Jonny Depp as Willy Wonka, not a patch on Gene Wilders original, although still not quite as bad as Colin Farrell in Alexander, what were they thinking!
However i would be giving the prize to whoever cast Micheal Keaton as Batman.
Having seen the tiny Tom Cruise (or 'wee' as the scotch folk say) playing Jack Reacher (who is a big chap in the books), it got me thinking: "WTF!!!, who cast this movie?"
So I would be interested to hear what other folks think was inappropriate casting
Jonny Depp as Willy Wonka, not a patch on Gene Wilders original, although still not quite as bad as Colin Farrell in Alexander, what were they thinking!
However i would be giving the prize to whoever cast Micheal Keaton as Batman.
Last edited by Billyloves2boogie; 6th February 2013 at 14:57.
The new series "The following". The actor that plays the role of the main 'bad guy'.
Serial killer?, pah!, what a joke
Last edited by Kiki Picasso; 6th February 2013 at 16:20.
Well, Keanu Reeves was cast as Buddha - that must be a winner right there?
I understand that Tom Cruise owns the production compoany that bought up the film rights to the Jack Reacher books, which explains why he has the lead role - I can't think that he would have been the first person that the directors would have thought of otherwise....
My candidate for unlikely casting is Dick Van Dyke as Bert the cockney chimney sweep in Mary Poppins
Rob
Mel Gibson in Braveheart (well anything really). Turned it into an in joke which was clever but still didn't save the film from descending into Pantomime. If this is the only thing that people think they know about Scottish History a serious crime will have been committed.
Hayden Christenson in Star Wars - Roger Moore has more range than this actor. Pouting and whining does not represent the epic descent into evil that Lucas intended. Very poor.
Christophe Lambert - is rubbish in practically everything I've ever seen him in - even 'Highlander', even though I love the film.
Sigourney Weaver is very poor in everything she touches, I know everybody thinks they love her as Ripley, but seriously watch the performance rather than the sets and the monster. Olivier was of the opinion that an actor should turn up, deliver their lines and not bump into the scenery - Weaver can on average pull off one out of three.
Nicholas Cage in everything he's ever done - a truly shocking actor. But his ultimate crime has to be Captain Corelli's Mandolin. Everything else about that file was excellent but he destroyed it as a piece of film-making - dreadful.
David
Not too keen on DeCaprio in Gangs of New York...
Tom Hanks in Davinci code
De Niro - Frankenstein
List goes on!
Sly Stallone as Judge Dread is the worst.
Roger Moore - As "Bond"
“Don’t look back, you’re not heading that way.”
The RM as Bond question is an interesting one. He certainly bore no resemblance to Ian Fleming's Bond but I'd say he did a pretty good job of camping it up.
Moore at least was amusing with decent films as a whole.
The 90's Dredd movie was crap and Stallone as Dress was heresy.
He's actually very good in Leaving Las Vegas where he plays a drunk loser.
My contributions:
Kevin Costner in Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves. Somewhere in here is a great film fighting its way out only to be bludgeoned every time Costner opens his mouth.
Melanie Griffith in A Stranger Among Us, a film which was buried in the UK for good reason. Directed by the once-great Sidney Lumet, it has a serious awfulness which will leave you breathless.
Madonna in any film she has ever been in.
Every single actor who has played Batman.
Every single American actor who has played an Irishman. eg Tom Cruise in Far and Away. "Shannon, you're a corker"
Jude Law in Alfie. Wrong, just Wrong.
The film version of Bonfire of the Vanities where every single actor was miscast.
The entire cast of 'Sahara' - always though Jim Caviezel would make a good Dirk Pitt!
Javier bardem in Skyfall - reminded me of John Malkovich's character in Johnny English...
Liam Neeson as Hannibal in the A-Team.
Last edited by Chris W; 6th February 2013 at 15:24.
I hear Stallone made a remake of Get Carter. I haven't seen and don't wanna see it. That's just plain wrong. As bad as a US Italian Job.
Sean Connery - The Hunt For Red October.
F.T.F.A.
Most recently Tom Cruise as Claus Von Stauffenberg in 'Valkyrie' and Kristen Stewart as Snow White in 'Snow White and the Huntsman'. I could mention Megan Fox and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley but I'm prepared to overlook their shortcomings.
In hindsight OJ Simpson as Police Detective Norberg in The Naked Gun
Last edited by mylofitz; 6th February 2013 at 15:44.
