Similarly, most of Steven Seagal's theatrical flicks were very well-cast when it came to their character-actor heavies. I always came for THEM, not Stoneface Slowpants. Eventually, SS went straight to video when the good actors bailed out on his projects, or got tired of being killed. His last decent flick featured Belker and Tara King.Low budget movies like to put big names in supporting roles because that's how they sell the movie. They give a lot of money to one name to put on the cover but it only buys a day or two of filming. Stallone seems to be the go-to guy for that right now.
Voight had second billing, but Leigh had extra-large last with an ''and'' in front of her name. Just like the ads for Sam Jackson in DEEP BLUE SEA. A slight tip-off. But if you've got a talented Oscar winner like Voight getting killed so soon, some might feel ripped off. If you have Brando's Jor-El, it's common knowledge he's toast and it's only Brando, after all.I would've suggested Janet Leigh in Psycho. After all, DePalma's intent in M:I was similar to Hitchcock's, to set up our expectations and then pull the rug out. So it would've been consistent with that if Voight had, in fact, been killed off in the first act along with the others.
Presumably you were waiting for Steven Seagal to come back from the dead in Executive Decision?![]()
Gosh, yes. Didn't Hitch die just days before DRESSED TO KILL came out? Now THAT was a PSYCHO remake if anything was. With a stolen unrelated older title to boot.Damn weird for someone like DePalma to try to emulate Hitchcock in any way.![]()
The beginning too, last in the cast, at least in the original version on opening day. Unless he got offended and had his name removed out of spite.Executive Decision was weird when it came to credits in that Seagal was featured in all the ads but then his name is nowhere to be found in the opening credits or poster. He's in the end credits though.
Voight had second billing, but Leigh had extra-large last with an ''and'' in front of her name.
But if you've got a talented Oscar winner like Voight getting killed so soon, some might feel ripped off.
If you have Brando's Jor-El, it's common knowledge he's toast and it's only Brando, after all.
The beginning too, last in the cast, at least in the original version on opening day. Unless he got offended and had his name removed out of spite.
He was featured prominently on the original US posters too, to help sell the idea that he was the co-star and not a fake-out guest star. The poster originally had his face and his main credit, they just dropped both once the initial surprise period was over. ...IIRC, that is.He is prominent on the poster in some other countries though.
Other sources confirm your no-credit comment. The bizarre thing is that I saw it opening morning, and I could swear I saw Seagal's name when Kurt Russell was sitting down and opening his briefcase. Of course, EXECUTIVE DECISION is not CLUE with alternate elements (and this is not to say they are plottily similar in any way), so unless there is a long-lost opening morning extra-credit cut like no other movies generally have ever had, this seems similar to my seeing Merle Haggard's obituary in a national newspaper 16 years before he actually died.*I saw it opening night. He wasn't in the opening credits and I overheard a few people in the audience wondering why. He is prominent on the poster in some other countries though.
I think the Smallville example may-sadly-be in no small part to how much comic books, including Superman, have faded from public consciousness. I guess that because, growing up, including in 1979,, pretty much everyone (heck, even my mom, who was so much a non-genre person it was 2020 before she finally figured out that Star Wars wasn't a movie version of Star Trek) seemed to know that Clark Kent was Superman who came from a planet that exploded and killed his parents and everyone else. Probably because the George Reeves TV show had been on in syndication for twenty years.Genre fans always overestimate how much laypeople know about genre characters and storylines. There were fans of Smallville in the early seasons who had no idea it was connected to Superman in any way, because they didn't know the significance of the names "Clark Kent" and "Lex Luthor." So don't assume that your average moviegoer who took their date or family to the theater in 1978-9 to see the new Brando/Hackman movie had ever heard of Jor-El or had any idea what was going to happen to him.
Did I see the guy who played Milchick in Severance in this trailer? That's pretty cool if that's him.
Didn't know Nick Offerman was in this. LOTS of call backs to the first movie
Luther's in it, so it's canon.Each of the McQuarrie films has referred back more and more to the film series's history, although they have yet to make any acknowledgments of the second film. I wonder if this film will change that. I hope not, since I consider it apocryphal. (Heck, I consider it a self-aggrandizing fantasy that young Ethan Hunt scribbled in his notebook margins in spy school.)
Yeah really. Come on, guysAh Ethan's doing a Dr Strange![]()
Luther's in it, so it's canon.
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