Last week brought the borderline-absurd news that
Nicolas Cage was in talks to star in a new take on the
god-bothering "Left Behind" franchise (this is a WTF even for Cage). This week brings the first major movie starring another Oscar-winner,
Halle Berry, in five years, in the shape of "
Cloud Atlas," as well as the barely-noticeable release of
Gerard Butler vehicle "
Chasing Mavericks." These things mean many things, but perhaps first and foremost among them, it's that certain actors aren't having the best of times.
Careers ebb and flow and always have in Hollywood, but there seems to have been a particular trend of late, exemplified by Cage above all others, of actors who once sat atop the world now finding themselves in lesser work, long without a hit or an acclaimed performance. To pay tribute to Cage, Berry and Butler, and to wish them better luck in future, we've put together a list of ten performers who really need to have a think about the direction that their careers are heading in. Some are in need of
serious help, possibly an intervention. Others are considered some of our best, but lord knows they've made some spotty choices or in the case of folks like
Colin Farrell, keep getting positioned by the powers that be as a leading-man hero when clearly the actor is better suited to character work with depth and texture. Check it out below, and let us know which actor you'd most love to pull themselves up by the bootstraps in the comments section below.
Forest Whitaker
After winning Best Actor for "
The Last King of Scotland" in 2007, it feels like
Forest Whitaker had one of the fastest ever turn-arounds from Oscar-winner to star of... well, a lot of undesirable crap. A character actor favorite who'd long been familiar from the likes of "
Platoon," "
Good Morning, Vietnam" and "
The Crying Game," it was the rare chance of a lead role for the actor, who around the same time was appearing in a TV stint on "
The Shield." Whitaker got a little post-Oscar boost, getting some paycheck roles of the kind he wouldn't have had before, in mid-level programmers like "
Vantage Point" and "
Street Kings," but none were especially well-reviewed, or big hits. Would-be awards bait like '
The Great Debaters" and "
Hurricane Season" turned out to be anything but, and the best thing he's done since his Oscar remains a vocal turn in "
Where The Wild Things Are." But a glimpse over his CV for the last few years reveals a very disconcerting bunch of direct-to-video movies that you've never really heard of ("
Fragments," "
Powder Blue," "
My Own Love Song," "
The Experiment," "
The Truth," "
Catch .44," "
Crossfire"), along with a season back on TV with short-lived "
Law & Order" rip-off "
Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior"). It may be that Whitaker simply wasn't getting the offers that some do -- he's always been a very specific physical type. But it also seems that there were a lot of bad decisions along the way. You're an Oscar winner for crying out loud! Fortunately, things are looking up these days -- he has the lead in
Lee Daniels' starry "
The Butler" (unfortunately still directed by
Lee Daniels, but it'll at least get a theatrical release), he's in
Scott Cooper's "
Out Of The Furnace" with
Christian Bale, and he's backing up Arnie in "
The Last Stand." So a comeback to the roles that should have arrived post-2007 seem to be on the horizon. And hopefully we'll get more of those, and fewer
50 Cent and
Bruce Willis movies that go straight to VOD.
Adrien Brody
Brody co-starred in "
The Experiment" with Whitaker, and the film seemed to mark something of a cautionary tale for future Oscar-winners. Like Whitaker, Brody was a popular character actor, and he recovered from having a lead role cut down to shreds in the editing room (
Terrence Malick's "
The Thin Red Line") to win an Oscar for
Roman Polanski's "
The Pianist" in 2003. And understandably, Brody seized the chance to become a leading man quite quickly, taking roles in "
The Village," "
The Jacket" and
Peter Jackson's "
King Kong" in quick succession. And they were all disappointments to varying degrees, and things have only gotten worse since. Some of what Brody's done since ("
The Darjeeling Limited," "
Hollywoodland," "
The Brothers Bloom," "
Splice") were good movies in which he gave good performances. Some ("
Giallo," "
Predators," "
Wrecked," and once more for emphasis, "
Giallo") were bad movies, and bad performances. But really nothing managed to properly capture the imagination of the public. Brody was delightful in a tiny cameo as Salvador Dali in "
Midnight In Paris," but that hasn't necessarily signaled an upward swing -- he has
Paul Haggis' "
The Third Person" coming up, but also something called "
InAPPropriate Comedy" starring
Rob Schneider of all people. Hopefully, that's some kind of nadir. At least "Midnight In Paris" seems to suggest he's willing to do what he should be doing, and taking smaller roles for great filmmakers, rather than leading man roles he's unsuited for (see "Predators"). You're an Oscar-winner, how did you fall off the track this far?
