Can you think of any actors who are infamously difficult to work with? Let us know in the comments. For more content like this, click here: ua-cam.com/video/ypJfhyGFrUk/v-deo.html
He actually wasn’t known as that much of a jerk until “under siege” did super well in the theaters and he got very rich and skyrocketed in fame. Pre-fame and in his first 3 movies those on set just kind of laughed at him behind his back and thought he was delusional. He didn’t start trying to take over sets, mistreat, or boss people around until “Under Siege” came out
@@cbotten106 the thing that profoundly changed him is that after the success of his first few movies culminating with his biggest “under siege”, he became very wealthy and donated some of that money to the Dalai Lama who in return anointed him with a Buddhist title that made him an “elevated human” or such nonsense. So from that point on, he became delusional and thought he was legitimately holier than thou. That’s a true story, you can look it up lol
Lawrence Tierney also made a bad impression on the Seinfeld cast, when he appeared in a single episode as Elaine's father. The plans for him to be a recurring character changed.
@@murrayroodbaard207 You can't be serious? It's one of the funniest ones - when they were scared of him and wanted to leave. George also impersonates him. But, he was apparently really strange - I think the cast of Reservoir Dogs also had things to say about him?
My father was an electrician one on of Richard Pryor's movies (I forget the name) and he told me he was the nastiest guy he ever met. I'm sure the drugs had something to do with it, but that always stuck with me because I never heard my father say one bad thing about anybody else.
Seagal thought William Forsythe was better than him. Honey, a plastic bag blowing down the street has better acting chops. And Leto. I think the only reason he plays sociopaths so well is because he isn't acting.
@@temporaladvisor3958 yeah plus with Leto I saw on you tube so there's always a little doubt but these I believe. Jared Leto accused of having relations with underage girls and he has an island where women can pay him $13,000.00 to get it on. I believe it this guy sent his costars in suicide squad used condoms and other weird crap.
I can't stand jared Leto; he is a horrible actor full of himself. As the joker, he was a joke. Sometimes, I don't understand how they can cast unbearable actors like Leto or rachel zegler.
Some actors feel like being assholes is part of their process. If I were a movie producer I would fire any actor who felt tormenting his costars was necessary to get into character.
@@christopherfoley8322 Producers provide the funding for a movie, it's much easier to replace an actor than it is to replace someone who is putting up 25% of the cost of your film.
Lawrence Tierney was in a Seinfeld ep where he was cast as Elaine’s father and during filming he was caught hiding a kitchen knife hidden in his coat from the set kitchen and said he was planning on improvising a scene between him and Jason Alexander’s George safe to say he never reprised his role. P.S. everyone was terrified of him.
This guy also did an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation around roughly the same time and apparently freaked out the entire cast. Patrick Stewart admitted that they were all scared to death of him! LOL
I don’t know about the cast, but German actor Klaus Kinski was practically the mortal enemy of director Werner Herzog on the films “Aguirre The Wrath of God” and “Fitzcarraldo.”
Here's another good one, Lindsey Lohan in Georgia Rule. During production, fellow cast members and producers(including Jane Fonda) have called her out for being unprofessional by acting like a diva and either showing up late or being absent due to her then notorious partying lifestyle.
I do not condone Leto, but Steven Seagal is known also bullying and for really punching stunt actors and actors on purpose when filming action scenes, not just for being presumptuous, I would say that is worst than nasty or weird behavior
Shia captured the authenticity of being a tanker. During war you’re lucky to get a break out of the tank to clean your body with a water soaked bandana at times. You keep a Gatorade bottle to piss in your station and eat crackers and cheese to prolong periods of having to take a crap.
“You keep a Gatorade bottle to piss in your station and eat crackers and cheese to prolong periods of having to take a crap.” I do this while playing computer games. I know their struggle.
Shia pulled method when it wasn't required, or even necessary. Reminds me of the time Dustin Hoffman got himself hungover and sleep deprived for a scene onely to have Lawrence Oliver ask him if he had actually tried acting.
Lawrence Tierney also guest starred in an episode of "Seinfeld" as Elaine's father, but what was set to be a recurring stint (like Jerry's and George's parents), was reduced to a single episode because no one wanted to work with him. Jerry Seinfeld said that Tierney carried a knife around with him on set, which freaked people out, and also a lot of the same complaints Tarantino made about him.
The hell Jared Leto put his _Suicide Squad_ castmates through--you just can’t make that stuff up, and Val Kilmer’s _The Island of Dr. Moreau_ remake behavior would get him fired from any set if he tried it today.
@@murrayroodbaard207 Funny, considering Brando's antics, not just on this film but his whole career, he is the last to talk about professionalism. Did the pot at Brando's house call his kettle black?
I'm surprised Jeffrey Jones in "The Devil's Advocate" isn't here. I thought Al Pacino had him killed halfway through the movie because he & Keanu Reeves found him standoffish.
Ooo, good tea. That would at least give a reason for it. He wasn't just a giant jack*ss for no reason, he was just a big baby taking it out on his co-workers.
No Jim Carrey and "Man on the Moon"? Carrey was so horrible on set that there is a documentary (Jim and Andy) solely about how terrible Jim was and the producers hid it from the public for decades
The Bounty used for "Mutiny on the Bounty" - Marlon Brando's version - was built in Lunenburg, NS. I was actually on the boat with my parents when it was at the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic in Lunenburg (home port of the Bluenose II), back in the late 1980s. It was a beautiful ship... Too bad it sunk during Hurricane Sandy in 2012. It was built by the same company that built the original Bluenose in 1921.
