What are some good movies which have actors with accents?

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Alexender
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21 Feb 2012, 12:49 am

I thought of this when i was reading a book today. A character in the book was russian, and I realized I had given him a russian accent. if I wanted to give some characters in some of the books I read a better voice then it would help if I saw movies that had people in it that spoke in different accents.

It seems kind of dumb I guess, but I thought it was interesting how my brain just gave the russian guy a russian accent without me actively thinking to do that.

My main source of movies would be Netflix by the way.

I am from the us (midwest) I accidently got rid of that when I was editing this message



Last edited by Alexender on 21 Feb 2012, 1:24 am, edited 1 time in total.

Declension
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21 Feb 2012, 1:22 am

Well, that depends where you're from, silly! Which people, to you, do not have an accent?



Alexender
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21 Feb 2012, 1:25 am

Declension wrote:
Well, that depends where you're from, silly! Which people, to you, do not have an accent?


edited in where I am from



Declension
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21 Feb 2012, 1:47 am

Well, hmm. You could try watching these:

working-class English: Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
upper-class English: The King's Speech
working-class Australian: The Castle
Afrikaner / Nigerian: District 9
Hindi: Slumdog Millionaire
Samoan: Sione's Wedding

EDIT: This is a harder question than I thought, especially when it comes to accents inherited from foreign languages. There are lots of films with characters who do not speak English as their first language, but they would tend to spend most of the movie speaking their native language. I'm finding it hard to think of a movie which mainly features Germans speaking English with a German accent, for example.



IdahoRose
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21 Feb 2012, 4:10 am

Upper-class English and Scottish - Alice in Wonderland (2010)
Working-class English and Italian - Sweeney Todd (though most of the dialog is sung since it's a musical after all)
French - Chocolat
Austrian - Anything Arnold Schwarzenegger is in



auntblabby
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21 Feb 2012, 5:05 am

there is a documentary about the scottish percussion artist evelyn glennie, featuring her totally mellifluous scotch burr, she is so yummy to listen to when she is talking 8)
this is especially amazing considering she is deaf. :o



Mummy_of_Peanut
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21 Feb 2012, 9:25 am

auntblabby wrote:
there is a documentary about the scottish percussion artist evelyn glennie, featuring her totally mellifluous scotch burr, she is so yummy to listen to when she is talking 8)
this is especially amazing considering she is deaf. :o

I've always been amazed by her. She has an undeniaby Scottish accent and really doesn't sound like she might be deaf at all.


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Mummy_of_Peanut
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21 Feb 2012, 9:39 am

I hate to hear an actor from around these parts, with an accent that isn't their own, which they haven't quite mastered. I saw a few minutes of PS I Love You, with Gerard Butler with an 'Irish' accent and it was painful. Also, someone in Hollywood has decided that Scots make good Russians and occasionally Middle Easterns (and I can recognise the similarities there). But, I tend to just hear a Scottish accent mixed with a silly voice. Other people trying to put on a Scottish accent seldom ever hit the mark, two of the few exceptions being Johnny Depp in Finding Neverland and Eric Stoltz in Rob Roy, who were more than passable.


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Last edited by Mummy_of_Peanut on 21 Feb 2012, 3:19 pm, edited 2 times in total.

IdahoRose
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21 Feb 2012, 3:04 pm

Mummy_of_Peanut wrote:
I hate to hear an actor from around these parts, with an accent that isn't their own, which they haven't quite mastered. I saw a few minutes of PS I Love You, with Gerard Butler with an 'Irish' accent and it was painful. Also, someone in Hollywood has decided that Scots make good Russians and occasionally Middle Easterns (and I can recognise the similarities there). But, I tend to just hear a Scottish accent mixed with a silly voice. Other people trying to put on a Scottish accent seldom ever hit the mark, two of the few exceptions being Johnny Depp in Finding Neverland and Eric Stoltz in Rob Roy, who were more than passable.

Alright! Someone else who thinks Johnny is good at UK accents! *high five* :D



Mummy_of_Peanut
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21 Feb 2012, 3:14 pm

IdahoRose wrote:
Alright! Someone else who thinks Johnny is good at UK accents! *high five* :D

He's the master. I love Johnny. :D


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Tequila
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21 Feb 2012, 3:15 pm

Proper English accents: The Full Monty



MagicToenail
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23 Feb 2012, 9:27 am

49th Parallel is otherwise an excellent movie, but it is unintenionally funny with Laurence Olivier's bad French-Canadian accent as Johnnie the fur trapper. I still heartily recommend it though.

If you are a fan of bad accents, then all of the Peter Sellers Pink Panther movies.



auntblabby
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24 Feb 2012, 1:13 am

i liked listening to ray walston affect a scotch burr in "paint your wagon."



Mummy_of_Peanut
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24 Feb 2012, 4:51 am

I don't remember what the film was, but Pierce Brosnan was cast as someone from 'Glasgay', as he put it. Now, if you actually come from Glasgow, you will call it 'Glasgow' or 'Glesga'. 'Glasgay' is a yearly festival with a whole different meaning.


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auntblabby
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24 Feb 2012, 5:01 am

i really like the way people in scotland talk :) at least that which is represented on TV or movies. maybe those are exaggerated forms of the scotch burr, but i like them just the same.



Kyra71
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24 Feb 2012, 8:43 pm

Ewan McGregor has a beautiful Scottish accent. Little Voice is actually a great movie - both for the accents, and the fact that the main character is possibly Aspie(?)



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