The best casted role TV or film or biggest casting mistake

All this X-Men talk, and no one says how perfect both Patrick Stewart as Professor X, and Ian McKellan as Magneto were?

Or maybe someone did and I missed it.

Pretty well everyone in I Claudius was perfectly cast.

Particularly Derek Jacobi as Claudius, Patrick Stewart as Sejanus and John Hurt as Caligula. I can’t watch ST:NG without thinking to myself “Sejanus … in Space!” :smiley:

Some say Brian Blessed was miscast as Augustus, but I think he works in that role.

And, really, Kelsey Grammer as Hank McCoy.

The point of the film, though, is that Oz really isn’t the wizard, he’s just some guy, and I thought Franco pulled that off pretty well.

An easy place to find casting mistakes is in Shakespeare. Jason Robards may have been one of America’s finest actors, but in 1970’s Julius Caesar he was badly miscast as Brutus. Other actors shine with the material. Watch Whedon’s Much Ado next month and see how perfect Nathan Fillion is as Dogberry.

I agree with you about the script, but my main problem with Routh’s performance wasn’t his looks or even, his acting, per se - it was his voice. Routh’s voice, through no fault of his own, is too high and far to nasal for the role of Superman.

Lord of the Rings has both ends covered.

The casting was marvelous. Everyone was damn near what I had envisioned them as while reading the books, with two exceptions.

Hugo Weaving as Elrond- Great actor but the timing was bad. He had just come off of being Agent Smith in The Matrix and I couldn’t get past that.

Elijah Wood as Frodo - no acting skills, just pretty-boy looks and he butchered the role.

I actually found Ian McKellan a little bit less impressive as Magneto. I think he definitely got the acting down, and I know comic book physiques are grossly exaggerated, but I would have liked to have seen a slightly younger super-buffed 60 year old play him

Why does Magneto need to be buff? I mean, if you can lift an airplane with the power of your mind, why the hell do you need muscles?

To keep your brain from squirting out your ears from the strain? :stuck_out_tongue:

The entire cast of Fargo. They were all born for those roles, from Steve Buscemi and Peter Stormare to Frances McDormand and William H. Macy. Like most of their work it’s a testament to the Coen Brothers’ skill at casting the right people and writing characters to those actors’ strengths and /or natural personalities.

I second Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark.

Worst? Shaq as Dr. John Henry Irons/Steel.
Notwithstanding the movie being a stinker, no one should be Steel but Avery Brooks.

Patrick Warburton as The Tick in the shortlived, eponymous TV series. Like Ron Perlman for Hellboy, I can’t imagine anyone else in that role.

James Franco in Oz. Stunk out the movie, but I don’t think it was his fault. He’s not a bad actor IMO. He just looks too creepy for that role.

You misspelled “Laura San Giacomo”, but that’s all right - hers was a minor character anyway.

But she turned in possibly the absolute worst recreation of a character in TV history - it’s as if she read the book, said “I don’t want to do this Nadine Cross, I want to do the opposite of her”… and did it.

Sorry, No. Jack Nicholson wasn’t the Joker, he was simply Jack Nicholson in a stupid costume doing stupid jokes.

Voice wise, there is only one true Joker. Mark Hamill.

William Peterson did a great job as Will Graham in that film as well. The quality of the first two films is so far above all the Cult of Hannibal shite that has come out since. What a pity that Thomas Harris couldn’t stop while he was ahead.

HBO’s Rome had many excellent casting choices, particularly James Purefoy as Mark Antony, Tobias Menzies as Brutus, and David Bamber as Cicero.

Rik Mayall as Lord Flashheart in Blackadder II.

:stuck_out_tongue:

Casting mistakes, by definition, are the fault of the director, not the actor, and a miscast actor is not equivalent to a bad actor. In A New Hope he somehow cast actors who could thrive under his bad direction.
Given the conflict in Anakin’s character, the right actor could have made it a stellar performance. Lucas didn’t find the right actor.

Yeah, but there’s a difference between “just some guy” and the (unnamed, in 1939) “Man Behind the Curtain”—you could put John Wayne or Wes Studi or someone else random in the role, and not make an especially good small-time Edwardian circus huckster magician.