When they were filming 55 DAYS IN PEKING, Ava Gardner was such a pain in the neck that they killed off her character just so they could stop working with her! Remember that such diva behavior is rare among actors. (Few of them can afford to get a bad reputation!) Have you done a video about the most difficult directors?
John Leguizamo is a scrawny runt. Seagal is a fat fool, but he's 6 inches taller, 60 pounds heavier, and a legit martial artist (in a silly discipline).
@@JustTooDamnHonestSegal is a huge guy tho which is why Leguizamo said that. Dude is 6'4". He's a fat ass now but still being 6'4" is a considerable size advantage.
I have seen a while video series of Kevin Smith bitching about different people he worked with. I sounds like Smith is as much the problem as anyone else.
@@krashd Well, Kevin Smith is not a trained director. He's also constantly working while high. So, whenever he worked with highly trained actors or really professional people they would get annoyed by him saying "get me the lens that goes like this *hand gesture*" to the DP. Bruce Willis is classically trained, but he's also a former mega star which makes him a big diva. So its a perfect storm of zero respect.
I've seen Smith's complaints. It occurred to me that nearly everything bitchy he had to say about Willis could be attributed to his declining condition that forced him into retirement.
@@_XR40_ Except that he was doing it more than a full decade before he even had the disorder. He's got the fast acting dementia, and Smith is FAR from the only one to call him out on how he was acting on set in those decades. Willis has had those complaints from pretty much EVERYONE that wasn't relying on mutual connections for work (or thought they didn't) since the late 90's. They were there during 5th Element, 6th sense and just became the norm of working with the guy. That's almost 30 years of dozens of people saying the same thing. Once you add in the actors PR teams, the charitable takes on him and his age of diagnosis, that all points to someone pulling diva behaviour after a string of successes
@@kyleboulanger170 Well, that would explain why Kilmer just fell off the radar. He was so charismatic and had a few big roles but then just fell off into D movie land. Him being bad to work with would explain it, like the others who did the same thing.
@ I chose Community because there’s a lot of stories already out about how miserable Chevy was to work with there, and because none of the significant cast/directors/writers are dead (meaning there’s always the chance for them to provide more details). Also, from what I understand of his career, he wasn’t quite as much of a raging asshole in the earlier part of his career (the original SNL cast, for example, didn’t want to work with him because he would report their using drugs to Lorne and wasn’t as comfortable doing improv as everyone else in that cast was.)
Klinton Spilsbury, the title character in the 1981 movie Legend of the Lone Ranger Had allegedly been a nightmare to work with onset, and couldn’t even deliver his lines properly to the point where they brought in Stacey Keach to dub over the voice. The studio had hoped, casting an unknown in the lead would pay off similar to the Superman movies, but it turned out to be a critical and commercial failure. In fact, it’s the man’s only, acting credit to date
In fairness, there have been quite a few attempts to revive The Lone Ranger. Every one has been an utter failure. Problem is that the character is largely forgotten except by older viewers - And those older viewers inevitably compare the "new" versions to Clayton Moore's version. The fact is, some franchises really have to be retired when the original cast gets too old (At least until the original fans all pass away). No matter how hard they may try, Will Smith can never be James West, Ralph Fiennes can never be John Steed. Sometimes, the popularity of a character is based entirely on _the actor's portrayal_ of the character....
Method actors excusing their bad behavior by saying "i am in character" is the same as an abusive drunk saying "it's what happens when I drink". Nah man. If every time I did something it resulted in me hurting people, I'd stop doing that thing. Grow up and take some accountability. Case in point. Using a lit cigarette on a cast member isn't a prank, it's assault.
Doing your job is not the same as drinking, dude. What i don't understand is why these actors don't simply punch a guy's lights out when he does crap like that. I think Yaphet Kotto could have wrung Richard Pryor's neck if he wanted to.
I saw a T-shirt once with a motto on it that apparently perfectly describes Tierney's personality: "instant asshole -- just add alcohol." He apparently was difficult even when sober, and when drunk, a nightmare. He apparently frightened and intimidated people in the entertainment industry for his entire career. One notable exception was WWII hero Audie Murphy. When a drunken Tierney was causing trouble at a party being belligerent toward the other guests, Murphy calmly explained to Tierney what would happen if he didn't leave, and Tierney left. Murphy later said said, “If somebody hadn’t stopped me, I would have very happily have killed him.”
Hold up… no mention at all for Klaus Kinski in “Fitzcarraldo”?? 🤣 One of the producers legit admitted to setting up a plot to kill the guy because he was such an asshole lmao
That was the director, Werner Herzog himself. But you have to take what he told with a grain of salt, because he has admitted to lie and exaggerate in interviews, to make them more interesting.😁 That said all the trouble put aside, Klaus was also his muse. He would have probably kept making movies with him, if he hadn't died.
7:00 Val Kilmer was difficult on sets of movies because he was always angry that He was being cast in roles for his good looks and not his genuine Juliard trained acting talent. He hated top gun, Batman forever, Island of Dr. Moreau which were big budget special effects heavy films. But when he did stuff like “tombstone” or “the doors” he got along with everyone and did his best work because it took serious commitment and acting on his part which he liked
You can defend him all you want but you have to take the bad with the good and treat them both the same. Yes you will be happier in a movie you enjoy doing than not but you don't have to be an A hole in the ones you don't. That's like a kid throwing a tantrum bc they can't get what they want.
