Hollywood loving the upper-lip fuzz
By Chris Lee
Los Angeles Times
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Attention, winter movie stars: Yosemite Sam called and he wants his facial hair back. This season at the multiplex, a who's who of recognizable marquee draws can be seen on-screen conspicuously sporting that yesteryear trapping of male vanity, the mustache. Ask Burt Reynolds, Magnum P.I., or the biker in the Village People: Nothing says mucho macho quite like a 'stache. But these days, movie stars are making pointed use of their male plumage in cerebral potboilers, historical epics, political dramas and quirky character studies alike.
So is the furry-upper-lip look making a comeback? If the examples here are any indication, the mustache is again having a moment. Hirsute for Hollywood!
JAVIER BARDEM
Role: A lovesick romantic in the big-screen adaptation of Gabriel Garc’a Márquez's novel "Love in the Time of Cholera"
The 'stache: Broad, paintbrush-thick
What it says about the character: Pining after a woman who spurned his romantic overtures and married another man for "51 years, nine months and four days," Bardem's mustache is hardly a metaphor — it's an exaggerated frown, the embodiment of his unrequited love.
JOSH BROLIN
Roles: A corrupt narcotics officer in "American Gangster," and a down-and-out Vietnam War veteran in the brainy thriller "No Country for Old Men"
The 'stache two ways: In "Gangster," the mustache appears luxuriant and manicured, giving off a high-gloss sheen. In "No Country," it looks forlorn and distinctly untidy — like it might be hiding stale beer and bits of fried chicken.
What it says about the characters: Brolin's villainous cop in "Gangster" is all silken menace. His muscle car, leather trench coat and shellacked-in-place hair are always just so — ergo, the mustache is, too. Brolin's broken-down, shot-up and downtrodden character in "No Country," on the other hand, is all cowboy, a guy with a few dreams left but no time for frippery. His mustache is as simple and unquestionable a part of his facial landscape as tumble brush is to the plains of West Texas.
RYAN GOSLING
Role: A creepy but sweet introvert who forms an emotional attachment to a lifelike sex doll in the dramedy "Lars and the Real Girl"
The 'stache: Inelegantly trimmed, dorky
What it says about the character: Dude is out of touch with reality. Living in the garage of his childhood home, Lars uses his facial hair as a disguise to convince the rest of the world — and himself — that he's a functioning adult.
DANIEL DAY-LEWIS
Role: A hardscrabble oil man in the historical epic "There Will Be Blood"
The 'stache: Turn-of-the-last-century walrus whiskers
What it says about the character: You're not supposed to think about Day-Lewis' mustachioed Bill the Butcher in "Gangs of New York," but the parallel is inevitable — it seems like whenever the actor wants to portray someone aggressive and ambitious, he stops shaving his upper lip.
PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN
Role: A CIA operative in the political potboiler "Charlie Wilson's War"
The 'stache: Unglamorous, a bushy curtain of bristle
What it says about the character: That he's a rogue and somewhat of a creep — albeit, a fast-talking, double-crossing, arms-dealing one. The mustache bounces and wobbles whenever Hoffman speaks.
JASON SCHWARTZMAN
Role: one of three grieving brothers traveling through India in the dramedy "The Darjeeling Limited"
The 'stache: Think '60s George Harrison after he met Ravi Shankar
What it says about the character: A louche American expatriate novelist cum Lothario, Schwartzman's Jack spends a lot of the movie on the make for women. His facial foliage serves to emphasize a certain je ne sais quoi of the diminutive actor's male virility.
FOREST WHITAKER
Role: The father of a student on an all-black college debate team in the Denzel Washington-directed historical drama "The Great Debaters"
The 'stache: Flecked with gray, curving below the edges of the Oscar winner's mouth
What it says about the character: Taken in conjunction with the round, wire-rimmed spectacles he wears in the film, Whitaker's facial hair is an outward sign of his character's moral rectitude and weary gravitas, framing the pained grimace he wears while contemplating his son's involvement with a controversial debate team.
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