ASP3: This is John Galt
Ideally, the actor playing John Galt in Atlas Shrugged Part 3 will appear to have jumped right off of the pages of Atlas Shrugged. However, in our quest to find the perfect John Galt, some tough choices may have to be made. That's where you come in.
If you had to choose, which would you consider the number one priority in casting John Galt?
A. As long as the actor looks and acts like John Galt, I don't care what his personal beliefs are.
B. The actor needs to possess a deep understanding of, and passion for, Ayn Rand's ideas first and foremost.
Leave your answer in the comments below.
If you had to choose, which would you consider the number one priority in casting John Galt?
A. As long as the actor looks and acts like John Galt, I don't care what his personal beliefs are.
B. The actor needs to possess a deep understanding of, and passion for, Ayn Rand's ideas first and foremost.
Leave your answer in the comments below.
Previous comments...
The debate between the cast changes has become non-productive, since this is 'water under the Gulch bridge'.
What might be helpful would to keep the Part 2 cast for Part 3, and try to make some sort of continuity amends. I had no real issues with the Part 2 actors, and actually preferred Hank over Part1.
I agree that Gary Cooper was a super star, and his unpretentious confidence in his demeanor lent well to his role in 'The fountainhead'.
It was the thickest paperback on the rack and I had no idea how Ayn Rand was poised to direct my life.
In the following three months I continued reading, while attending class at America's most Liberal private boarding school in Sedona, AZ.
Four years later, I graduated from Verde Valley School at a total cost of $50,000 and having read all of Ayn Rand that I could find.
Forty years later I left Wall Street. Not as a Broker, but as a Coder and I’d proven to myself that Rand was right.
Today, I’m too old to play John Galt, though I chat with him every day.
Probably why I’m so “off the radar”.
Want to find a great “John Galt”?
Look in the mirror.
Actually... he might make a great Ragnar... look at this..
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1330560/?ref_...
Pirate?
Dunno if he's massive enough though.
Because of A and B
I am not concerned with the actor's politics. I am concerned solely with his ability to play the role.
Although Jim Caviezel would otherwise be a good choice, his prior acting experience would make it easy for critics to belittle AS3 as the "The Passion of John Galt."
The others would make great cast members but can't see playing John Galt.
Would Rand Paul (the senator, whose first name might not have been chosen at random) be OK to play the part ?
Would it be compatible with his current occupation as a senator ?
After all, he knows how to pitch, and he probably deeply understands the spirit of the novel.
Even physically, I think he would fit the role quite well. Of course, there's the little issue that he's not an engineer, so he probably doesn't have the "engineer" behavior of always thinking of some problem in the background... But the speech part in the novel is definitely a political speech he would with no doubt perform with perfection...
uh, no to Rand Paul.
What would Howard Roark do? I find it interesting to apply Ayn Rand's philosophy of the Arts to the production of AS. The ideas presented in The Fountainhead are directly applicable.
Add to that the pure aesthetics of these cars, and the class they add to their movie owners, and you have a perfect choice. It probably wasn't an accident that Francisco drove a Porsche...he didn't give a hoot where his money was going....
P.S. I re-watched both parts last night, and I think you are wrong about their quality and lasting impact. Part 2 is my favorite, and I would like to see a relatively unknown play John Galt in Part 3. Any large actor will bring along viewer's prejudices, and preconceived images, of their past roles.
Somehow I think that the right actor will relentlessly solicit this role, and for all the right reasons.
N.B. list in random order
further note: spellcheck suggests "simplemindedly" instead of "singlemindedly". humph.
James didn't have it in him to succeed on his own, and certainly didn't have the independent spirit to drive himself around...unlike all the characters that we admire.
The writers and/or director got it 100% right.
"You guys suck! The fictional characters in the books would never do it that way! WAH! WAH! WAH!"
Seriously? Grow up and get a life Jones. You're pathetic. Better yet, just go away.
Kirk Douglas (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIUVbQEaB...)
Robert Mitchum (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hB3lzLAsp...)
Clark Gable (already mentioned by someone)
Michael Keaton
Alan Ladd (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ternps0JF...)
Audie Murphy (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kskT463MI...)
Al Pacino? (Michael Corleone as John Galt? Chilling!)
Steve McQueen (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Nvbdw4Ng...)
Paul Newman (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hEvbUTWKL...)
Tyrone Power (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dyDZDckb...)
George Peppard (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atBdy_7ho...)
William Holden (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcEOsGvT0...)
Charlton Heston (we have a winner...) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEoV_7cIs...)
Jim Caviezel is problematic simply because of the Passion of the Christ connection, but he also played Number 6 in the Prisoner reboot (which sucked) so I am torn! :)
I wish I had thought of him....
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