33 thoughts on “Fake Acting Vs Real Acting

  • To be fair, it's really not that hard to scream at the top of your lungs and hit stuff. That scene was an overdramatized example of PTSD anyway. Sorry, but it's overrated

    (I know, God forbid I try to convince the internet that PTSD isn't as bad as it's made out to be)

  • Nawww you can’t compare Addison and my man red ranger (bro looks like he should be a power ranger) to Andrew😂😂that’s an insult to Andrew.
    Tanner actually kills it in cobra Kai tbf lol

  • Bruhhh if they would have kept this deleted scene in the 2nd amazing Spider-Man, the 3rd one would have definitely came out. I miss andrew as Spider-Man

  • Just know, There's a little more to it than "screaming & '💢 face' = good acting"

  • You can't be serious my man lol pulling fucking amazing spiderman clips saying this shit is real acting

  • Tobey's performance in "Brothers" really doesn't get talked about enough.

  • I will say… sometimes over reactions may look more "real" and most definitely takes more talent. But in reality, a lot of us dont just completely lose all composure when we face hardship.

  • I dont see the problem with the first one. People are just super picky i guess.

  • The two are literally the same. Some people just don’t go around ripping their hair out and flipping tables, that’s just not their personality. If the actor doesn’t go out of their way to do that, it doesn’t mean it is bad acting.

  • I get the point, but screaming and crying does not equal “real acting”.

  • What if you play a character that has no hyper emotion? The definition of good acting here is lacking

  • If you haven’t already, go check out Andrew Garfield in Hacksaw Ridge inspired by a true story. He did really good in that

  • The key difference is whether you’re thinking about the camera/how you look and spent time practicing in a mirror VS genuinely convincing yourself it’s real and reacting to the story while forgetting the camera exists.

Comments are closed.