Richard Pryor is one of the best examples of people that have become legendary *after* *they* *died* His t.v. show only aired 4 episodes and it doesn't help that he was high and drunk all the time but it's gotten so much hype that it sounds like some kind of revolutionary show that was too early for it's time. You can even buy volumes 1 and 2, making it sound like it's so much but then you check runtime and it's 1 hour. lmao
William Shatner and the cast of "Star Trek". Originally stemming from the TV series, some, if not all of the cast's animosity towards Shatner had to continue into the film series.
@@ulyssesocounter8488 But the thing with Shatner is: He was the star, actually. He carried the show. He had the title role in a tv series before Trek and did stuff after. Chekhov did Babylon 5, Nimoy needed psych help cause he was confused whether or not he was his character and wrote books about that and the Zulu actor was gay and did nothing much else. Same with "Castle" btw. Nathan Fillion was (and still is) a/the star. The female co wanted the same amount of money and the show got cancelled. Fillion got yet another successful show running shortly thereafter, but she vanished. There actually is a difference. Secondly: Even on a good day, the original Star Trek was a very campy show with minimal budget, sets and effects. Much like the Adam West Batman. Working on that set and then talking about it is nothing to brag about. I would keep it quiet.
@@donaldduck830 This is what people forget. Shatner was the "Star" of the show. He was ably supported by Nimoy and DeForest Kelly - Everyone else was a bit-player. Sulu wasn't even in half the episodes and could have been easily replaced by anyone in the ones he _was_ in. Star Trek was not an "ensemble comedy". People like Takei whining that Shatner prevented him from being a _star_ are delusional. He was never going to be a star, he wasn't even a very good actor....
Yep, the comments about Bale are just jealousy. Just listen to the actress: quote "I did not even know what method acting was" unquote. total incompetence.
Back around 1969/70 Lawrence Tierney was out of acting and working construction in NYC. My father, who was working with "Dillinger", as everyone called him because of a movie role he played in the mid '40s, got the bright idea of inviting him over for Christmas dinner. At one point he discovered a bottle of liquor and very much became the character described by Tarantino. Years later I purchased a copy of Reservoir Dogs and saw the DVD had a tribute to Mr. Tierney. I thought, "You've got to be kidding!" Turned out, the "tribute" was spot on, with Tarantino nailing his personality as I remembered. Sadly, my father pre-deceased him and didn't get to see the tribute, of which he would have gotten a laugh.
5:52 that's actually crazy bc Leto's Joker is the worse one to date and that's actually pretty much a Joker thing to do, but also not. His gifts are more "Ha Ha" rather "Yuck"
Reynolds character was the best part of that movie! I watch Blade and Blade ll for Blade, but I watch Blade Trinity for Reynold's Hannibal King's deadpan humor and fearless ability to take all the pain while still joking. Blade in this movie came off as a sanctimonious ass, so Hannibal was a breath of fresh air.
Do NOT take this video's comments about Island of Dr. Moreau as facts. They obviously did little to no research or even watched the documentary about it. Val Kilmer was full of bad attitude because he looked forward to working with one of his heroes ,Marlon Brando, only to find out that Brando didn't like Kilmer or his work and was rude to Kilmer. And Kilmer's screentime was cut because Brando didn't want to do scenes with Kilmer.
@@azizcammioneur7311 Val Kilmer can burn some random actors head, he sure as Hell couldn't walk up to Brando and light him on fire. Though I'm sure he wanted to.
@@lazyhomebody1356 I think Brando refusing to learn lines, refusing to show up on time, and acting like a mean bully jackass to almost everyone on set except the little Minnie Me guy is pretty childish as well.
Oh c'mon, listen to what was being said. It's not just 'not sharing pleasantries' it's unnerving people and acting like an asshole. Bale freaked out Brett Easton Ellis the author of the damn book for godsakes. And lets not forget the rant against the poor tech during the Terminator movie. You don't treat your colleagues on a job like rubbish, especially on something that is entirely collaborative.
I was expecting to see something about Sasha Mitchell here, that the director of Kickboxing described as something like “too dumb to exist”, or JCVD coked out of his mind during Street Fighter filming
I wonder why Denzel didn't get mention after refusing to kiss/play intimate scenes with Julia Roberts during The Pelican Belief since he didn't want to 'piss off ' or let his black fans down. He simply would not do anything with a white woman, and treated her quite badly. Remember being disappointed reading that. No one should ever treat anyone of a different colour/ethnicity badly/differently.
Actors and crews have complained about Daniel Day-Lewis and his extreme method acting, because he stays in character throughout the shoot, includes on breaks but they all praise him for the end results.
Snipes was pissed at what they were doing to the Blade character and legacy. They made it camp, and he wasn't having it, and I think he just made it clear by treating people like shit, and copping an attitude. I still liked Blade III. I liked all the Blade movies, even though they didn't have as much continuity as I wanted to see. Snipes was the bedrock character, who held it all together, but every director/producer wanted to put their own stamp on the franchise, without regard for what came before or what might come after. Kind of sucks. I probably would've watched 5 or 6 Blade movies.
Brando was notorious for acting like a spoiled child. One of his last movies The Score he refused to wear pants. They had to change all his scenes to sitting behind objects.
The reason actors and actresses, bands, singers, people at work in a store whatever effin place or situation you can think of do this……is because they’re allowed to. It’s really not that complicated.
Lawrence Tierney was the guy that played Elaines father in the one Seinfeld episode. Even all the Seinfeld cast was intimidated by him on the set especially. That is probably why that was the only episode he was in.
