If we were talking about an actor jumping from an episode of a TV show no one watched to a movie that was very loosely related 8 years later I guess people wouldn't notice. I think people are probably perceptive enough to notice the same actor is playing two different characters in the same franchise within six months of each other.
It'd be like casting the guy who played Darwin as Bishop in Days of Future Past. You could, and maybe some people wouldn't notice, but why the hell would you? There are dozens of actors who are actually right for the role that didn't just star in an adjacent film
I think you're overestimating the perception of your average moviegoer to spot casting snafus involving extremely minor cameos like Fandral. And you're definitely overestimating their ability to even notice that the dark-headed clean-shaven guy from "Chuck" was also that blond-headed Errol Flynn looking guy with the goatee in Thor's entourage --- what was his name again, Vandal or something...?
Marvel Studios handles talent in entirely different ways than the way Hollywood is used to. They require long-term contracts that aren't historically lucrative or equitable. Those that actually speak up about unfair pay have all found quick exits from the MCU.
In short, Marvel is in the business of looking for low-marquee value actors who are willing to get in on the ground floor of potentially lucrative franchises, and who are willing to keep the same pay grade regardless of whether or not the franchise becomes a runaway hit. That means that the job pool for Marvel Studios movies is limited to TV stars and overseas imports looking for a breakout film role in Hollywood, to has-beens who've seen better days, and to Marvel insiders with comic-book geek cred.
As someone mentioned above, it's almost inevitable that Marvel is going to have to wind up "double-dipping" into a manpower pool that small.
If you don't think Evans and Hemsworth and Ruffalo are getting raises I don't really know what to tell you.
Also 95% of actors would literally kill for a 6 picture, 6 figure per deal as a lead in a big international franchise. Whether these actors got their start in indies, foreign cinema, television, smaller roles, whatever. I promise you that "manpower pool" or whatever we're calling it is not anywhere near small. Hollywood isn't hurting for talented 20-something actors looking for their breakout.
If you don't think Evans and Hemsworth and Ruffalo are getting raises I don't really know what to tell you.
Also 95% of actors would literally kill for a 6 picture, 6 figure per deal as a lead in a big international franchise. Whether these actors got their start in indies, foreign cinema, television, smaller roles, whatever. I promise you that "manpower pool" or whatever we're calling it is not anywhere near small. Hollywood isn't hurting for talented 20-something actors looking for their breakout.
The Iron Man star is set to score a proverbial kings ransom for the movie, much more than his co-stars, who will be getting significantly less. Marvel is famously known for low balling talent when theyre negotiating deals for their superhero films Mickey Rourke was offered just $250,000 for his role in Iron Man 2 - however, the studio does seem to be lavishing cash on Downey Jr. Following the success of Iron Man in 2008 (it banked $585 million worldwide); the actors agents renegotiated his deal so that he would receive profit participation in any future movies where he played Iron Man - allegedly 5 to 7 percent of the box office gross. It must have seemed like a sweet deal then but even sweeter now when the grosses are doubled.
The rest of the cast arent so lucky. Samuel L. Jackson and Scarlett Johansson are said to be scoring an estimated $4 6 million apiece once their upfront fee and box office bonus is combined. Its still a lot of cash, but nothing compared to that of Robert Downey Jr. Meanwhile, Chris Hemsworth, Chris Evans, Jeremy Renner and Mark Ruffalo will probably bank around $2 3 million each for their work on The Avengers. Again this is serious money but not much when you take into account the billions of dollars the film will make once other ancillaries are added.
All that I get out of that is that they all got significant raises from their previous appearances. And they will again.
Which is the opposite of what you were saying.
Prove you're worth it and you'll get paid. Don't know how this differs from, well, anything.
You must have imagined that premise on your own. At no point did I say it would be more likely out of necessity. It's about casting whoever is best for the role and not worrying about whether they've already played some minor part in a separate barely connected film/TV series. The longer it goes on the more likely it'll be that that's happened.
you do realize that from the 3 actors that got replaced in the MCU one was replaced because of scheduling conflicts, one because of creative control issues and only one, namely Terrence Howards, because of money. And that actor got more pay as a minor character in his movie than the lead actor and wanted even more. I doubt this qualifies as unfair pay.Marvel Studios handles talent in entirely different ways than the way Hollywood is used to. They require long-term contracts that aren't historically lucrative or equitable. Those that actually speak up about unfair pay have all found quick exits from the MCU.
All that I get out of that is that they all got significant raises from their previous appearances. And they will again.
Which is the opposite of what you were saying.
Prove you're worth it and you'll get paid. Don't know how this differs from, well, anything.
I said merry christmas, what'ya want from me![]()
Yesss!!! I'm 1000% behind casting Zac as QuillI'm assuming Gunn is referring to the headline, rather than the article:
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