Michael Caine?
He had a fake death in one film that I remember, but I can’t remember him actually dying.
Dude. I just mentioned *Get Carter *a few posts back.
Adam Sandler - not matter how much we may wish death upon his characters.
His fake death in SLEUTH is, in fact, followed by a real death. Things likewise end badly for him in DEATHTRAP.
Tom also died in Young Guns.
Also in Taps.
Technically speaking, he dies in Click.
As some have mentioned, as soon as you expand the pool of potential actors to be basically any tip-billing actor (including comedians) it starts to get to be a pretty large pool. I’m going to limit my offerings to action/horror/thriller stars for this thread…
OK, I’d say that, without doing an exhaustive check, Jackie Chan probably has not died in very many movies.
He also died in Blood and Wine.
Heck, he won an Oscar for dying in The Cider House Rules.
Which is one reason I suggested using only 25% of his cinemortality (great word) as the basis for intergender comparisons. And even that drastic lowering of the bar hasn’t produced a truly comparable case of female cinemortality, AFAICT.
Waitaminute…has Pierce Brosnan ever died onscreen?
Fourth Protocol.
Tom Cruise was in Young Guns???
Another Tom Hanks death: Road to Perdition.
What about Mike Myers (The non-Halloween one) ?
Yes, for about 1 second. He gets shot by Charlie at the end of movie when they’re all running out of the burning house.
how 'bout Bradley Cooper?
We get voiceover from the narrator as 54 ends while viewing Mike Myers: “You see, Steve Rubell had a dream – but like with all dreams, you wake up to reality … in reality, the party was over.” The lights then dim entirely on Mike, and we’re helpfully informed that “Steve Rubell died in 1989. He was 45 years old.”
Well, she died twice in two different Resident Evils (for a total of 4 deaths), but they recently brought her back to life in the Fast & Furious series, so I don’t know if that invalidates the earlier death. And she died in Bloodrayne, Avatar, and the series Lost.