I thought Disney would never bring Wesley Snipes back after what happened on the set of BLADE TRINITY Especially considering their zero tolerance on people with a criminal record
In defense of Wesley, I think he had a lot of outside stuff going on and I think the Trinity production just wound up being the lightning rod for all his anger at the time. I think he was getting screwed over with his taxes during all that. And like they mentioned, him and Ryan buried the hatchet.
I had a friend in college whose great uncle was a screenwriter who won an Oscar in the 1940s for Best Screenplay. He had other families that also were connected to Hollywood in the 1940s & he told me his grandmother or great aunt (can't remember which) used to be drinking buddies with Lawrence Tierney. Based on what I've heard, it sounds like Tierney was a major alcoholic for decades & it's probably a reason why he never got bigger parts, but was limited to character roles, mostly in B movies.
I worked in Denver Tech Center back in 1996-1998, and we hired a new secretary in 1998. She was Steven Seagals' assistant during the filming of Executive Decision, and told us that he's "an asshole". She shared a story about Executive Decision and why they killed his character off in the first scene. He demanded to be the lead roll, that Kurt Russell was slated for. So, instead of putting up with Stevens attitude, they killed off his character.
Jeremy Piven acts like a tenting 5 year old on set. Constantly looking for him and trying to get him to go to set when it’s his scene but he refuses outright or takes a hundred detours on the way.
Who’s the German actor that had a string of films with a controversial director and was considered the best actor ever, but was also a NIGHTMARE to work with…..??? The director made a documentary called “My Best Fiend” about their relationship.
Faye Dunaway supposedly angered William Holden so much with her diva-ish behavior, including being late to the set every day, that he held her up against a wall and threatened to push her through it if she didn't stop her crap. There are other horror stories about Faye, including the one where she threw a cup of pee on Roman Polanski because he plucked out one of her hairs. And, of course, there was Bette Davis calling Faye the worst person in the world.
On the other hand, William Holden was an alcoholic that killed a man in Italy while drunk driving. Roman Polanski is a child-molester - And Bette Davis was hardly a prize either. Of course, none of this means that Dunaway _isn't_ an ass, just that one always has to consider the source....
Heard Bret Easton Ellis tell a story about how Christian Bale insisted that he wanted the author's approval of his casting and so a dinner meeting was arranged. Patrick Bateman turned up and refused to break character. Really unnerved him. To top it all off it was a vegan or vegetarian restaurant so Bret couldn't even have a steak. Great performance. Intense human being.
@@mollyneversmiles7930 That depends on the person I guess. The point of the story was that he was sitting across from a serial killer his imagination had created. Being acted out by a manic and very muscular Christian Bale. The comfort of a food you enjoy, plus having the nice sharp steak knife he would have been given, at hand, would have been reassuring.
Tierney had a terrible reputation when he guest starred on Seinfeld as Elaine's father. If he'd behaved normally he probably would've been featured on Seinfeld regularly, but he freaked everyone out. He stole a kitchen knife from the set of Jerry,s apartment.
Everyone on your list is a Boy scout compared to the horrors I witnessed working as an assistant director on the reboot of Hawaii 5-0 in 1997, which never aired. Every day brought a new nightmare. I thought our poor producer was going to have a brain aneurism. I hated him just 60 seconds into a preproduction phone call. That actor is Gary Busey.
He tried to get me fired on day one. (Blessing in disguise) He crashed a brand new Honolulu police car…on purpose. He got into a drunken bar fight just hrs before his set call. He has several incidents involving drugs. Etc, etc.
To think that he was also one of the main names in Under Siege, now I feel bad for Tommy Lee jones having to share a stage with both Steven "You want a piece of this pie" Seagal _and_ Gary "Aliens crashed my motorcycle" Busey.
@@ric010 In fairness, Busey supposedly suffered serious brain-damage in a traffic accident. That wouldn't make him any easier to deal with, but might help explain it a bit....
He claimed he was a born again Christian and was drug free. He had at least 3 incidents involving cocaine that I was privy to. He had several alcohol induced altercations. He ruined the production. He gets no sympathy or ‘pass’ from me.
It’s a shame Mutiny flopped because it really is an excellent picture. I have seen it more times than I can count and there are juicy quotable lines which have stayed with me for years. I just saw it again last night on streaming. Yeah, Brando is difficult but he is amazing in this film as are Trevor Howard and Richard Harris and other supporting cast members. Whatever friction there was on the screen, the end product was first rate
@ I think the film itself got short shrift or maybe too much focus on Brando’s antics as well as the criticism of his British accent which did not trouble me. Trevor was brilliant and deserved more recognition. He did have a pretty varied career
Lebouf has grown up in the last few years. Hes a different man.❤ Marlon Brando raped his costar in Last Tango In Paris. But you chose his poor performance in another movie? Weak.
Can you think of any actors who are infamously difficult to work with? Let us know in the comments.
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😮yea Jessica Beal
You really should have given a mention to Rex Harrison for his work on Dr. Dolittle.
Katherine Heigle also had a reputation for being hard to work with.
How bout you start doing more positive lists? There is enough hate in the world already.
I can think of several other films with a notoriously difficult actor on set, but they're all Marlon Brando again...
Steven Seagal in Out for Justice?? Surely you meant Steven Seagal in every single movie he has ever been in?
He supposedly got worse as the box office grew so that was pretty early on.
