A few weeks ago, I
inexplicably referenced The Flinstones in Viva Rock Vegas in one of my posts. Sure, that may be grounds for movie blog renouncement right there, but somehow my inpending trip to Las Vegas made me think of it. Besides, it gave me the idea for the post that you're currently reading. See, the first
Flintstones movie starred John Goodman in the title role. Who doesn't love Goodman, after all? He was in
Roseanne, he'll be forever remembered as Walter Sobchak - heck, he even played
The Babe (not that anyone cares to remember that one).
So, imagine Jack's Total Lack of Surprise that the second, Goodman-less (and every other star-less)
Flintstones movie bombed. But as bad as either film might sound, the truly egregious act here was the replacement of Goodman with the terribly unfunny, wildly annoying and somewhat cherubic Mark Addy in the role of Fred Flintstone. Surely, Alan Reed (the original voice of Fred)
and Jackie Gleason (whose Ralph Kramden character on
The Honeymooners was the inspiration for Fred) were both spinning in their graves.
That is but one case of terrible casting jobs in Hollywood sequels. The list is long and indistinguished, I'm afraid. Lucky for you, I'm here to recount and rehash some of the worst of them for you. For these purposes, a new actor or actress playing the lead in the sequel
in a different role will count as a replacement (think Jason Patric taking the reins for Keanu Reeves in
Speed 2: Cruise Control), though you might think I've stretched that definition before we're done here. As a bonus, I'll even throw in some good-great replacements (and maybe some that are too tough to call) at the end.
Kill the Casting Director
John Goodman --> Mark Addy (The Flintstones)Well documented above and in the previous post.
Bruno Kirby --> Jon Lovitz (City Slickers)

Taken in small doses, and in the right roles (like the short-lived animated series
The Critic), Jon Lovitz can be great. This was not one of those times. Besides, Kirby is probably most famous for his
Slickers role; he might have been the smart one by skipping the sequel, but that doesn't make it any easier on us.
Harrison Ford --> Ben Affleck (Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan series)THE box office star of the 80s versus...the guy from
Daredevil and
Gigli? Sure, the public has a love-hate relationship with Ben (currently re-entering love after his Jimmy Kimmel skit), but this one is really no contest. It'd be like casting Shia LaBeouf as Indiana Jones son or something.
Jim Carrey --> Jamie Kennedy (The Mask)Love or hate Carrey, their stars have never been close to being on the same level, and Kennedy has shown that he can be funny for 5-minute segments, but not necessarily for a whole movie. Not even close.
Brandon Lee --> Vincent Perez (The Crow)I'm probably being harsh on Perez here; after all, Lee never actually had the chance to become a big star, and this was the only film of his that came close to being a hit (
Rapid Fire doesn't count, and I have no idea why I can remember the name of that film - the only other thing I can recall is that it takes place in a laundromat or dry cleaner for a portion of it). But it's not like anything ever became of Perez, either, and he has the benefit of still being alive.
Arnold Schwarzenegger --> Danny Glover (Predator)Sure, Glover's great and all, but replacing Ahnuld in what started out as a straight-up action franchise?! Gimme a break.
Macaulay Culkin --> Alex Linz (Home Alone)
Oh wait - I'm not actually an informed critic of this choice, as that would involve me actually watching Home Alone 3. Am I safe in assuming?
Tom Cruise --> Stuart Townshend (Interview with the Vampire)Townshend has never seemed to me to be anything more than a Johnny Depp clone that makes bad choices (though, to be fair, it's probably because Depp gets first crack at all the scripts that might come Stuart's way). But Cruise was still near the top of his game when he was cast (miscast?) as Lestat in
Vampire; Stuart's other high-profile role was in
The League of Extraordinary Gentleman. I rest my case.
Christian Bale --> Mila Kunis (American Psycho)Ahahahaha. You're joking, right?
Six of one, half dozen of the otherVin Diesel --> Tyrese Gibson (The Fast and the Furious)You might say that this is a big drop-off, and you might say that I'm terribly uninformed, having not fully seen any of the
Fast and the Furious flicks. But this is my report, and I say this is more or less a wash.
