Critical Successes
A particular high point in
Downey's career came in 1993, when he was nominated for an Academy Award (best
actor) for his performance in Chaplin(1992), directed by Richard
Attenborough. In the highly acclaimed film, which didn't go over nearly as well
with audiences as with critics, Downey nimbly portrayed the legendary Charlie
Chaplin from ages 19 to 83. The role displayed his dramatic range as well as
his considerable talent for physical comedy. By this time, the 27-year-old
Downey had come to be seen as one of the most gifted actors of his generation,
but he had also earned a reputation as a troubled and controversial figure in
Hollywood.
In the wake of his critical
success with Chaplin, Downey anchored a documentary
about the 1992 presidential election, The Last Party. In 1994, he appeared in the
romantic comedy Only You, as well as in Oliver Stone's
acclaimed but controversial Natural Born Killers. The following year,
the actor starred in the period film Restoration alongside Meg Ryan and Sam Neill; an
updated film version of Richard III (1995), co-starring Ian McKellen and
Annette Bening; and the Jodie Foster-directed Home for the Holidays, also starring Holly
Hunter.
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