James Franco Pens An Open Letter Explaining Why Andy Serkis Deserves An Oscar For "Caesar"

James Franco Pens An Open Letter Explaining Why Andy Serkis Deserves An Oscar For "Caesar"

Rise of the Planet of the Apes star James Franco has written a heartfelt open letter explaining why Andy Serkis should be considered for an Academy Award following his performance as the motion captured "Caesar".

By JoshWilding - Jan 09, 2012 03:01 AM EST
Filed Under: Sci-Fi
Source: Deadline

Andy Serkis' motion capture performance as "Caesar" in Rise of the Planet of the Apes has gained a huge amount of critical acclaim since the release of the movie last summer. The support for the actor to receive awards recognition in the form of an Oscar nomination for "Best Supporting Actor" has ramped up with an official campaign by 20th Century Fox and now last year's Oscar host James Franco and Serkis' Apes co-star has weighed in with his thoughts. Here is the letter in full courtesy of Deadline.



The new Planet of the Apes film, Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes, belongs to Andy Serkis. Narratively it was always his film: I play an emotionally stilted scientist who in the process of mistakenly unleashing a lethal virus on the human race, learns to care for others; Serkis gets to play Caesar, essentially Che Guevara in chimp form. There is no question that his character arc is much more dynamic and fascinating, it is the story line that takes the franchise’s central theme of culture/racial/species clash and turns it on it’s head by making the maligned apes the unequivocal heroes. We get to watch the fall of mankind and enjoy it because we root for the underdogs, the apes.

But this narrative structure is only half of the story; there is also an acting revolution that has taken place. Andy Serkis is the undisputed master of the newest kind of acting called “performance capture,” and it is time that Serkis gets credit for the innovative artist that he is.

When Serkis was hired to play the inimitable character, Gollum in Peter Jackson’s Lord Of The Rings trilogy it was initially only for his voice, the character was meant to be entirely animated. But Serkis got so physically involved in the production of the character’s odd voice – Serkis was inspired by his cat coughing up a hairball – that Jackson decided to find a way to capture the performance so that it could be translated into a digitally rendered character. This was the birth of performance capture as we know it, the process that led to the nuanced performance behind King Kong, the blue things in Avatar, and now Caesar. Audiences are used to large scale effects: impossible explosion, space travel, fantastic fairytale worlds, boys in tights swinging around New York, men with Squids for faces, but there is still a disconnection that happens when a character’s outer surface is rendered in a computer like Caesar’s was. We want to forget that there is a human underneath, the effects are so well rendered we either forget that the spark of life in it’s eyes and the life in its limbs is informed by a breathing human or we are so drawn into the ontology of the character we can’t grasp its artistic origins or exactly how it was created. What this means is that we can enjoy such a character – enjoyment testified by the response to such films as Avatar, Return of the King, and Planet of the Apes – but we don’t give artistic credit where it is due.

I, as much as anyone, can get anxious when I think about the future of movies and the possibility of the obsolescence of actors, or at least actors as we know them, but after making Apes I realize that this is backward thinking. Performance Capture is here, like it or not, but it also doesn’t mean that old-fashioned acting will go the way of silent film actors. Performance Capture actually allows actors to work opposite each other in more traditional ways, meaning that the actors get to interact with each other and look into each others eyes. For years computer technology forced actors to act opposite tennis balls if a movie wanted to have CG creatures, but now the process has come full circle so that actors playing CG creatures can perform in practical sets, just like the “human” actors. In acting school I was taught to work off my co-stars, not to act but react and that was how I would achieve unexpected results, not by planning a performance, but by allowing it to arise from the dynamic between actors, and on The Rise of the Planet of the Apes that’s exactly what I was able to do opposite Andy as Caesar. And Andy got to do the same because every gesture, every facial expression, every sound he made was captured, his performance was captured. Then, what the Weta effects team did was to essentially “paint” the look of Caesar over Andy’s performance. This is not animation as much as it’s digital “make-up.” There are plenty of Oscar winning performances that depended on prosthetic make-up to help create the characters: John Hurt’s in The Elephant Man, Nicole Kidman’s in The Hours, Sean Penn’s in Milk. Those actors depended on make-up artists to augment the look of their characters, but the performance underneath came solely from the actors. Well, that’s exactly the same position that Andy is in, his problem is that the digital “make-up” is so convincing that it makes people forget that he provides the soul of Caesar. That soul, the thing that was so compelling about that film, came from Andy, and the way he rendered that soul is of equal importance, if not more important than the photo realistic surface of the character.

