“The White Lotus” is set to win Jennifer Coolidge another Emmy for her star turn in the hit HBO show — but Coolidge isn’t the only supporting player who deserves some awards love this season. Tom Hollander turned in yet another fine performance with typically scene-stealing panache.
In the second season of “The White Lotus,” Hollander plays Quentin — a rich, gay English expat living in Sicily, which is where the show is set. Hollander’s performance as Quentin is typically colorfully and addictive and critics have lined up to praise the English actor.
Liam Gaughan of The Collider called Hollander’s Quentin “one of the most dynamic characters in the series,” explaining that Hollander’s performance brings a “playfulness, mystery, and darkly comic wit to the storyline.” Gaughan wrote: “Of all the shocking moments in ‘Arrivederci,’ [season finale] Quentin’s cold, seemingly impenetrable demeanor stands out as the most chilling.”
Meanwhile, Marlow...
In the second season of “The White Lotus,” Hollander plays Quentin — a rich, gay English expat living in Sicily, which is where the show is set. Hollander’s performance as Quentin is typically colorfully and addictive and critics have lined up to praise the English actor.
Liam Gaughan of The Collider called Hollander’s Quentin “one of the most dynamic characters in the series,” explaining that Hollander’s performance brings a “playfulness, mystery, and darkly comic wit to the storyline.” Gaughan wrote: “Of all the shocking moments in ‘Arrivederci,’ [season finale] Quentin’s cold, seemingly impenetrable demeanor stands out as the most chilling.”
Meanwhile, Marlow...
- 3/29/2023
- by Jacob Sarkisian
- Gold Derby
The actor turned author speaks his mind about critics, ‘arrogant’ aid work, the ‘mania-led’ #MeToo movement, and why Madonna finds him boring. By Emma Brockes
Sean Penn walks into a low-key restaurant not far from his house and slides undetected into a seat at the back. It is a misty day in Malibu, 15 miles north of La, and the actor appears in familiar, I-don’t-care guise: beat-up leather jacket, brushfire hair, with the jittery energy of a man who has stood for too long next to very loud speakers. The 57-year-old greets me affably, to my surprise: while Penn may be long admired for his acting, he is denigrated for almost everything else. He is known to be pugnacious, short-tempered, long-winded, a man who yells at photographers and smokes on TV. And now he has written a lunatic novel. “It’s the most fun I’ve had professionally,” he croaks...
Sean Penn walks into a low-key restaurant not far from his house and slides undetected into a seat at the back. It is a misty day in Malibu, 15 miles north of La, and the actor appears in familiar, I-don’t-care guise: beat-up leather jacket, brushfire hair, with the jittery energy of a man who has stood for too long next to very loud speakers. The 57-year-old greets me affably, to my surprise: while Penn may be long admired for his acting, he is denigrated for almost everything else. He is known to be pugnacious, short-tempered, long-winded, a man who yells at photographers and smokes on TV. And now he has written a lunatic novel. “It’s the most fun I’ve had professionally,” he croaks...
- 5/5/2018
- by Guardian Staff
- The Guardian - Film News
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