He actually wasn’t known as that much of a jerk until “under siege” did super well in the theaters and he got very rich and skyrocketed in fame. Pre-fame and in his first 3 movies those on set just kind of laughed at him behind his back and thought he was delusional. He didn’t start trying to take over sets, mistreat, or boss people around until “Under Siege” came out
@@cbotten106 the thing that profoundly changed him is that after the success of his first few movies culminating with his biggest “under siege”, he became very wealthy and donated some of that money to the Dalai Lama who in return anointed him with a Buddhist title that made him an “elevated human” or such nonsense. So from that point on, he became delusional and thought he was legitimately holier than thou. That’s a true story, you can look it up lol
Listen to the episodes of The Dollop talking about Seagal. The guy is a terrible human.
Seagal is living in Tsar Putin's "Love Dungeon".
Lawrence Tierney also made a bad impression on the Seinfeld cast, when he appeared in a single episode as Elaine's father. The plans for him to be a recurring character changed.
I was coming to say this too. I believe that he took a knife from the set, and just crazy.
he had a lt of issues
That episode was horrible. There was nothing funny about it, and you could feel the tension.
@@murrayroodbaard207 You can't be serious? It's one of the funniest ones - when they were scared of him and wanted to leave. George also impersonates him. But, he was apparently really strange - I think the cast of Reservoir Dogs also had things to say about him?
@@danp2306
There was hardly anything funny about it. And now that we have backstage info it also makes sense why it wasn't funny.
I love John Leguizamo. The fact that he hates Steven Seagal and even created a character based off of him makes me love him even more.
I loved him in Romeo + Juliet, Ice Age, and Encanto
DITTO!
agreed but his comment about running away if they see each other was weak. he shoulda said he’s gonna kick SS’s ass
Yeah but everytime I see him I just think Fucking Benny Blanco!
@@dannyaraya8017 Nah, that would have been even weaker because then he'd be seen as a wannabe toughguy and would be totally fake.
My father was an electrician one on of Richard Pryor's movies (I forget the name) and he told me he was the nastiest guy he ever met. I'm sure the drugs had something to do with it, but that always stuck with me because I never heard my father say one bad thing about anybody else.
Surprised Chevy chase from community isn’t on here
That’s a tv show
That's not a movie
@ASMR-Arboretum Chevy Chase has been in movies. So I'm surprised he's not on the list either
@@106andie ahh fair enough I’m dumb lol. five seasons and a movie though iykyk 😂
@@gazellebeast3995 Ok, you can be forgiven for the first gaff, but five seasons and a movie? IT'S SIX! SIX SEASONS AND A MOVIE! GODDAMN YOU!"
Seagal thought William Forsythe was better than him. Honey, a plastic bag blowing down the street has better acting chops. And Leto. I think the only reason he plays sociopaths so well is because he isn't acting.
@@temporaladvisor3958 yeah plus with Leto I saw on you tube so there's always a little doubt but these I believe. Jared Leto accused of having relations with underage girls and he has an island where women can pay him $13,000.00 to get it on. I believe it this guy sent his costars in suicide squad used condoms and other weird crap.
You just nailed it so well with Leto. He's not acting, he's psychotic.
Leto is a mistake.
I can't stand jared Leto; he is a horrible actor full of himself. As the joker, he was a joke. Sometimes, I don't understand how they can cast unbearable actors like Leto or rachel zegler.
@@hervegeorges
Zegler won’t be getting cast much longer. Except maybe in porn.
Some actors feel like being assholes is part of their process. If I were a movie producer I would fire any actor who felt tormenting his costars was necessary to get into character.
Sadly sometimes it not your choice. If the actor/actress is a bigger name than you, then the studio would have no problems getting rid of you.
@@christopherfoley8322 Producers provide the funding for a movie, it's much easier to replace an actor than it is to replace someone who is putting up 25% of the cost of your film.
@@krashd i net unless you are a famous director, i truly do bet they'd choose a big named actor over a small director.
I get method acting, but some of these folks take it way too far. I don’t believe, if I were an actor, I’d ever work with them twice.
@@christopherfoley8322😂😂😂That is so very very wrong.
Lawrence Tierney was in a Seinfeld ep where he was cast as Elaine’s father and during filming he was caught hiding a kitchen knife hidden in his coat from the set kitchen and said he was planning on improvising a scene between him and Jason Alexander’s George safe to say he never reprised his role. P.S. everyone was terrified of him.
😂😂He sounds like a genius though
This guy also did an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation around roughly the same time and apparently freaked out the entire cast. Patrick Stewart admitted that they were all scared to death of him! LOL
I heard he was calling George "Mr. Pink" in several takes and REFUSED to do otherwise lol
I don’t know about the cast, but German actor Klaus Kinski was practically the mortal enemy of director Werner Herzog on the films “Aguirre The Wrath of God” and “Fitzcarraldo.”
Had a hand as well as an eye for the ladies too.
@@mrbedford... I would rather forget that, if possible.
@@mrbedford Including his own daughter.
Yeah I'm shocked he's not on here. He's pretty infamous for his behavior.
They hated each other but Herzog kept casting Kinski in his movies. 🤣
Here's another good one, Lindsey Lohan in Georgia Rule. During production, fellow cast members and producers(including Jane Fonda) have called her out for being unprofessional by acting like a diva and either showing up late or being absent due to her then notorious partying lifestyle.
That whole movie you can feel Lohan’s chaos. I loved it but I find that I never want to watch again.
Well she was on cocaine.
Wasn’t just her. Felicity Huffman was drinking heavily on set as well.
