Casting directors now just see me as the hard-core sniper or prison guard.
Even if you play a villain, you do an injustice to him if he's just, like, programmed to do those things. It's always more complex.
I don't like to play the victim.
I identify with the Clint Eastwoods and Harrison Fords. Those are my heroes.
If you're expecting an intellectual film, then you will be disappointed.
It was sort of his 'Brando' moment - his very 'method' moment. He just absorbed it and continued on.
Several of the actors I've had the good fortune of working with stand out in my mind as 'ultimate'. I guess the obvious would be Tom Hanks, because he really is as fun and as genuine as he comes across in his films and interviews.
They were so exhausted and seasick and all they could do was crawl up those beaches. And thousands of them lay dead in no time at all. It's unthinkable.
Well, I'm Canadian. True, north, strong, and free.
Barry stared as Dale Earnhardt in the ESPN movie "3".
He received an Emmy Nomination for playing Roger Maris in 61*.
His performance in 61* earned him a Golden Globe nomination in the category: Best Performance by an Actor in a Mini-Series or a Motion Picture Made for Television.
He was cast in Scorsese’s The Aviator but had to back out due to conflicts with Mr. Ripley’s Return.
At the 2002 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards, he was nominated for Best Actor in a Picture Made for Television for his role in 61*.
He was nominated in the category Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries at the 2005 Screen Actors Guild Awards for his role in The Dale Earnhardt Story.
He was nominated at the 2000 SAG Awards for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Theatrical Motion Picture for The Green Mile.
Barry is five feet ten inches tall.
Barry played volleyball, baseball and rugby in high school.
He married his wife, Cindy, in November of 1997.
He taught breakdancing at one point.
His zodiac sign is Aries.