Gene Hackman as a leading man until they saw him whoop it up as Buck Barrow in “Bonnie and Clyde,” nor was Renée Zellweger a cinch for stardom prior to her incandescent performance in “Jerry Maguire” (for which she wasn’t even nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar, but that’s another outrage for another time).
Matt Damon was another show-me star.
It’s to his credit that I remembered him from his small part in “Mystic Pizza” when I saw him play the antisemitic antagonist of “School Ties,” and he was impressive in Walter Hill’s “Geronimo: An American Legend” if only because he held his own with the powerhouse likes of Hackman, Wes Studi, Robert Duvall, and Jason Patric. He still had a babyface, but he exuded confidence. Like any aspiring actor, he knew he belonged. He just had to prove his worthiness to the folks who did the casting. To do so, Damon took on a role in a great Denzel Washington war movie that nearly killed him.