Alexander Skarsgård Is Dying to Be Funny

Alexander Skarsgård’s first foray into the American film industry was a little movie called Zoolander back in 2001. Though the son of prolific Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgård already had a handful of performances from his native country under his belt by that time, it was playing one of Derek Zoolander’s doomed model friends, Meekus, in Ben Stiller’s ribbing of the fashion industry that functioned as Skarsgård’s introduction to America. As the role was incredibly brief (the character is tragically killed in a gas station cigarette-smoking car explosion incident—or “freak gasoline fight accident,” as it’s called), it often shocks people when you bring it up. This isn’t helped by the fact that the eldest of the Skarsgård acting brood has since made his name in the Western world—in both movies and television—playing the kinds of guys who are the complete opposite of the dopey, braindead male model Meekus. Skarsgård has been a vampire (True Blood), an abusive husband (Big Little Lies), a racist husband (Passing), a neglectful husband (Melancholia), a predatory father figure (The Diary of a Teenage Girl), a sociopathic army sergeant (The Kill Team) and countless iterations of intense, macho tough guys over a career which spans nearly four decades.
Indeed, Skarsgård (like his father and brothers) has become accustomed to playing various kinds of unsavory men due to his appearance. Though—as he looks less conniving than his father Stellan and less ghoulish than his younger brother Bill—Alexander Skarsgård tends to get pigeon-holed as abusers, manipulators or uber masculine protagonists. He has a lean, towering build at 6’4” and is objectively gorgeous, but has a shrewd yet deceptively warm face that can be molded at a whim as either a hero or a villain. Skarsgård can play both with ease. But he’s proven that he wants to be funny, too, and that he absolutely can be. Not only that, but he is also at his very best when he’s allowed to play funny. Yet he is offered frighteningly few opportunities to do so. His naturally goofy smile; narrow, deep-set eyes; ample height, that can be played up as gawky and oafish—one of the less-exploited features of his handsome face is that it can fashion him as effortlessly into a doofus as it can a sadist. The latter is Alexander Skarsgård’s secret weapon.
As a dimwitted insurance salesman with dreams of becoming a multilevel marketing bigshot in On Becoming a God in Central Florida, Skarsgård is so perfectly attuned to the role that it’s a shame that his character dies in a freak alligator attack in the (tragically canceled) series’ first episode. His massive frame is less intimidating than it is bumbling and awkward, and the role is similar in physicality to his brief appearance in the studio comedy Long Shot, as the doofy, grinning Canadian prime minister. His persona as “big handsome guy” was utilized in the series finale of Eastbound & Down, with Skarsgård portraying the fantasy, grown-up version of Kenny Powers’ (Danny McBride) young son, Toby. He even had a guest role on Drunk History.