Wow, so much to respond to!
Re Jane Fonda:
Yes, this is true. And why did she have to get back into the movies, anyway? Georgia Rule and Monster-in-Law certainly aren't shining stars in the cinematic firmament. LOL
I know! They're tarnishing her reputation more, in my view, than her visit to Hanoi!
She was once a really good actress. So why bother to come back at all, just to be in crap? So much better to go the Julie Christie route, and come back only for a really good role. It's not like she needs the money, is it?
I don't mind Diane Keaton and Jane Fonda (etc.) playing unsympathetic characters, I just wish they did it in movies worth seeing, lol!
Exactly! The problem with Diane in TFS was that she wasn't
supposed to be unsympathetic, she was supposed to be a wise, beloved matriarch. That movie was soooo deeply flawed. For me, it was also the last straw for Sarah Jessica Parker, who gets on my nerves anyway. And let's throw in Dermot Mulrooney, whom I sometimes like but don't feel very attached to. Even Claire Danes didn't come off looking great. Rachel McAdams and Luke Wilson are the only ones I don't like less after that film, and only because I've seen them in enough other things where I do like them.
Re Kevin Costner:
He's always totally delightful in romantic comedies:
Bull Durham, Tin Cup, The Upside of Anger. He's also good in dramas with a mostly lighter tone:
Field of Dreams, Silverado, the way-underrated
A Perfect World. I'd put
Dances With Wolves in that category, too, though I'm afraid that like Leslie I might find it trite at this point.
I don't like him in movies where he has to frown the whole time. I thought he was out and out bad in
JFK. I don't recall him adding much to
The Untouchables. No Way Out I don't remember very well, but from what I do recall I kind of suspect I'd like it better for the screenplay than for Kevin.
As for what he's like in real life ... I can't say I've ever read or seen an interview with him. If so, it must have been boring, because I don't remember it!
But with a few exceptions (are you listening, Mel Gibson?) I don't care what people are like in real life as long as they entertain me onscreen. Though they do get extra credit for being appealing in real life.