Lindsey Lohan is a terrible actress. Don't know why anyone would hire her in the first place.
@@hummingbird11 I can think of a few reasons but never mind. lol
Interesting list thanks but I think Jared Leto is the worst actor to work with
I do not condone Leto, but Steven Seagal is known also bullying and for really punching stunt actors and actors on purpose when filming action scenes, not just for being presumptuous, I would say that is worst than nasty or weird behavior
@@kleinkaufman8940he has severely injured stunt actors just because.
Shia captured the authenticity of being a tanker. During war you’re lucky to get a break out of the tank to clean your body with a water soaked bandana at times. You keep a Gatorade bottle to piss in your station and eat crackers and cheese to prolong periods of having to take a crap.
Method acting doesn’t win you a lot of fans
“You keep a Gatorade bottle to piss in your station and eat crackers and cheese to prolong periods of having to take a crap.”
I do this while playing computer games. I know their struggle.
Shia pulled method when it wasn't required, or even necessary. Reminds me of the time Dustin Hoffman got himself hungover and sleep deprived for a scene onely to have Lawrence Oliver ask him if he had actually tried acting.
He pulled a tooth out on set with pliers for the "method."
@ I did it in real life to avoid a US Navy dentist. So, kudos to him.
Lawrence Tierney also guest starred in an episode of "Seinfeld" as Elaine's father, but what was set to be a recurring stint (like Jerry's and George's parents), was reduced to a single episode because no one wanted to work with him.
Jerry Seinfeld said that Tierney carried a knife around with him on set, which freaked people out, and also a lot of the same complaints Tarantino made about him.
"Master of the house.."
The hell Jared Leto put his _Suicide Squad_ castmates through--you just can’t make that stuff up, and Val Kilmer’s _The Island of Dr. Moreau_ remake behavior would get him fired from any set if he tried it today.
Marlon Brando had Kilmer matched on the set of "Dr Moreau".
I feel bad for anyone dealing with those two egomaniacs.
Rob Morrow quit the film because of those two.
Surprised some of his costars didnt make him eat his gifts. Leto has been lucky he hasnt run into the wrong costar yet.
@@dhenderson1810
Marlon Brando was actually the only one who put Kilmer in his place.
@@murrayroodbaard207 Funny, considering Brando's antics, not just on this film but his whole career, he is the last to talk about professionalism.
Did the pot at Brando's house call his kettle black?
When terrible ppl like Leto use "method acting" as an excuse to be terrible.
One question: Why have a photo of Jessica Biel as your thumbnail for this video? She's not one of the "hated" cast members on the list. Misleading eh?
No. She just didn't like working with Wesley Snipes.
You can't see why they used Jessica Biel's photo...?
@murrayroodbaard207 Precisely my point...clickbait
@@TheNinjaStuff Clickbait. Cool photo of Jessica Biel but it doesn't fit the topic of the video
Because I'm not clicking the video if it has a Shia LaBeouf thumbnail.
I'm surprised Jeffrey Jones in "The Devil's Advocate" isn't here. I thought Al Pacino had him killed halfway through the movie because he & Keanu Reeves found him standoffish.
Maybe Jones was distracted by the young ones.
Supposedly David S Goyer took Away Snipes executive production role and that's why he was like that on set
Goyer is a very mediocre writer. I can’t imagine how he is as a Director.
Ooo, good tea. That would at least give a reason for it. He wasn't just a giant jack*ss for no reason, he was just a big baby taking it out on his co-workers.
My understanding was that Snipes resented being reduced to a supporting character in the movie....
No Jim Carrey and "Man on the Moon"? Carrey was so horrible on set that there is a documentary (Jim and Andy) solely about how terrible Jim was and the producers hid it from the public for decades
Someone i know who works on production sets said that Ian McShane was the worst she ever met.
They almost had Shia in David Ayer's Suicide Squad but believed he was crazier than a schizophrenic
The Bounty used for "Mutiny on the Bounty" - Marlon Brando's version - was built in Lunenburg, NS. I was actually on the boat with my parents when it was at the Fisheries Museum of the Atlantic in Lunenburg (home port of the Bluenose II), back in the late 1980s. It was a beautiful ship... Too bad it sunk during Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
It was built by the same company that built the original Bluenose in 1921.
When they were filming 55 DAYS IN PEKING, Ava Gardner was such a pain in the neck that they killed off her character just so they could stop working with her!
Remember that such diva behavior is rare among actors. (Few of them can afford to get a bad reputation!)
Have you done a video about the most difficult directors?
When you look at the history of that picture it was a disaster from day one. Gardner was more than likely right about her issues w the script.
Lawrence Tierney was also a lunatic when he was a guest on seinfeld. Larry and Jerry tell some story of him stealing a knife or something on set.
Whether it's in the movies or off screen there is always drama between actors/actresses.
I like how John Leguizamo, despite knowing the guy is a fat fool, knows he still would get his ass kicked if Seagal got a hold of him.
As much of a punk John is today. if John got into a fight with Steve then Steve would've ran like the coward we all know him to be.
@@JustTooDamnHonest I have no doubt Steve would crush him. He really just needs to sit on him.
John Leguizamo is a scrawny runt. Seagal is a fat fool, but he's 6 inches taller, 60 pounds heavier, and a legit martial artist (in a silly discipline).
@@JustTooDamnHonestSegal is a huge guy tho which is why Leguizamo said that. Dude is 6'4". He's a fat ass now but still being 6'4" is a considerable size advantage.
