“Behind the Curtain: Why These Beloved Actors Regret Their Most Iconic Roles”
Radcliffe told Playboy in 2015 that his acting “is very one-note” and that he felt he just got “complacent” with the character.
Katherine Heigl Liked Knocked Up But Hated Her Character
Heigl never hid her feelings for the Judd Apatow comedy film that made her a name on the silver screen. Even when promoting the film in 2007, she called it “a little sexist.” Later on, she expended the comment and said the film painted her as “shrew, humorless and uptight.”
Many people were quick to agree with her, but Heigl quickly made it clear it’s not the movie she hates but it was her character.
Marlon Brando Hated Being Beautiful
Brando is known for different roles by different generations, but his portrayal of Stanley Kowalski in the 1951 film A Streetcar Named Desire shot him into fame. Despite being the role that made him, Brando once told Time magazine he “detests the character” because for a long time it branded him as a “sexy outlaw” archetype.
It took a few decades but Brando eventually shook the label when he landed the lead role in The Godfather.
Harrison Ford Hated Blade Runner More Than Star Wars
The only character Ford hated more than Han Solo was Rick Deckard in Blade Runner. He complained that he was a “detective who did not have any detecting to do” and that the material was difficult to read. He also despised having to read for voice-overs.
Post Comment