Surprised no one has mentioned Pierce Brosnan in Mamma Mia
just to remind you just how bad he really was
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvTEvmhnAMk
Sarah Bolger as Mary Tudor in the series Tudors. I'm not particularly fussy about casting as a rule but when she appeared with her over-botoxed lips i was stunned that someone had cast her! it was so completely out of place. She'd have got it, though... actually she did get it, many times. Gotta love Tudors :)
Cruise has the height problem but at least brings his reputation for 'action' films.
A real tragedy is a fairly decent actor like Kevin Spacey bearing not the slightest physical, emotional or intellectual resemblance to Quoyle in 'The Shipping News'.
You're all wrong!
It's Daryl Hannah in Wall Street, even Oliver Stone regrets it.
John Wayne in The Greatest Story Ever Told. "Truly, this man was the son of God."
+1 to that, it's still a very watchable show though.
Ben Affleck in anything, but particularly the brilliant 'Dogma' in which he mispronounces words and fails to look like a professional actor at every level - especially next to Matt Damon who I think is pretty good in 99% of his roles.
No mention for Russell Crowe? He has made some passable movies, but his leading role in Robin Hood was watch-through-gap-in-fingers cringeworthy.
Daniel Craig as Bond.
Connery was great in red October, but yes he just plays himself ref the untouchables.
Doubles to ints. It never ends well.
Controversial, but I agree with that. I've argued with friends before before that Sean Connery just really plays the same character. He plays it well, he has charisma and presence, he's a "movie star", and can "act" in the sense of delivering lines and reacting as he would himself, but he doesn't really ever take on a different character. He's not the only big actor like this, to be fair.
Here are some casting decisions that I'd suggest were inappropriate...
Orlando Bloom – ‘Kingdom of Heaven’. The role called for someone who could command an army of hardened warriors in some of the bloodiest battles in history. The actor would need to convey tremendous charisma. The audience would need to believe that this man could inspire and lead. Think the oratory skills of the Winston Churchill combined with the physical command and prowess of a character like Maximus Decimus in the film, ‘Gladiator’. The producers picked the weedy, personality-less cherubic-faced actor, Orlando Bloom.
Denise Richards – ‘The World Is Not Enough’. Admittedly, Bond films don’t exactly strive for documentary-esque authenticity and realism. That said, an invisible Aston Martin or a wannbe dictator occupying a hollowed-out volcano with their private army both seem more palatable as real world possibilities than Denise Richards... as a nuclear physicist.
Keira Knightley – in pretty much anything
Marlon Brando – ‘Guys and Dolls’. Brando is my favourite actor. ‘On The Waterfront’ (for which he won his first Oscar) is my favourite film. Brando was arguably the most significant and “authentic” actor who worked in the 20th century. Marlon Brando couldn’t sing. Marlon Brando was cast in a musical. He was the lead alongside Frank Sinatra (who could sing a bit). Brando confessed that he couldn’t sing more than one note without going out of tune and that all of his vocal “performances” were painstakingly pieced together in the studio from multiple takes until something reasonable was produced (1950s studio trickery). Brando should have passed.
Jude Law – (see Keira Knightley)
Gerard Butler in almost every film he's been in (especially the leading man/romcom roles). He was good in 300 but that was almost cartoon-like with the CGI-enhanced bodies and scenes.
Agree with Cruise in Jack Reacher. He's simply not right and should have known it, but these films rarely get made without a big name attached.
The Dirk Pitt and Al Giordano actors in Sahara. As far from Clive Cussler's descriptions as you can get EXCEPT William H. Macy as Admiral Sandecker.
Willem Dafoe as John Clarke in Clear and Present Danger, especially if you have read what I think is one of Clancy's best books, Without Remorse. Dafoe is just not tough enough though I thought Liev Schreiber did a good job of playing John Clarke in The Sum Of All Fears.
Willem Dafoe in Platoon. Just watched it again recently, and he looked completely wrong. He should never play the good guy.
Hmm, perhaps an appropriate casting decision after all - Jude Law was a good choice to play a robot, one which was trying to imitate a human character but wasn't totally convincing at doing so.
Perhaps it is reasonable to say that Steven Spielberg was inspired in casting Jude Law in 'A.I.' in the same way that James Cameron was inspired in casting Arnold Schwarzenegger as a humourless monosyllabic robot in 'Terminator'!