Halle Berry
After Halle Berry won the Best Actress prize in 2002 for her raw and blistering performance in "Monster's Ball," her response to her bruising, powerful turn was to try and cement her A-list status with a series of action or horror leads. Aside from two more entries in the "X-Men" franchise she'd already began, there was "Die Another Day," "Catwoman," "Gothika" and "Perfect Stranger," films that steadily got worse and worse as time went on. Berry pulled out of the nosedive with Susanna Bier's "Things We Lost In The Fire," an excellent, underrated performance that might actually be better than her one in "Monster's Ball," but not one that was seen by many unfortunately. She then took three years off, for the most part, with the seen-by-even-fewer people "Frankie & Alice" following in 2010, with only "New Year's Eve" and DTV shark thriller "Dark Tide" coming since. This week, she's starring (multiple times) in "Cloud Atlas," her most high-profile picture in half a decade, and whether you love or loathe the film, it's undoubtedly a step in the right direction for Berry. But it may not last; next year brings another genre entry in "The Hive," a small role in portmanteau comedy "Movie 43," neither of which suggests an absolute return to form. She's clearly got the chops, but she's definitely got to find some meatier roles.
82 Comments
Raindogs | October 30, 2012 9:52 PM
If I may, can we add... Denzel Washington?!
b | October 30, 2012 5:35 PM
I scanned these comments, but don't think anyone mentioned Robert DeNiro. I guess he's a bit different since his career will forever be known for greatness, but the last ten years is a big WTF to me looking at his resume. Am holding out hope for Silver Linings Playbook, but other than that a bunch of mediocre shit. If he does one more of those Fockers movies that is it for me. I will swear him off for forever.
I haven't seen Machete though so perhaps that will renew my faith in him and his film choices. And I suppose it's unfair of me to cite an actor who made his career with films from Scorsese, The Deer Hunter and The Godfather Pt. II, it's hard to live up to such awesomeness.
Angela | October 29, 2012 9:38 PM
Hey, Fright Night was awesome, even if no one went to see it.
Daisy Kenyon | October 28, 2012 4:06 PM
Is it really the agents fault though? it may just be a downturn in career or bad luck. Hollywood Inc. is brutal
LAH | October 28, 2012 12:32 AM
I agree with several of the people that think this topic is unfair. If you frequent movie theaters, or Netflix or whatever illegal downloading site you may watch movies from you'll see there are a limited number of good movies per year. The odds of getting a great script, then getting a director and producer that will get the most out of the script and then find a studio that will leave them alone and not muddle with it or have enough cash to may for the movie is pretty low. There just aren't enough good movies to employ every good actor and actress in Hollywood so you take a chance or sometimes bite the bullet and do a movie to get paid or stay in the spotlight.
Dee | October 27, 2012 8:50 PM
Funny you mentioned Jude Law. I'd certainly nominate him, though it seems he's started to correct course. Even with lacklusters like Contagion, it fares better than Repo Men.
