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« Review: A Hologram for the King | Main | The Huntsman: Winter's War »
Sunday
Apr242016

Viggo Mortensen: Still here, still fantastic

Our celebration of Actors this month continues with Lynn Lee on Viggo

Is Viggo Mortensen the most interesting man in the world?  Based on his peripatetic history and eclectic interests, he’s certainly a contender.  In addition to acting, he’s a prolific painter, photographer, composer, and poet who founded his own publishing house.  A dual American and Danish citizen who spent his early childhood in South America and Denmark before returning to his native New York, he speaks multiple languages, with greatest fluency in English, Spanish, and Danish.  Oh, and his ex-wife is punk singer Exene Cervenko, with whom he has a son. 

As my husband put it, “Viggo Mortensen is who James Franco wishes he was.”

I can’t speak to the artistic merits of Viggo’s off-screen pursuits, but I do see him as a kind of anti-Franco in keeping them largely off the public radar.  And while he’s clearly driven by a need to express himself via many outlets, he still exudes a sense of some private, fundamentally unknowable core self.  It permeates his screen presence, too, and is part of what makes him so intriguing as an actor.  (Well, that plus the rugged Scandinavian good looks and dimpled chin don't hurt, either.)  More...

That suggestion of hidden depths may have helped him land the role that vaulted him from the ranks of rising actor to movie star—namely, Aragorn from the Lord of the Rings series.  Even as he cut a convincing (and swoonworthy) swashbuckling hero, he also revealed a more introspective, ambivalent, self-doubting side to Aragorn that wasn’t present in the novel.  It might not be canon, but it was effective and memorable.

In other ways, though, it was an atypical performance for the actor.  Perhaps because Aragorn is unequivocally good, he lacked the hint of menace that always seemed to be lurking behind Viggo’s stoic demeanor in his other memorable roles, from the troubled bad-seed brother in Sean Penn’s The Indian Runner to Demi Moore’s enigmatic CO in G.I. Jane.  Even as a sex god in A Walk on the Moon (no, really, that’s what he is, opposite an equally sexy Diane Lane), he brought a frisson of danger that somehow enhanced rather than undercut his tenderness as a lover.

He’d later hone that duality to perfection in his collaborations with director David Cronenberg—in particular, the bracing one-two punch of A History of Violence and Eastern Promises, the latter earning him the Oscar nomination he really should have gotten for the former.  (Not to knock his work in Eastern Promises, which probably deserved an award for that bathhouse fight scene alone.)  As two sides of the same coin – the criminal posing as an honest man in HoV, the cop posing as a criminal in EP – he brings to mind a coiled spring: even before it’s sprung, the viewer can sense that behind those calm blue eyes and quiet affect lies a capacity for terrifying violence that can crack through at any moment, even right after a gesture of utmost gentleness.  You see a version of that dynamic again in Hossein Amini's The Two Faces of January, adapted from Patricia Highsmith’s novel, in which Viggo’s outwardly suave, inwardly desperate grifter faces off against a younger, wilier, but less seasoned version of himself (played by Oscar Isaac).

Apart from his work with Cronenberg (which also included a smartly understated turn as Sigmund Freud, possibly the only thing everyone could agree on about the polarizing A Dangerous Method), Viggo’s post-LOTR filmography has been a bit spotty and definitely idiosyncratic; a fair number of his films have barely registered in the U.S. film market.  But many of them have felt like deeply personal, sometimes oddball ventures, consistent with his general MO in life.  One gets the sense that starring in one of the most high-profile, instantly iconic movie franchises of our time changed him not a whit except insofar as it’s given him greater means to pursue whatever project pleases his fancy, no matter how obscure.  Who else would have produced, starred in, and composed the score for a film (Jauja) entirely in Danish, Spanish, and French, about a 19th century Danish captain searching for a runaway daughter in Patagonia?

For my part, I applaud him for marching to his own drumbeat but admit I’d like to see him in a film that gets a bit more mainstream recognition.  Will he have a winner in the upcoming Captain Fantastic, which premiered at Sundance earlier this year and is screening at Cannes next month?  While early reviews have been mixed, his performance has been well received, though it remains to be seen if the film gets any awards traction.  Still, it’s comforting to think that Viggo himself almost certainly isn’t wasting any time wondering if it will or not.  I imagine he’s got plenty of other thoughts and plans to occupy himself.

Previously on Actor's Month: 80s Action Hero, Current Stars Who Need an Oscar NomOlympian ActorsAntonio Banderas in Law of Desire, Sterling K Brown in The People vs OJ Simpson, Chris CooperHarrison Ford in WitnessAndrew Garfield, Brendan Gleeson, Tom HiddlestonJason Scott Lee, Joe Manganiello in Pee Wee's Big Holiday, Jack Nicholson, Ryan O'Neal, A Conversation With Gregory PeckMatthias SchoenaertsMichael Shannon, Aaron Tveit,

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Reader Comments (8)

He IS a sex god, people!
One of the actors that I thank God for at least having one Oscar nom.
A History of Violence is so much even MORE gory on the visual book, just haunting!
I enjoyed Two Faces of January, because him and Oscar Isaac, holla..
Loving this Actor month, we need to do this more & can we talk about Maximillian Schell?

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterCraver

I know you'll hate me but my fave of his performances is in the Stallone disaster movie Daylight,he gets his character spot on and the film is lesser without his prescence,a typical good perormance bad movie.

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered Commentermark

He was just so great in the three-punch of The Lord of the Rings, History of Violence and Eastern Promises.

Unfortunate, he hasn't given as good of a performance or been in a movie as good as those three since.

If you think about it, that is quite a rut. Eastern Promises was released in 2007 (almost 10 years ago). If we had to guess how many great/good performances Viggo was going to give us in the next 10 years in 2007, we would have unfortunately been much too optimistic.

The disappointing part of it all is I don't think Hollywood is to blame here as I bet he had options. He'd probably be 100% content to keep going on as he has these last few years; which is good for him I suppose, but bad for us because he can do so much more.

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterAnonny

Anonny, I'd argue that Jauja, Far From Men, and The Road are all stronger than Eastern Promises. And he was terrific in A Dangerous Mind.

You know, he's like a male Tilda Swinton, except better.

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterArkaan

Oh.... that is right. For all of the weird shit James Franco is doing. It is really more than a cheap and poor imitation of what Viggo Mortensen is doing. Viggo is an original.

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterSteven

Viggo is seriously great. I like him for all the reasons the article praises him for. And I think he should have not only been nominated for A History of Violence but won that year.

Ever hopeful that he will have another big mainstream hit - but as long as he's happy doing what he's doing, I'm happy for him!

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterEdward L.

Two quick corrections, pointed out by my husband. In G.I. Jane Viggo was the unit's Command Master Chief, not Demi's Moore's CO. And, in Eastern Promises, Viggo was an Russian FSB agent rather than a cop.

April 24, 2016 | Unregistered Commenterlylee

He is for sure one of the most interesting man in the world. Thank you so much for including him in this series!

April 25, 2016 | Unregistered CommenterIvonne
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