Andy doesn’t need me to tell him he is an innovator, he knows it. What is needed is recognition for him, now. Not later when this kind of acting is de riguer, but now, when he has elevated this fresh mode of acting into an art form. And it is time for actors to give credit to other actors. It is easy to praise the technical achievements of this film, but those achievements would be empty without Andy. Caesar is not a character that is dependent on human forms of expression to deliver the emotion of the character: despite the lack of any human gestures, and maybe two or three words of human speech Caesar is a fully realized character, not human, and not quite ape; this is no Lassie and this is no Roger Rabbit, it is the creation of an actor doing something that I dare say no other actor could have done at this moment.


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thalidomide
thalidomide - 1/9/2012, 3:34 AM
Serkis deserves the award, nuff said.
Grady
Grady - 1/9/2012, 3:37 AM
lol at "the blue things in Avatar". The letter is a nice touch by Franco but I don't think the Academy is going to care what he says after he more or less ruined last years ceremony for them.
Ric
Ric - 1/9/2012, 3:50 AM
give Andy the oscar now!
Kayo
Kayo - 1/9/2012, 3:56 AM
great performance of 2011.............he deserves a recognition.
seamuskeaneart
seamuskeaneart - 1/9/2012, 4:33 AM
honestly I dont know about giving this guy an oscar, i mean he motion captured for it sure, but the facial expressions were touched up digitally. so how much of it was serkis, if its not 100% serkis there on screen then he doesnt deserve an oscar.
BackwardGalaxy
BackwardGalaxy - 1/9/2012, 4:38 AM
I don't know if he deserves an Oscar, because I probably haven't seen most of the performances he'd be up against... unless they just want to give him one in a totally new category, that is. I will say that his performance was excellent. That damn ape made me cry.
BackwardGalaxy
BackwardGalaxy - 1/9/2012, 4:40 AM
@seamuskeaneart, they've released videos showing exactly what Serkis did for the part. They ARE his facial expressions. They ARE his movements. It IS 100% him. It isn't "touched up". It's just digital make-up, as Franco points out.
QuietStorm
QuietStorm - 1/9/2012, 4:50 AM
I think thry'll have to create a new catagoruy within the next 10 years for digital and or voice performances. This motion cap acting will soon get out of hand the way reality tv is now...you won't really need actors to have a hit anymore.
siggisuperman
siggisuperman - 1/9/2012, 4:54 AM
when charlize theron got the oscar for Monster she had ugly bitch make up all over her face and body you could not even recognize her... without that makeup she would not have been very believable... still she deserved tthe award, and so does Andy
HavocPrime
HavocPrime - 1/9/2012, 4:58 AM


He deserves an Oscar or at least a nomination.
marvel72
marvel72 - 1/9/2012, 5:06 AM
andy serkis should of got a nomination for all his motion capture work i.e gollum,king kong & caesar.

if he doesn't get it this time,he should definetly get it for the hobbit.
Sparrowsabre7
Sparrowsabre7 - 1/9/2012, 5:08 AM
http://gifs.gifbin.com/1233928590_citizen%20kane%20clapping.gif
loki668
loki668 - 1/9/2012, 5:32 AM
Andy Serkis has deserved an Oscar for so long that, to me, it cheapens the credibility of the Academy Awards to not have evolved to include such performances for consideration. Having said that: teabag! Bring on the boobs!!!

