What makes vin diesel attractive
So I'm 24 and my hair is starting to get thinner. I'm starting to lift more and plan to shave my head eventually - hopefully when my muscles get a lot bigger. I probably won't get as outrageously big as Vin Diesel, but I'm already getting some good results.
What do you think, is this look still attractive? Is it only attractive to badass girls who only like badass guys? I like a girl to have a rebellious side, but definitely prefer women who have their lives together and don't chase super bad boy dudes. I'm not one of em lol. Shaved head with big muscles is attractive to all kinds of girls. Vote A. Vote B. If you have a good build, not gigantic, and a shaved head, you'll look good. Vote C. Don't shave your head. Vote D. Select age and gender to cast your vote:.
Your age Girl Guy Please select your age. Share Facebook. Girls, how do you feel about the Vin Diesel look? Add Opinion. Not to me. Bald guys aren't attractive. If you're a hottie and bald you become average looking at best to me. Nope different types of girls are attracted to baldies. Is this still revelant? I think bald guys can look really, really attractive - especially if they have a solid build not TOO bulky though.
By Owen Gleiberman. Chief Film Critic. No movie star in history gets as little respect as Vin Diesel. A lot of people — too many — still see him as a fake star, a joke, a beady-eyed mush-mouthed poseur in a wife-beater. But Diesel is a different hunk of rock. Off camera, he leads with his proletarian hip-hop swagger; onscreen, his identity in the Hollywood galaxy comes down to his being the renegade hood ornament on a series of wildly overwrought vehicular thrillers that a lot of people have zero to no patience for.
For 20 years now, Vin Diesel has been the star you love to hate, to mock, to place yourself above. Yet none of that is really fair. For throughout that time, he has honed his act and kept it tight. In another era, he might have had a more prestigious career, but the reason his name brings out the snark factor is that he incarnates the current era in all its disreputable shagginess. That made Diesel, with his swarthy glower that straddled categories was Toretto really Italian?
Or was he the gangsta Andrew Dice Clay? There are other obvious reasons for the Vin Diesel swoon. First, there's the delightful name -- reminiscent of greasy motorcycles and the Italian mafia -- which is simply too good to be true it isn't.
Finally, there's the voice; a slow, bemused growl, a low-rent bedroom baritone. For the women who confess to loving him, Vin Diesel exudes an odd sort of sexual charisma.
No woman I know would actually call him good-looking, but several confessed to melting over his softer-edged version of beefy masculinity.
This is a man, after all, who shows up in his latest film wearing a fur coat, a fashion statement that is at once openly effeminate and self-consciously masculine only a man confident enough with his own testosterone levels would don a fur. My male friends, on the other hand, tend to roll their eyes and groan when I beg them for their opinions, offended that I would waste my time admiring a hokey action star. My male friends are, it should be said, mostly sensitive film geeks unimpressed by another man's biceps; but judging by box office receipts, they must be in the minority.
But while Vin Diesel is no Alec Guinness, whether he can really act is beside the point. Vin Diesel's most prestigious films were also his smallest roles: in "Boiler Room" and "Saving Private Ryan," he plays the gruffly good-humored Italian-American lug who doesn't quite grasp what's going on around him. In both films, there's a suggestion that he's actually an actor who might be able to do something with a fully developed role.
But his subsequent rise to stardom has been propelled by schlock pics like "Pitch Black" and "The Fast and the Furious," where his acting has consisted primarily of oozing a cool charisma; and in its own way, that alone is more than enough. Both these films were, to put it mildly, mind-numbing and ridiculous. I loved both.
Because of Vin Diesel. In "Pitch Black," he plays Riddick, a calmly confident convicted murderer who can see in the dark -- the only hope for a group of hapless travelers stranded with hungry aliens on a planet of eternal night. In "The Fast and the Furious," he's Dominick Toretto, a calmly confident convicted felon who has a way with race cars -- the only hope for a hapless detective who hopes to break a truck-jacking ring.
His purpose in "Pitch Black" is mostly to lurk menacingly in corners, gaze stoically out into the lethal night and deliver groaner lines while he kills aliens with his bare hands "He did not know who he was fuckin' with". In "The Fast and the Furious," he calmy crashes cars at miles an hour, pontificates about family values and delivers howlers like: "I live my life a quarter mile at a time. In the preposterous "XXX," a kind of James Bond thriller for the Playstation crowd, he once again plays "the best and brightest of the bottom of the barrel.
Vin Diesel's purpose in this movie, much as it was in "The Fast and the Furious" and "Pitch Black," is to deliver teen-friendly one-liners like "Don't be a dick, Dick" with a cocky expression on his face; to flex his tattoos and look macho as he jumps off the back of a motorcycle or snowboards out of an avalanche. Sitting in the movie theater surrounded by the teenage boys this movie was made for along with, not surprisingly, a large number of gay men , I felt ridiculous.
0コメント