In this weekend's Crazy, Stupid, Love (read Movieline's review here), Julianne Moore plays Steve Carell's bored wife whose office affair (and subsequent request for divorce) catapults her husband into Ryan Gosling's impeccably toned arms for a man makeover and life overhaul. How did the North Carolina native evolve from playing a pair of conniving, clichéd half sisters on As the World Turns to one of the most reliably brilliant actresses in Hollywood?
You can always trace a direct line through a few important roles to illustrate what led to an actor's current success. So let's look at nine pivotal performances that track the evolution of four-time Academy Award nominee Julianne Moore.
As the World Turns (1986)
After growing up as an army brat in the U.S. and Germany, Moore earned her bachelor's degree at Boston University and immediately moved to New York City to begin taking auditions while moonlighting as a waitress. After a few forgettable parts, Moore won her first major role as Frannie Hughes and her long-lost half sister Sabrina Hughes on As the World Turns. Moore stayed with the soap for three years, during which time she won a Daytime Emmy. When it was announced that CBS was pulling the plug on As the World Turns, Moore agreed to return to the soap for a brief arc to pay tribute to the series that helped launch her career.
Short Cuts (1993)
After leaving soap life, Moore landed supporting roles in a string of films like The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, Benny & Joon and The Fugitive (as a nurse that recognizes a disguised Dr. Kimble, Moore's brief performance allegedly impressed Steven Spielberg so much that he cast her in The Lost World: Jurassic Park without an audition), Moore received her first real critical acclaim for Robert Altman's Short Cuts. This role is also noteworthy in that it was the first in a long line of complex, dissatisfied wife roles for Moore (Far From Heaven, The Hours, Trust the Man, Chloe among others ). The entire Short Cuts cast won a special Golden Globe for its impressive ensemble performance and Moore would go on to collaborate with Altman again six years later in Cookie's Fortune. (She's also famously bottomless in Short Cuts, if you're into that sort of thing.)
Nine Months (1995)
Two years later, Julianne Moore starred in her first high profile big studio film -- and also one of the few titles on her resume to completely bomb with critics. As the unexpectedly pregnant ballet teacher/love interest of Hugh Grant's commitment-phobe, Moore's character in this Chris Columbus romcom is one of the only two-dimensional parts on her resume. Hugh Grant's arrest two days before the release boosted box office sales in spite of scathing reviews. Moore would go on to star with Nine Months cast member Jeff Goldblum two years later in the infinitely more successful project, The Lost World: Jurassic Park.
Safe (1995)
Moore rebounded from her foray into ho-hum rom coms with her first central lead role in Todd Haynes' Safe that same year. As a housewife who mysteriously becomes allergic to her environment in this drama/thriller, Moore was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for Best Lead.
Boogie Nights (1997)
Shortly after, Moore returned to the ensemble format for Paul Thomas Anderson's drama Boogie Nights. As the heartbreaking Amber Waves -- a housewife-turned-porn star who becomes Mark Wahlberg's surrogate porn mother onscreen, and makes late night phone calls to her ex, tearfully begging to speak to her son -- Moore won her first Oscar nomination.
Far From Heaven (2002)
2002 was perhaps the brightest spot in Moore's accomplished career because that is when the actress won two Oscar nominations for her work in the ensemble drama The Hours and her leading role in the Todd Haynes period film Far From Heaven. As a 1950s homemaker who discovers that her husband (Dennis Quaid) is homosexual, Moore's character (and the project) deftly tackled a variety of social issues like race, sexual orientation and class.
Trust the Man (2005)
Of all the titles in her filmography, Trust the Man was Moore's most personal to date. Starring in the romantic comedy -- written and directed by her husband Bart Freundlich -- as a character based loosely on herself, Moore played a successful film actress who struggles to keep her marriage together in spite of extramarital temptations, children and career-related road blocks. Unfortunately the personal nature didn't transcend to critical acceptance; the film rests at 28 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.
Children of Men (2006)
At this point in her career, Moore had firmly established herself as one of our generation's greatest dramatic actresses and she chose to prove her versatility in Alfonso Cuarón's dystopian sci-fi film Children of Men. As the former lover of a British activist (Clive Owen), Moore's character tries to smuggle a pregnant woman out of the country to refuge in an allegedly safe space, which is a problem in the movie's anarchic world where a human hasn't given birth in nearly 20 years. Although the film didn't break any box office records, it was critically embraced as "a superbly directed political thriller," and Moore appears in its most shocking scene. (Not embeddable, but click here to watch.)
Crazy, Stupid Love (2011)
This weekend, Moore follows-up her cheating wife role in The Kids Are All Right with a cheating wife role in the romantic dramedy from Glenn Ficarra and John Requa. Moore has the unenviable task of breaking Steve Carell's heart in the first act, but she does it effectively and then gracefully steps out of the way so that Carell and Ryan Gosling's bromance can blossom. That she's able to do so much with one of the film's only underwritten roles is a testament to her talent.
With upcoming roles as varied as Sarah Palin (in the HBO drama Game Change) and the "most dangerous witch of the 1700s" (The Seventh Son), Moore is sure to have many more milestones in her accomplished career.