Movies That Killed Careers

Discussion in 'Visual Arts' started by JediJones, Apr 14, 2021.

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  1. Ghostworld

    Ghostworld Senior Member

    Location:
    US
    worth watching "Val" the documentary about kilmer - for a least a tiny glimpse. But it just seemed the whole thing was a wreck. Only good thing -- Barbara Carerra. Yowza.
     
  2. paste

    paste Forum Resident

    Location:
    Ohio
    Was she in the movie? I know she was in the 70s remake, but don't recall her being in the more recent remake with Kilmer and Brando.
     
  3. Knox Harrington

    Knox Harrington Forum Resident

    Tom Selleck - Lassiter
     
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  4. Randall DeBouvre

    Randall DeBouvre forum resident

    Location:
    Illinois
    peter bogdanovich - at long last love.
    it was universally reviled when it came out in 1975. the lone desenter was roger ebert. he said the film was not great, but he said he didn't understand the hostility towards it. it seems more people are agreeing with rog.
     
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  5. Randall DeBouvre

    Randall DeBouvre forum resident

    Location:
    Illinois
     
  6. beccabear67

    beccabear67 Musical omnivore.

    Location:
    Victoria, Canada
    Peter Bogdanovich had changed for the worse by the time of the sequel to The Last Picture Show. I loved the original but could not stand the Texasville follow-up. It's really unusual I think that one director can make something so great and another so ghastly.
     
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  7. Randall DeBouvre

    Randall DeBouvre forum resident

    Location:
    Illinois
     
  8. Ghostworld

    Ghostworld Senior Member

    Location:
    US
    I could be wrong
     
  9. Larry Mc

    Larry Mc Forum Dude

    My wife and I liked this movie a lot.
     
  10. Larry Mc

    Larry Mc Forum Dude

    Ben Stiller's been lagging for sometime now.

    "The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty" didn't ring as many bells as he hoped. :)
     
  11. Scooterpiety

    Scooterpiety Ars Gratia Artis

    Location:
    Oregon
    I was so disappointed by Another 48 Hrs. as the first film was one of my favorites of the early '80s.
    The chemistry that Murphy and Nick Nolte had in the first film was completely gone and the ridiculous plot (especially when the unseen bad guy, the sinister "Ice Man" turned out to be none other than Jack's (Nolte) cop buddy Kehoe (Brion James).
    About the only thing I remember liking about the film was Kevin Tighe's performance as a sleazy cop.
     
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  12. Holerbot6000

    Holerbot6000 Forum Resident

    Location:
    California
    Yeah she was in the version with Burt Lancaster and Michael York. Kinda silly but at least coherent and she was definitely hot.
     
  13. Panther

    Panther Forum Resident

    Location:
    Tokyo, Japan
    I dunno, Magnum P.I. still went on for four years after that, and three years later he had Three Men and a Baby, which grossed $240 million.

    He didn't transition into the 90s well, though. What sort of killed him off was the 1992 double-whammy of:
    [​IMG][​IMG]
     
  14. He's Chevy Chase, and you're not!
     
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  15. James Slattery

    James Slattery Forum Resident

    Location:
    Long Island
    I can't believe this one hasn't been mentioned yet. Tod Browning was a famous horror director, working with Lon Chaney Sr. on some of his greatest silent horror films. Browning then directed the 1931 Dracula with Bela Lugosi, the first talkie horror film. He followed that up with the career killer, Freaks. The movie was so disturbing that after previews, 30 minutes of "objectionable" material was cut from the film (which are considered lost). That pretty much ended his career.

    Tom Laughlin had phenomenal success with Billy Jack in 1971, the second Billy Jack film. He followed it up with the excessively long and drawn out Trial of Billy Jack. He had one last go around with the character with Billy Jack Goes to Washington, which outside of some preview runs in a few cities, never had a real release until it came out on DVD decades later (and cut by about an hour from its original listed running time).
     
  16. Fabrice Outside

    Fabrice Outside Forum Resident

    Location:
    EU
    The Devil Doll was great ( 1936 )
    I have no idea if it was successful though obviously nothing could top his own success with Dracula
     
  17. Jazzmonkie

    Jazzmonkie Forum Resident

    Location:
    Tempe, AZ
    He also made The Mark of the Vampire (1935) and Miracles for Sale (1939) so his career wasn't dead after Freaks.
     
    Last edited: Nov 19, 2021
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  18. Toddarino

    Toddarino Total Hunk

    Location:
    Wisconsin
    That movie didn’t kill either of their careers.
     
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  19. postscripum

    postscripum Forum Resident

    Location:
    Liverpool
    What, like the Jewish mother of Sherlock Holmes, a Welsh Dr Watson, a nervous misfit in Bedazzled, a drunk in Arthur, etc etc. Yes, I guess he did. If only he'd had the range of Ryan Reynolds.
     
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  20. brucewayneofgotham

    brucewayneofgotham Forum Resident

    Location:
    Bunkville
    The woman who starred in the Alita Battle Angel movie , Rose Salazar. To answer the PMs.
     
  21. Jmac1979

    Jmac1979 Forum Resident

    Location:
    Louisville, KY
    If anything hurt Jennifer Lawrence, its Mother
     
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  22. Jmac1979

    Jmac1979 Forum Resident

    Location:
    Louisville, KY
    I always looked at Selleck, much like his Three Men And A Baby costar Ted Danson more as tv stars who had enough charm and charisma that they got movie offers as well. Both always had tv to fall back on when the movie roles dried up, especially Danson who has only been off tv screens for a couple years since Cheers premiered in 1982. The irony being Shelley Long left Cheers for a full time movie career yet Danson had bigger movie success while concurrently doing the show and he stayed 11 years. Michael J Fox was sort of in the same boat but he was a bigger "movie star" at the height of his fame that many were surprised he didnt leave Family Ties sooner
     
    Last edited: Nov 20, 2021
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  23. Oatsdad

    Oatsdad Oat, Biscuits, Abbie & Mitzi: Best Dogs Ever

    Location:
    Alexandria VA
    I don't think Selleck ever really made a satisfying move from TV to movies.

    Yes, "3 Men" was a hit, but it didn't seem like an "actor-driven hit".

    Ie, it did well because people liked the premise - you could've cast a broad array of other actors as the leads and it would've done as well.

    I mean, Selleck, Guttenberg and Danson didn't exactly have film careers that set the world on fire, did they?
     
  24. Oatsdad

    Oatsdad Oat, Biscuits, Abbie & Mitzi: Best Dogs Ever

    Location:
    Alexandria VA
    Yeah, Fox legitimately made the "TV to movie" transition. The 3 "Back to the Future" movies were huge, and other flicks like "Secret of My Success", "Teen Wolf" and "Doc Hollywood" did nicely.

    Fox's other films never approached the level of the 3 "BttF" flicks, but he still was an actual movie star, whereas I would never call Danson or Selleck a "movie star".

    Also, I feel strongly that Fox was a significant reason that the first "BttF" was such a big hit.

    Would it have done as well with Eric Stoltz as the lead? Doubt it seriously! Fox was perfect for the role and really helped sell tickets...
     
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  25. Jmac1979

    Jmac1979 Forum Resident

    Location:
    Louisville, KY
    I
    It was symbiotic because I think BttF also helped turn Family Ties into a bigger hit. The show was already a hit but it exploded in 1985 being #2 behind Cosby and I think the whole "we get to see Michael J Fox every week" thing was a big selling point because they pretty much retooled the show to focusing on him instead of the parents.
     
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