Currently, Knightley resides at the top of my list of predicted 2012 Best Actress Oscar nominees (I will update the list on April 1st, seriously). I'm still a little shaky, as the project sounds very experimental and could go either way, so I'm not confident that she'll win, more or less get nominated. But, as of yet, she has the baitiest prospects, IMO. For the longest time, I was blind to her appeal held by That Fellow. She was adorable in Love Actually, but I didn't get her in general. Constantly unimpressed with her choices, I finally got a glimpse at what she's capable of in last year's A Dangerous Method where she dove into the role of Russian-Jewish Sabina Spielrein, a wild-child who learns that her sexual impulses are connected to physical pain from her youth. She is able to apply her lessons to becoming an accomplished psychiatrist. But, the part is tricky, as she first had to adopt facial and vocal tricks, which, if not done carefully, can come across as unintentionally funny. Some still found her turn affectatious. I found her enthralling.
Knightley made her first big impression with Bend It Like Beckham, a small hit that featured her playing a talented football (soccer) player. Perhaps taking a page out of Rachel Weisz' book, she joined the Pirates of the Caribbean (Weisz was one of the first award-winning actresses to build her career off of a popular action-comedy franchise), but, perhaps without the foresight it would be such a blockbuster and spawn several sequels. The same year, she appeared as the cute-as a-button Juliet in the British ensemble moneymaker Love Actually. Her next big budget feature, King Arthur, gravely disappointed commercially and critically. And, unless Pirates is in the title or Joe Wright is behind the camera, audiences have passed on most of the rest of her films. Despite a healthy British following, they often make barely a blip on the box-office radar. She's played an assortment of characters including a decadent 18th-century aristocrat, a 1940s star-crossed lover, a supermodel turned bounty hunter, a reclusive actress, a housewife with questions about fidelity, and a jealous clone donor. But, she really wouldn't up the ante until she joined forces with David Cronenberg with Method.
She first teamed up with director Wright in 2005, which proved to be fortuitous. She scored her first AMPAS nod playing Elizabeth Bennet in Pride & Prejudice. They would come together again with Atonement, where she played a woman whose love is destroyed by a lie. (She would also work twice with director John Maybury.) The film received multiple award nominations, including Best Picture. She's playing his Anna Karenina, set for release towards the end of the year. She'll be working off of Oscar talk from last year involving her performance in Method. Along with Karenina, she has made the bold choice of playing opposite Steve Carell in her most non-serious role yet. In Seeking a Friend for the End of the World, she'll be a comical foil in an end-of-the-world romance. In December, she just may be looking at two Golden Globe nominations. Tomorrow, she turns 27.
Previous Actress Retrospectives:
Keira giving all she has got |
Eva Mendes Rosie O'Donnell Lena Olin Meg Ryan Rachel Weisz
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