Rosie | October 27, 2012 1:21 PM
This is the most arrogant article I have ever written. All actors encounter either bad press, failed movies or even a dry spell in their career. It's nothing new. Yet, this article seemed to indicate that if your opinion is adhered to, every Hollywood movie or television star will be consistently successful. The arrogance in this article is unbelievable.
ugh | October 26, 2012 8:51 PM
Correction: "Whose," not "who's" in the last paragraph.
jean vigo | October 26, 2012 4:05 PM
I find it hard to believe that a lot of these actors can't read a script ahead of time and see that it's going to be a stinker. An agent is an agent in ANY biz, regardless of what he/she will say. Objective #1: maximize income/percentage. Sell your "property" for the highest bid.
Maybe these actors need to be more pro-active instead of playing the "talk to my agent" game. I'm sure they can live comfortably enough than 99% of us and wait for the right project.
bapi | October 26, 2012 3:50 PM
Josh Hartnett
Dan | October 26, 2012 2:37 PM
I think Sigourney Weaver needs to be on here. She still has the "Avatar" buoy keeping her afloat, and she's apparently done very well in "Red Lights", but "Abduction"? And "Cold Light of Day"? C'mon.
ali | October 26, 2012 12:16 PM
Just because you are resonably good looking does not make you a lead actor and neither does giving a strong performance in a character role. None of the actors on this list are leading actors. They are all good/solid supporting actors. If they can check their egos and play to their strengths( Reese,stop doing rom-coms. Halle, you are supporting dramatic actor)their careers can rebound.
The Jackal | October 25, 2012 7:13 PM
Cusack and Cage are the poster boys for disastrous acting choices. Halle Berry has just fallen off the map as a legitimate actor. Gerard Butler just needs to be a little choosier, as his role in Corialanus proved he's still got the acting chops. Hillary Swank pops in occasionally decent flicks, Amelia and Freedom Writers were enjoyable if not spectacular. I think Adrian Brody is just fine. He turns in good performances in independent films and I thought he was a hoot in Predators. Forrest Whitaker, in my opinion was never meant for leading man status. The Last King of Scotland was the role was born to play, yes. He still does well in supporting roles. Not sure what happened to ol' Clive. Children of Men was phenomenal. Hope he gets back on track soon.
Thems the facts
Krazyjoe | October 25, 2012 3:13 PM
"Those that made it to theaters, like "Hot Tub Time Machine," "The Paperboy" and "The Raven" were pretty dreadful, "
Hot Tub Time Machine was hilarious. I saw that 4 times in theaters. You guys need better taste.
Krazyjoe | October 25, 2012 3:09 PM
"Some ("Giallo," "Predators," "Wrecked," and once more for emphasis, "Giallo") were bad movies, "
Predators was excellent.
myattempt@sarcasm | October 25, 2012 1:54 PM
i'd add daniel day lewis to this list. by now he shouldve had a 3rd oscar but he's busy taking 5 year breaks between films and now wasting his time with that talentless hack steven spielberg. what a loser.
cinephile | October 25, 2012 1:04 PM
Yup, I'd add Renee Zellweger to this list. Where the hell did she go, like, four years ago?
Sitting Pat | October 25, 2012 10:43 AM
Colin Farrell was awesome in Seven Psychopaths. If that's the direction his career is headed, smaller interesting films with great performances, then he's headed in the right direction.
As for Reese Witherspoon, I guess in her case it's don't eff your agent. Her days of being a viable lead are over. It's not the projects, she's proven over and over, as has been said here, that she's no longer a very good actress.
bruckey | October 25, 2012 8:14 AM
22 that need saving
http://www.hitfix.com/galleries/can-these-careers-be-saved/more-galleries
takealook | October 25, 2012 7:54 AM
Similarly to @ADAM's stance, I am going to say that I don't think Reese Witherspoon is that great of an actor either. Most undeserved Oscar if I've ever seen one - she was decent in Walk The Line but compared to Felicity Huffman's performance in Transamerica?? Shocking. And she became completely overrated after that. Maybe she can't get better roles because dare say it, she isn't in that league?
asiandude | October 25, 2012 2:55 AM
I found it weird :) if The Playlist made this 1.5 years ago CHARLIZE THERON would definitely be on here :D and look @ what a ride she has had since Young Adult!
