Tom's moved up into second on that poll...
It's silly, I know, but I like to see him do well in things like that. Although, I do think he would be perfect as John Carter.
http://www.johncartermovie.com/cgi-bin/actorsearch.pl
quick question. I know Tom was on the poll about who should be cast as John Carter but did he ever actually audition for the role or was it just wishful thinking from a fan?
I would argue that Taylor Kitsch is a far better actor, but that's for another thread.
I'm not talking about acting. I mean in terms of publicity. Welling could have gotten people excited. Instead, it basically has been "two actors from Wolverine sign up for John Carter."
The following, from The Playlist, seems to sum up what I have been reading from people:
Update: Lynn Collins, last seen as Silverfox in "X-Men Origins: Wolverine," has joined the cast as has Taylor Kitsch (Gambit in "X-Men Origins: Wolverine") who is evidently the lead [ed. Dunno dude, pretty generic casting here, this just fell off my radar hard].
I've always wondered how popular Tom Welling really is. Smallville was a pretty big deal back in the early WB days. But within the last few years, it'd be a massive stretch to say it's made a dent on the pop culture radar. And Welling hasn't been in a movie in four years.
Hmm. I'm not sure I'd take Kitsch over Duhamel myself. Josh actually carried a primetime series and proved he could do action quite well in Transformers, but Kitsch's work on Friday Night Lights (especially the 3rd season) is enough to justify him getting the nod here.
I've always wondered how popular Tom Welling really is. Smallville was a pretty big deal back in the early WB days. But within the last few years, it'd be a massive stretch to say it's made a dent on the pop culture radar. And Welling hasn't been in a movie in four years.
Does Welling still purposely avoid superman comics?
For the first few seasons, it could be argued that it was just a Method Acting technique to not want to know too much about the journeys end of a character; still, some 9+ years later, it borders on intellectual dishonesty.. At this point, how could reading current comics ruin his interpretation of Clark?

Does Welling still purposely avoid superman comics?
For the first few seasons, it could be argued that it was just a Method Acting technique to not want to know too much about the journeys end of a character; still, some 9+ years later, it borders on intellectual dishonesty.. At this point, how could reading current comics ruin his interpretation of Clark?