Lord Loki has spoken
RyanLantern77
RyanLantern77 - 1/9/2012, 6:22 AM
Serkis more than deserves to win. Unfortunately he probably wont. Albert brooks will probably win for drive, or possibly Nolte for Warrior. Both great performances, but Serkis trumped them
thalidomide
thalidomide - 1/9/2012, 6:25 AM
Tea isn't here yet so here yah go bud



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ThunderCougarFalconBird
ThunderCougarFalconBird - 1/9/2012, 6:49 AM
I'd give Andy a nomination at very least for his work as Ceaser, it was beautiful. As for being the innovator and the only one who can do what he does is questionable. What about Doug Jones? Yes his characters have been more human based but he is also a genius of motion capture technology.
MarvelousMarty
MarvelousMarty - 1/9/2012, 7:02 AM
Why don't they just give it to Jonathan Winters for his portrayal of Papa Smurf? Ridiculous idea, end of story.
DudeGuy
DudeGuy - 1/9/2012, 7:12 AM
GIVE IT TO HIM
loki668
loki668 - 1/9/2012, 9:38 AM
@thalid and tea

Very nice. When I conquer Earth with my, heretofore, unnamed army, you will be spared.

Lord Loki has spoken
GrayFox1025
GrayFox1025 - 1/9/2012, 9:41 AM
I would hope his acceptance speech goes something like this

loki668
loki668 - 1/9/2012, 9:41 AM
@mediocremarty

I had to adjust your name to reflect your level of trolling. At least I hope you were trolling. If not, that's the dumbest comment to have been posted on this site in some time. Congratulations. You can pick up your trophy in traffic.

Lord Loki has spoken
DarthTesla
DarthTesla - 1/9/2012, 9:57 AM
Serkis definitely deserves it. RotPotA was an amazing film, and Caesar was done beautifully.
monstermaniac
monstermaniac - 1/9/2012, 11:35 AM
I agree he deserves to at least be nominated. Have any of you played Enslaved : Odyssey To The West? He did motion capture in that too , he was amazing.
NoAssemblyReqd
NoAssemblyReqd - 1/9/2012, 11:54 AM
I'm in favor of a Special Achievement in Performance Capture Acting award just for Serkis.

If I recall correctly, Total Recall got an award -- un-challenged -- for Special Achievement in Visual Effects back in 1990/91.
AC1
AC1 - 1/9/2012, 2:32 PM
@Ron I agree Doug Jones is also an undeniable talent in the mo-cap field, but Serkis is in a league of his own. With Doug, you can always tell it's Doug behind the FX, and his roles are more similar to each other. Serkis' roles are so diverse, and he completely loses himself in them; watching Apes or King Kong, I never think about him in the role, and the only reason I associate him with Gollum is because it's the first role I ever saw him in. For an actor to truly lose themselves in a role like Andy Serkis does, it's a gift that a lot of actors haven't shown yet in their performances, and it takes something really special to lose yourself in a digitally realized character, because in a way, the actor is sacrificing their own recognition to make the film as amazing as possible.
OcciferPing
OcciferPing - 1/9/2012, 4:32 PM
I honestly thought this movie was going to blow (especially after the VERY long title lol) but going in and watching it it proved me wrong, which I think makes it even better for proving me wrong. Serkis definitely deserves this Oscar. He's a great motion capture actor and deserves recognition.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJjpsUk1Kkc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKLjZu1wXf4
CaptainTall
CaptainTall - 1/9/2012, 4:55 PM
Very well written. Andy does deserve it, but there were 11 other actors in the motion capture suit, remember that. they deserve it too. I liked Maurice.
bobevanz
bobevanz - 1/9/2012, 10:52 PM
I wonder what Caesar whispers into his ear at the end of the movie. He did seem quite stunned o_0
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