Some I think should be mentioned: Winona Ryder / Uma Thurman (indeed, all the Kill Bill girls - Lucy Liu at least started making some small wave + Daryl hannah probably too rich & weird) / Gwyneth Paltrow (without the tabloid + connection + Iron Glee, she would be here) / Kate Hudson / JLO / Renee / Thandie Newton / Ewan Mc
Shawn Gordon | October 25, 2012 1:22 AM
Here are ten alternatives, actors who for the last decade have had a pretty lackluster career, especially when you look at the decade prior.
Harrison Ford, Harvey Keitel, Kevin Kline, Steve Martin, Robin Williams, Michael Douglas, Michelle Pfeiffer, Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer, Michael Keaton
Leonardo | October 25, 2012 1:21 AM
they really want some money, but common what happened to their seelf-respect...
Sean | October 24, 2012 11:01 PM
At The Playlist, must you put the list onto 3 pages instead of 1....?? Well regarding the actual article it is perfect to a T! Every1 you mentioned I have at some point or another thought "where the hell did you go? & why?" Its really a shame too esp for some of the "better" names on here.... Such as Hilary Swank, Forest Whitaker, John Cusack, Clive Owen, Colin Farrell, Halle Berry, & Reece. The rest are whatever to me... I wish The Playlist could have gone into some deeper digging & give us reasons as to WHY WHY WHY this has happened to some great actors & their careers (such as inner gossip of Hollywood, the politics of the buisness,).... Now that would be a fantastic article. This is some some stuff we already knew unfortunatley ....B/c is this really just the case of a BAD AGENT...?!?!? I def dont think so... And it appears theres literally only a handful of top actors who have stayed around for decades anymore rather than 2 handfuls or a group of 20 or so has wittled down to about 5 I think....
Someone | October 24, 2012 8:31 PM
It's over for Halle. Thats why she wants to move abroad-- at least she knows it cause Nicole Kidman sure doesnt.
JD V | October 24, 2012 7:49 PM
Whoah, now hold on. PREDATORS is not a bad movie. : )
Jon | October 24, 2012 6:43 PM
Don't forget that Cage did Bringing Out the Dead
Jolene | October 24, 2012 6:02 PM
Tom Hardy needs a better agent as soon as possible.
Ellie Mae | October 24, 2012 5:39 PM
Regarding Gerard Butler, some of your comments just didn't ring true. The movie "Phantom of the Opera" was bashed by the critics because most didn't even bother to watch it and they didn't like the broadway musical either. But it was truly fantastic and beautiful and Gerard was fabulous in it. Just go to IMDB and Amazon - regular people overwhelmingly love this movie. His new movie, "Chasing Mavericks" is a PG rated relationship movie based on a true story about surfing the big waves near Santa Cruz, California. Directed by a great talent, Curtis Hanson. What's so bad about a nice family movie with good values and a good message, plus fantastic footage? Does every movie have to be a cartoon, science fiction, edgy, super hero or super violent to appeal to you critics? Gerard is a super talent in my book.
Jacques DeMolay | October 24, 2012 5:31 PM
Replace Collin Farrel with either A) Cuba Gooding Jr., B) Val Kilmer, or C) Kevin Costner and it'd be perfect.
Also, Drive Angry was fucking awesome and you all know it, Playlsters. Of course, that's more to William Fitchner's credit than Cage's, but still...
Duddi | October 24, 2012 5:15 PM
I've just read the article and the comments but in whole this mess i don't see mentioned not even one time the name of a dude called Val, Val Kilmer !? - Is he a finished episode or maybe he's ok with those "ugly", "stupid", "lazy" straight to video garbage he's been on in the last 5 years !!!