@@paynoattentionplease I know and now the only way that Seagal would win against Legu is if Seagal fell on him.
Heard there were lots of issues with Bruce Willis while making Cop Out. Kevin Smith was pretty vocal about it.
I have seen a while video series of Kevin Smith bitching about different people he worked with.
I sounds like Smith is as much the problem as anyone else.
@@dhenderson1810 Yeah, that sounds like a common denominator, if you don't get on well with a lot of people then often it is you that is the problem.
@@krashd Well, Kevin Smith is not a trained director. He's also constantly working while high. So, whenever he worked with highly trained actors or really professional people they would get annoyed by him saying "get me the lens that goes like this *hand gesture*" to the DP. Bruce Willis is classically trained, but he's also a former mega star which makes him a big diva. So its a perfect storm of zero respect.
I've seen Smith's complaints. It occurred to me that nearly everything bitchy he had to say about Willis could be attributed to his declining condition that forced him into retirement.
@@_XR40_ Except that he was doing it more than a full decade before he even had the disorder. He's got the fast acting dementia, and Smith is FAR from the only one to call him out on how he was acting on set in those decades. Willis has had those complaints from pretty much EVERYONE that wasn't relying on mutual connections for work (or thought they didn't) since the late 90's. They were there during 5th Element, 6th sense and just became the norm of working with the guy.
That's almost 30 years of dozens of people saying the same thing.
Once you add in the actors PR teams, the charitable takes on him and his age of diagnosis, that all points to someone pulling diva behaviour after a string of successes
I read that michael biehn and Tom Sizemore both hated working with Val Kilmer. Also Julia Roberts and nick nolte hated each other
Apparently Jim Carrey, Bobby DeNiro, Ashley Judd, Tommy Lee Jones & Chris O'Donnell also hated working with Kilmer.
@@kyleboulanger170 Damn that just so sad
@@kyleboulanger170 Well, that would explain why Kilmer just fell off the radar. He was so charismatic and had a few big roles but then just fell off into D movie land. Him being bad to work with would explain it, like the others who did the same thing.
@@kyleboulanger170
To be fair, Jim Carrey and Tommy Lee Jones hated each other too. Seems everyone in that movie hated each other.
Not a movie but look at how everyone affiliated with Community talks about Chevy Chase.
*Caddyshack...
Why is this so fing difficult for people? You want to dunk on a guy yet you struggle to select a movie.
@ I chose Community because there’s a lot of stories already out about how miserable Chevy was to work with there, and because none of the significant cast/directors/writers are dead (meaning there’s always the chance for them to provide more details).
Also, from what I understand of his career, he wasn’t quite as much of a raging asshole in the earlier part of his career (the original SNL cast, for example, didn’t want to work with him because he would report their using drugs to Lorne and wasn’t as comfortable doing improv as everyone else in that cast was.)
@@I_Did_A_Ting The examples they're thinking of come from Community, not Caddyshack, why is that so difficult for you? Relax.
@@I_Did_A_Ting You seem like a real load.
Christmas Vacation too. The director, Chris Columbus, left the filming to work on Home Alone because he couldn't stand Chevy Chase.
Klinton Spilsbury, the title character in the 1981 movie Legend of the Lone Ranger Had allegedly been a nightmare to work with onset, and couldn’t even deliver his lines properly to the point where they brought in Stacey Keach to dub over the voice. The studio had hoped, casting an unknown in the lead would pay off similar to the Superman movies, but it turned out to be a critical and commercial failure. In fact, it’s the man’s only, acting credit to date
In fairness, there have been quite a few attempts to revive The Lone Ranger. Every one has been an utter failure. Problem is that the character is largely forgotten except by older viewers - And those older viewers inevitably compare the "new" versions to Clayton Moore's version. The fact is, some franchises really have to be retired when the original cast gets too old (At least until the original fans all pass away). No matter how hard they may try, Will Smith can never be James West, Ralph Fiennes can never be John Steed. Sometimes, the popularity of a character is based entirely on _the actor's portrayal_ of the character....
Method actors excusing their bad behavior by saying "i am in character" is the same as an abusive drunk saying "it's what happens when I drink".
Nah man. If every time I did something it resulted in me hurting people, I'd stop doing that thing. Grow up and take some accountability.
Case in point. Using a lit cigarette on a cast member isn't a prank, it's assault.
Doing your job is not the same as drinking, dude.
What i don't understand is why these actors don't simply punch a guy's lights out when he does crap like that.
I think Yaphet Kotto could have wrung Richard Pryor's neck if he wanted to.
I saw a T-shirt once with a motto on it that apparently perfectly describes Tierney's personality: "instant asshole -- just add alcohol." He apparently was difficult even when sober, and when drunk, a nightmare. He apparently frightened and intimidated people in the entertainment industry for his entire career. One notable exception was WWII hero Audie Murphy. When a drunken Tierney was causing trouble at a party being belligerent toward the other guests, Murphy calmly explained to Tierney what would happen if he didn't leave, and Tierney left. Murphy later said said, “If somebody hadn’t stopped me, I would have very happily have killed him.”
Audie Murphy is the most decorated soldier in US history and was 5’5”. He would have shredded Tierney and Tierney knew it!
Hold up… no mention at all for Klaus Kinski in “Fitzcarraldo”?? 🤣 One of the producers legit admitted to setting up a plot to kill the guy because he was such an asshole lmao
That was the director, Werner Herzog himself. But you have to take what he told with a grain of salt, because he has admitted to lie and exaggerate in interviews, to make them more interesting.😁
That said all the trouble put aside, Klaus was also his muse. He would have probably kept making movies with him, if he hadn't died.
