HomeEntertainmentMen's FashionGuy Pearce Explains Why Studio Films Are "A Killer For Me"

Guy Pearce Explains Why Studio Films Are “A Killer For Me”

How Guy Pearce Walked Away With The Brutalist, the Indie Movie of the Year

He’s always had a comic-book hero’s face. He stepped out of Australian soap operas and onto the Hollywood leading-man track. So what’s Guy Pearce doing playing the embodiment of capitalist villainy in the awards-favorite epic The Brutalist? The same thing he’s always done: seeking out the dark, risky territory where he feels most at home.

Lately, I have spent an inordinate amount of time thinking about Guy Pearce’s face. That dramatically protruding bone structure. The way the twin spears of his cheekbones echo the laser-cut jawline that comes to a fine point at the beveled edge of his chin. His cheeks are drawn taut, concave at their hollows, which causes the skin around them to crease when he smirks or grimaces. His eyes are deep-set. His brow is naturally arched, his nose is upturned, his lips naturally pursed. He looks wholesome and regal and sleazy, sacred and profane, like an angel who fucks. It raises the question: Why has an actor with these sculpted features spent the last two decades retreating from the center of the shows and films he’s worked on, seeking out opportunities to play cowards, freaks, and dickheads?


I admittedly hadn’t thought much about Guy Pearce in the abstract until recently, and you probably haven’t either. It’s easy to take him for granted. That face has been part of the landscape of the movies—Hollywood cinema and independent cinema and international cinema—for 30 years, since Pearce emerged from the chrysalis of Neighbours (Australia’s longest-running soap opera) as a candy-colored blistering-hot drag queen movie star in 1994’s The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Minus one brief but significant sabbatical, he’s worked constantly over the ensuing three decades—across television and film, in prosthetics, in 16th-century period pieces, in films set in the Prohibition-era South, in outer space, in Tom Clancy adaptations, in two Best Picture winners, and with constantly migrating accents. He has been a spewer of rage, the picture of composure, a dumper of exposition. He’s played Andy Warhol, Prince Albert, Harry Houdini, and Henry VIII, but he’s not quite a chameleon. He can’t be, with that face. But although he looks enough like a superhero that he was offered Daredevil back in the day, he’d rather play Aldrich Killian, the guy who mutates himself with nanotech to kill Tony Stark. Pearce is something of a mutant strain himself—a twist on an old Hollywood cliché, a character-actor-in-a-movie-star’s-body who has actually carved out a character actor’s career.

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