Piotr | October 24, 2012 4:20 PM
Your use of the word 'portmanteau' suggests you have no idea what it means.
coke | October 24, 2012 4:12 PM
"The Butler" (unfortunately still directed by Lee Daniels, but it'll at least get a theatrical release)
LOOOL
Rizzo | October 24, 2012 4:08 PM
These guys should not fire their agents. Their presence helps me pick out which movies to avoid in the theater and just wait until I can watch them on Encore.
Glass | October 24, 2012 3:43 PM
Fucking KILLER idea for an article. I would hate to be an actor so bad... You can probably count on one hand, the actors that have the power to say, "send me all the good scripts with legendary directors attached, so I can decide which one to be in next". Actors usually have the 'audition' mentality built into them, so in the end, they take what they can get.
MJ | October 24, 2012 3:40 PM
I disagree on Colin Farrell, his films over the past 6 years or so might be under seen but they feature the best work of his career. Cassandra's Dream, Ondine, In Bruges, Triage, The Way Back & even his bit parts in Crazy Heart & Dr. Parnassus are all great performances. Seven Psychopaths is doing well for what it is in the current marketplace & even his Hollywood return last year was quite entertaining (HB & Fright Night), though we'll just pretend Total Recall didn't happen.
peter vincent | October 24, 2012 3:38 PM
Fright Night was hardly a "disaster". It made 41 million worldwide on a 30 million budget, despite being released at the ass end of august. also, it received pretty solid reviews. I mean, whatever - it's your article, but if that's a disaster and meanwhile "Alexander" is just a "flop" - then your brain is fucked.
Chris | October 24, 2012 3:24 PM
Once again, The Playlist's fact-checking leaves much to be desired. Regarding "Hot Tub Time Machine," it actually pulled in $50 million and made a profit. I agree it wasn't very good, but it did decent enough business and has something of a following.
JanBerlin | October 24, 2012 3:22 PM
Wasnât Cusackâs "Grace is Gone" considered awards material?
Adam | October 24, 2012 3:21 PM
I swear I'm not trying to be a troll here, but I'm gonna take what is apparently a brave stance and say that I don't think Nicolas Cage is actually very good. In fact, a couple of the folks on here aren't in need of better agents, but actually owe their success to the ones they've got. I don't think Cage was great in Raising Arizona or Leaving Las Vegas, I think that if you could have put any living human into those films and they'd have come off great, provided they were able to perform the incredible scripts they were given.
Wildcat | October 24, 2012 3:18 PM
Whitaker fired his agent after they forced him to do The Last King of Scotland. And look at where he is now... on this list.
Cribbster | October 24, 2012 3:17 PM
"Predators" wasn't a bad movie. It was pretty good. And Adrian Brody was as good as he needed to be in it.
Greg | October 24, 2012 3:16 PM
Michael Keaton. Michael Keaton. Micheal Keaton.
Niall | October 24, 2012 3:07 PM
Antoine Fuqua didn't direct Law Abiding Citizen. Yay for fact checking guys!
Mitchell | October 24, 2012 3:02 PM
Zellweger.
Jesse | October 24, 2012 3:00 PM
Sorry but Halle Berry is doing fine, she has the lead female role in Cloud Atlas and she's the lead in upcoming thriller The Hive directed by the director of The Machinist. She got a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a drama two years ago. Really she's doing fine, keep in mind she's over 45.
cary | October 24, 2012 2:55 PM
the problem of these actors is lack of ambition. they choose safe and easy jobs rather than challenging ones.
you should have mentioned Swank's attendance at Chechen president's birthday party and Owen's burger king commercial. I completely lost any remaining respect for both actors.
DG | October 24, 2012 2:50 PM
I wouldn't mind if most of these people disappeared for the scene altogether but I still like Whitaker and a Reese Witherspoon comeback would be good as well. Election is good and all but has anyone here seen Freeway? Weird fucking movie that she is hilarious and awesome in
OOGLE MONSTER | October 24, 2012 2:40 PM
Mira Sorvino, obviously!
Jeff | October 24, 2012 2:32 PM
Peter Jackson's King Kong was disappointing?