksonmay1539 күн бұрын
Phillip Seymour Hoffman was THE BEST
@JuanMartinez-xf3uz3 күн бұрын
I marathoned his entire filmography right after he passed. I loved him in every movie and remember feeling this dread of never knowing how many great performances would go unrealized. People who lived through Jimi Hendrix must have felt the same way.
@christianmauri89729 күн бұрын
Great video mate. Well done.
@TheAlexanderkl2 күн бұрын
I used to cite Phillip Seymour Hoffman as my favorite actor. No one's asked me that question in a long time, so I haven't pondered it lately. He still may be though. I'm glad that I still have some of his back catalog to watch, it'll be a sad day when I can no longer see him in a new to me role.
@DarqChildNYC8 күн бұрын
Miss PSH like crazy. He was truly remarkable. Commanded the screen in every scene. It was never about how he looked it was always about how he made you feel. Truly brilliant how he became the character and drew us in. Breaks my heart that he lost his battle with addiction💔
@dallas-cole9 күн бұрын
I loved him as Dusty in Twister
@shannawettergren72359 күн бұрын
It’s the suck zone…
@marklefevre34767 күн бұрын
fffFFFOOOOOOOOOD!
@SquirrelNutkinsКүн бұрын
So glad you said Love Liza was your favourite. Me too. He was also the only reason to watch Cold Mountain. A boring movie which for the few minutes he was on screen made watching the whole thing worthwhile.
@cinemasnitch39599 күн бұрын
top 5 of all time
@j_e_hill4 күн бұрын
A beautiful person. So much presence on screen. I would watch anything he was in and felt for him as a human in every turn he shared.
@IngramSnake9 күн бұрын
As Ocelot would say: You’re pretty good.
@SeanHomsher-ef3mx6 күн бұрын
He was my celebrity double. When he died, my wife was really upset. And she was crying when she found out, as well as everyday after for about a week when I asked her why she was so upset, she didn’t know, but then figured out that it was because he looked and sounded so much like me, and she felt like she was crying for me. RIP.