Tom Hanks (1993--Philadelphia, Best actor in a leading role; 1994--Forrest Gump, Best actor in a leading role)
That comment — “I don’t think Tom Hanks can carry this role! Maybe Brad Pitt! No fireworks!” — reflects a viewer’s subjective reaction to casting and chemistry, especially in the context of Every Time We Say Goodbye (1986), a quiet wartime romance rather than a typical Tom Hanks vehicle. Let’s unpack it:
When the film was released, Hanks was best known for light comedies (Splash, Big, Bachelor Party).
He wasn’t yet the dramatic powerhouse audiences later saw in Philadelphia or Forrest Gump.
So, viewers might have felt that:
His natural charm and comedic warmth didn’t translate into the restrained, tragic romantic tone of a war-era melodrama.
The romance between David (Hanks) and Sarah (Cristina Marsillach) is deliberately understated — their relationship is inhibited by religion, culture, and wartime sorrow.
To some audiences, that restraint reads as a lack of emotional or romantic “spark.”
Hence, “no fireworks” implies:
The emotional tension never ignited into palpable passion on screen.
Brad Pitt, who later became known for Legends of the Fall and A River Runs Through It, embodied a brooding, romantic intensity — the kind of “smoldering” presence that might make the forbidden-love angle more believable to certain viewers.
In contrast, Hanks projects decency and kindness, not dangerous allure.
So the viewer is really saying:
“This story needed a more sensual or mysterious romantic lead — someone like Brad Pitt, not the boy-next-door Tom Hanks.”
Every Time We Say Goodbye is quiet, slow, and introspective, exploring moral barriers more than physical passion.
Viewers expecting cinematic romance or wartime drama “fireworks” (action, intensity, sweeping music) can find it emotionally muted.
The comment critiques casting fit and emotional chemistry: Hanks’s wholesome, understated style didn’t create the dramatic or romantic “fireworks” some audiences expected — whereas an actor like Brad Pitt, known for intensity and magnetism, might have given the forbidden love story more visible tension.
Would you like me to compare Hanks’s performance here to his later serious roles (like Saving Private Ryan or The English Patient-style performances Pitt might have delivered)?
Excellent — let’s look at this in depth, because the contrast between Tom Hanks in Every Time We Say Goodbye and the kind of romantic gravitas someone like Brad Pitt later became known for reveals a lot about casting, tone, and evolution of screen persona.
Character: David Bradley — an American pilot recovering in Jerusalem, caught in a forbidden love with Sarah (Cristina Marsillach), a Sephardic Jewish woman.
Tone: restrained, introspective, melancholy.
Performance traits:
Earnest, sincere, gentle — his moral decency feels genuine.
Emotionally contained — perhaps too much so; his pain and longing stay internal.
Soft energy — he observes rather than dominates the screen.
In short: Hanks brings authenticity and quiet sadness, but not the charged magnetism the story seems to promise.
The film’s premise — a forbidden, cross-cultural, wartime love affair — calls for visible tension: a love so intense it feels dangerous.
But Hanks’s interpretation feels too safe. He looks like a man you’d trust with your luggage, not someone torn apart by passion or guilt.
This subdued approach made the romance feel intellectual, even dutiful — respectful rather than electric.
Imagine Pitt around his A River Runs Through It (1992) or Legends of the Fall (1994) era:
He radiates emotional turbulence and suppressed desire.
His silences feel charged, not blank.
His physical presence brings mythic romantic weight — the camera loves him as a symbol of yearning.
That version of David could make Sarah’s conflict — love vs. religious duty — more palpable.
Pitt’s dangerous beauty could amplify the sense that she’s drawn to something forbidden yet irresistible.
In other words:
Pitt’s portrayal would have made the story more sensual and tragic;
Hanks’s portrayal made it moral and quiet.
Compare to his later dramatic roles:
Film | Year | Strength | Tone |
---|---|---|---|
Philadelphia | 1993 | Deep empathy, quiet courage | Socially moral, not romantic |
Forrest Gump | 1994 | Innocent sincerity | Emotional but pure |
Saving Private Ryan | 1998 | Stoic leadership | Duty and grief |
Cast Away | 2000 | Endurance, inner struggle | Existential isolation |
In each case, Hanks excels in moral weight, integrity, and endurance, not sensual or romantic conflict.
He embodies the conscience, not the temptation.
So in Every Time We Say Goodbye, he was already reaching toward that archetype — a good man in pain — but audiences expected something else: a man in passion.
The film wanted to be Casablanca but landed closer to The End of the Affair without its fever.
Hanks’s decency was moving, yet incompatible with the melancholic eroticism of the script.
Hence the viewer’s remark:
“No fireworks” → no visible chemistry, no tension between desire and restraint.
Element | Tom Hanks | Brad Pitt |
---|---|---|
Screen energy | Moral, grounded, kind | Brooding, magnetic, sensual |
Emotional tone | Subtle, internalized | Visceral, expressive |
Romantic appeal | Comforting | Dangerous |
Audience effect | Sympathy | Desire |
Fit for role | Realistic but muted | Visceral, forbidden, cinematic |
Summary:
Tom Hanks played David as a man of conscience trapped by circumstance; Brad Pitt would have played him as a man consumed by love he cannot escape.
The difference isn’t talent — it’s temperature.
Would you like me to illustrate this contrast with short sample dialogue rewrites — one in Hanks’s understated tone and one as Pitt might deliver it (same line, two emotional registers)?