For the record: Your Highness is totally awesome, and at least she didn't star in Pride/Zombies as it initially seemed like she would, though in fairness against her, she'd pretty well aged out of the part by the time the flop finally got made (to flop).Yes, since her Oscar win, she's starred in masterpieces such as "Your Highness" and produced "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies."![]()
She also did "Jane Got a Gun".Yes, since her Oscar win, she's starred in masterpieces such as "Your Highness" and produced "Pride and Prejudice and Zombies."
Kor
With Gina Carano no doubt.I, for one, would have loved to see something more develop between Thor and Jane. Oh, well. Wait... maybe the character should be recast!
Oh, that's awesome. I was so afraid that he wasn't going to be in it and they'd just say that Loki killed Odin offscreen.Anything is possible. I would have thought that Anthony Hopkins would be a harder get after comments post- The Dark World, and yet he will be returning
Anything is possible. I would have thought that Anthony Hopkins would be a harder get after comments post- The Dark World, and yet he will be returning
I think the lack of exposure to plays has something to do with it, along with the tendency to rewatch shows/movies much more often than in pre-1980 days.I sometimes wonder if the modern aversion to recasting is a generational thing. Back in the day, it wasn't uncommon to recast characters in mid-series or, conversely, to cast the same actors in multiple roles over the course of the same series. Just look at any number of old black-and-white movie series. Moriarity (like Blofeld) was never played by the same actor twice in the Basil Rathbone SHERLOCK HOLMES movies. The original FLASH GORDON serials went through at least two Dale Ardens. And the old Universal Monsters movies practically had a repertory company of actors trading roles back and forth, so that, for instance, the Frankenstein monster ended up being played by Karloff, Chaney Jr., Lugosi, AND Glenn Strange over the course of two decades. And Chaney Jr. ended up playing the Wolf Man, Frankenstein, Dracula, and the Mummy at various points.
At the risk of channeling my inner curmudgeon, do modern audiences have a harder time suspending their disbelief when it comes to recasting? Not sure why that would be so, but it does seem that way sometimes.
I think the lack of exposure to plays has something to do with it, along with the tendency to rewatch shows/movies much more often than in pre-1980 days.
It's a shame Portman feels that way. She's not the worst part of the Thor movies and like Kor said, she hasn't really done much oscar worthy since.
I don't have a definitive answer but I'll explain my position. I take my favorite movies and TV shows a little more seriously than most. Often times, they're works that I immerse myself into. They're real worlds for me, more or less, not just entertainment that I watch, thinking that it's just entertainment, so I expect some level of integrity. I also put more weight on the visual aspect of film-making than most, so that adds to how I feel. So basically, it's not so much about an inability to suspend disbelief, it's more about wanting to see a created world that's a little more solid and consistent.At the risk of channeling my inner curmudgeon, do modern audiences have a harder time suspending their disbelief when it comes to recasting?
I have no idea why you're so cavalier about the idea of recasting a part originated by one of the greatest/most legendary actors alive, and then citing a decades-old cheap-ass pulp serial like it's any kind of meaningful precedent. Yes, recastings happen sometimes. But when you hire Anthony freaking Hopkins to play a role, you should absolutely do your damndest to keep him, especially when your studio (and parent studio) is positively drowning in money. And no, the change of the husband on Bewitched does not affect that calculus one iota!The original FLASH GORDON serials went through at least two Dale Ardens.
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At the risk of channeling my inner curmudgeon, do modern audiences have a harder time suspending their disbelief when it comes to recasting? Not sure why that would be so, but it does seem that way sometimes.
I have no idea why you're so cavalier about the idea of recasting a part originated by one of the greatest/most legendary actors alive, and then citing a decades-old cheap-ass pulp serial like it's any kind of meaningful precedent.
You're basing this assumption on, what, TrekBBS chatter? That hardly seems a scientific conclusion. Isn't it equally plausible that those who become emotionally invested enough in these properties to spend large amounts of time discussing them online are more likely to be emotionally invested in continuity of actor appearances?Why today's audiences seem to fall more on the immersive end of things is an intriguing question.
But you're picking and choosing your historical perspective, not to mention the vast differences in scale. You're arguing that because the larger products are both about myth, the specific actors don't really matter, and in so doing, you're implicitly putting the Anthony Hopkins, from a major motion picture franchise, on equal ground with some nobody from a cheap, mostly-forgetten niche TV show.Just trying to provide a bit of historical perspective here.
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