Vin Diesel --> Ice Cube (XXX)Same here. In fact, Diesel is a much more talented actor, and brings more to the table, than either Gibson or Cube, but it hasn't shown in his choices over the last few years. So he's getting a demotion to being on par with them. Deal with it, Vin.
Rachel Weisz --> Maria Bello (The Mummy)Though it's hard to believe that these two are playing the same role (Bello will reprise the role of Evelyn O'Connell in the third
Mummy flick, due out later this year), Weisz and Bello are generally a wash. Both are fine, attractive actresses that have starred in their share of crap and their share of quality, with the
Mummy films snuggling right in between both of those classifications.
Michael Keaton --> Val Kilmer --> George Clooney (Batman)To be sure, the quality of the
Batman films took a nosedive after Tim Burton left the series (and some would say from the first to the second), but surely the new shoes filling the role of Bruce Wayne didn't have anything to do with that - or at least, not much. Val Kilmer made a fine Dark Knight, and had Joel "Hack" Schumacher not turned the series into a lame cartoon with bad jokes, some might have thought the dark, reserved Kilmer to be the best of the bunch. Instead, he was left with "chicks dig the car" lines - oy. Meanwhile, the abominable fourth installment is an abortion of a movie, and granted, Clooney was not yet the fine actor he is today, but he was still a marquee name.
Cillian Murphy --> Robert Carlyle (28 Days Later)There are probably a lot of people that think they don't know who Robert Carlyle is. But then they see him and remember his unforgettable role as Begbie in
Trainspotting. In terms of types of characters from one film to the next, these two probably don't even warrant comparison, but it's fresh and topical, so on the list it goes.
Wesley Snipes --> Omar Epps (Major League)To be sure, Snipes was (at a certain point in time) a much bigger star than Epps has ever been. But if you watch Epps' inspired turn in the second
Major League, you have to give the guy credit for doing such a wonderful impersonation of Snipes' "Willie Mays Hayes." While many of the choices on this list play different characters, and other play the same but bring a whole new set of tools to the role, Epps went the role of personification, and pulled it off.
Drew Barymore --> Alyssa Milano --> Jaime Pressly (Poison Ivy)For the record, I've only seen the first in this series (starring Barrymore). But if you have as well, you know that I don't need to be a rocket scientist to judge the replacement casting. These are glorified skin flicks starring the hot young ingenue of the day (that's willing to bare all), and there can be no complaints about the skip from one of these actresses to the next.
Thought bad at first, not looking so bad now,Michael J. Fox --> Jason Bateman (Teen Wolf)As with the
Batman scenario, the second
Wolf was a vastly inferior one to the Fox-starring original (or maybe it was just that it was the exact same movie all over again, only with less overall talent involved). And though we might have once thought that the drop-off from Fox to

Bateman was a drop in quality akin to the difference between
Family Ties and
The Hogan Family, surely Bateman's career over the last eight years or so has proven that conclusion wrong and given him some sweet redemption. Besides, the egregiously bad casting replacement from one
Teen Wolf to the next was the vast drop from Jerry Levine (pictured) to Stuart Fratkin (Who? Exactly.).
Studio Head Takes all the CreditJodie Foster --> Julianne Moore (The Silence of the Lambs)You might wonder why this has been placed in the "improvement" category - after all, how can you improve on Jodie Foster? While I agree with that assessment, just the fact that they got someone that could challenge Foster in terms of acting (when a dramatic fall was all but guaranteed) is a feat in and of itself, and warrants a spot here.
Alec Baldwin --> Harrison Ford (Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan series)Baldwin certainly has his strengths, and (believe it or not kids) was a veritable movie star at one time, but this was hands-down, without question, an improvement in quality and potential box office. This was like going from Timothy Dalton to Pierce Brosnan (don't think I forgot the Bond series altoghether).
For another take on this subject, check out
this article.