I absolutely love Kevin Spacey. It feels as though the man was born with gravitas. Hollywood may have unofficially boycotted him, but you simply cannot help admiring his work. There was a time when I didn’t know Spacey; I started watching House of Cards and was blown away by the performance. Later, checking my IMDb history, I discovered I’d given top ratings to The Usual Suspects, L.A. Confidential, The Negotiator, The Life of David Gale, Se7en and Horrible Bosses.
Where it began: a brief biography
Kevin Spacey Fowler was born on 26 July 1959 in New Jersey. His father was a technical writer, his mother a secretary. Obsessed with theatre from childhood, he trained at Juilliard and made his Broadway debut in 1981. After spending the 1980s on stage, he broke into film in 1990 with a small part in Glengarry Glen Ross. From there, there was no looking back.
The roles that made him an icon
- The Usual Suspects (1995) – Verbal Kint. Limping, meek, stuttering. In the final five minutes he delivers one of the greatest twists in Hollywood history. Oscar – Best Supporting Actor. This role proved that “gravitas” isn’t shouting; it’s control.
- Se7en (1995) – John Doe. Twenty minutes of screen time, yet the theological engine behind seven murders. Reciting the Bible in that cold voice still chills the spine.
- L.A. Confidential (1997) – Det. Jack Vincennes. A corrupt Hollywood cop who smiles for the cameras and cuts deals in the shadows. The most stylish role in neo-noir.
- American Beauty (1999) – Lester Burnham. A father in mid-life crisis. Satire, sorrow and liberation all at once. Oscar – Best Actor. The tagline “Look closer” sums up Spacey’s career.
- The Negotiator (1998) – Hostage negotiator Danny Roman. A dialogue duel with Samuel L. Jackson. A masterclass in sustaining tension.
- The Life of David Gale (2003) – A philosophy professor on death row. Ideology versus reality — no one but Spacey could carry the part.
- House of Cards (2013–2017) – Frank Underwood. “Democracy is so overrated,” he tells us, breaking the fourth wall and locking eyes with the audience. The role that put Netflix on the prestige-TV map, and the one that introduced him to a new generation.
- Horrible Bosses (2011) – Dave Harken. Equally adept at comedy. As the psychotic boss who makes Steve Carell’s life hell, we laugh until it hurts.
The boycott: why did Hollywood turn away?
In October 2017, during MeToo, actor Anthony Rapp alleged that Spacey sexually harassed him in 1986 when Rapp was 14. More than 15 others in the US and UK later made similar allegations of misconduct and inappropriate behaviour. Some incidents allegedly involved minors.
The fallout: Within 24 hours Netflix sacked him from House of Cards and rewrote Season 6. Ridley Scott cut all of Spacey’s scenes from All the Money in the World and reshot them with Christopher Plummer in nine days. Agencies and publicists severed ties. That is the “unofficial boycott”.
Legal outcomes: In 2022 a New York civil jury found Spacey not liable in Rapp’s case. In 2023, Southwark Crown Court in London acquitted him of nine criminal charges. So there is no criminal conviction. Nevertheless, the industry has not welcomed him back to the mainstream. Since 2023 he has appeared only in small indie films such as Control and Peter Five Eight.
Artist versus the man: the audience’s dilemma
Spacey’s case is the classic “separate art from artist” debate. The allegations are serious, and the victims’ trauma is real. Yet in the eyes of the law he has not been found guilty. What should viewers do? John Doe in Se7en still gives us goosebumps; we still quote Lester’s monologues from American Beauty. Those performances haven’t been erased.
Spacey once said, “I have a lot of respect for actors who keep their personal lives personal.” Ironically, his private life derailed his career. The man born with gravitas showed god-level control on camera, but allegedly lost control off camera.
Final word
Hollywood may boycott him, but IMDb won’t delete his page. The limp in Usual Suspects, the Southern drawl in House of Cards, the ice-cold sermon in Se7en — these will be taught in film schools. You can hate him, love him, or ignore him. But for 22 years, from 1995 to 2017, Spacey was Hollywood’s most reliable “intelligent villain”.
The boycott is unwritten, but the legacy is written. To borrow a line from The Life of David Gale: “Fantasy is an exercise for the brain.” Spacey’s filmography is that exercise. Let the courtroom debate the man; the film room will debate the artist for another fifty years.
The Bangladeshi music industry is, quite literally, dead. There are no new blockbuster albums, no grand concert spectacles, and as far as I can tell, the entire scene has ground to a halt.