Boy did Blade Trinities hate come full circle
7:00 Val Kilmer was difficult on sets of movies because he was always angry that He was being cast in roles for his good looks and not his genuine Juliard trained acting talent. He hated top gun, Batman forever, Island of Dr. Moreau which were big budget special effects heavy films. But when he did stuff like “tombstone” or “the doors” he got along with everyone and did his best work because it took serious commitment and acting on his part which he liked
His work on the doors deserved awards, he was snubbed
Then why he got the role in movies that's crucial for him ? I get it.
Ah.
So what you're saying is he couldn't say no?
P.S. His acting in Top Gun was attrocious.
You can defend him all you want but you have to take the bad with the good and treat them both the same. Yes you will be happier in a movie you enjoy doing than not but you don't have to be an A hole in the ones you don't. That's like a kid throwing a tantrum bc they can't get what they want.
I honestly thought Megan Fox was going to be #1 for Jennifer's Body. The rest of the cast sat away from her during the promos/interviews
@DevilrMusic Hysterical movie, though.
A few years later and the world is like "Ahhhhh, now I get it.".
Richard Pryor is one of the best examples of people that have become legendary *after* *they* *died* His t.v. show only aired 4 episodes and it doesn't help that he was high and drunk all the time but it's gotten so much hype that it sounds like some kind of revolutionary show that was too early for it's time. You can even buy volumes 1 and 2, making it sound like it's so much but then you check runtime and it's 1 hour. lmao
Leto and Bale. American psycho must have been fun 😂😂
@@Mumbler100 Even Freud might pass.✌️
it matched brando and kilmer's dr moreau 😆
William Shatner and the cast of "Star Trek". Originally stemming from the TV series, some, if not all of the cast's animosity towards Shatner had to continue into the film series.
Yeah but it was more nuanced than these cases. Shatner has an enormous ego, but he oscillated between tolerable moments and bad moments.
@@ulyssesocounter8488
He and Nimoy were good friends.
@@ulyssesocounter8488 But the thing with Shatner is: He was the star, actually. He carried the show. He had the title role in a tv series before Trek and did stuff after. Chekhov did Babylon 5, Nimoy needed psych help cause he was confused whether or not he was his character and wrote books about that and the Zulu actor was gay and did nothing much else. Same with "Castle" btw. Nathan Fillion was (and still is) a/the star. The female co wanted the same amount of money and the show got cancelled. Fillion got yet another successful show running shortly thereafter, but she vanished.
There actually is a difference. Secondly: Even on a good day, the original Star Trek was a very campy show with minimal budget, sets and effects. Much like the Adam West Batman. Working on that set and then talking about it is nothing to brag about. I would keep it quiet.
Don't know about the others, but George Takei is a complete asshole himself.
@@donaldduck830 This is what people forget. Shatner was the "Star" of the show. He was ably supported by Nimoy and DeForest Kelly - Everyone else was a bit-player. Sulu wasn't even in half the episodes and could have been easily replaced by anyone in the ones he _was_ in. Star Trek was not an "ensemble comedy". People like Takei whining that Shatner prevented him from being a _star_ are delusional. He was never going to be a star, he wasn't even a very good actor....
I am sure working with someone as intense as Christian would be so hard.... But DAMN he is amazing!
Yep, the comments about Bale are just jealousy. Just listen to the actress: quote "I did not even know what method acting was" unquote. total incompetence.
Back around 1969/70 Lawrence Tierney was out of acting and working construction in NYC. My father, who was working with "Dillinger", as everyone called him because of a movie role he played in the mid '40s, got the bright idea of inviting him over for Christmas dinner. At one point he discovered a bottle of liquor and very much became the character described by Tarantino. Years later I purchased a copy of Reservoir Dogs and saw the DVD had a tribute to Mr. Tierney. I thought, "You've got to be kidding!" Turned out, the "tribute" was spot on, with Tarantino nailing his personality as I remembered. Sadly, my father pre-deceased him and didn't get to see the tribute, of which he would have gotten a laugh.
5:52 that's actually crazy bc Leto's Joker is the worse one to date and that's actually pretty much a Joker thing to do, but also not. His gifts are more "Ha Ha" rather "Yuck"
You can't really blame Snipes considering how Goyer shafted him. Also Reynolds character wasn't that good
Reynolds character was the best part of that movie! I watch Blade and Blade ll for Blade, but I watch Blade Trinity for Reynold's Hannibal King's deadpan humor and fearless ability to take all the pain while still joking. Blade in this movie came off as a sanctimonious ass, so Hannibal was a breath of fresh air.
Jerry Seinfeld has a crazy story about working with Tierney on Seinfeld. That dude seems to have been a complete nightmare on every job he ever had.
Maura is nice
My gosh, Scott Eastwood is a clone of his dad!
had no idea it was his son until now but once you look for more than a sec the resemblance is uncanny
Do NOT take this video's comments about Island of Dr. Moreau as facts. They obviously did little to no research or even watched the documentary about it. Val Kilmer was full of bad attitude because he looked forward to working with one of his heroes ,Marlon Brando, only to find out that Brando didn't like Kilmer or his work and was rude to Kilmer. And Kilmer's screentime was cut because Brando didn't want to do scenes with Kilmer.
So he was petty and childish and took out his hurt feelings on everyone else? Doesn't help!
Ok but so why did he burn another actor's scalp with his cigarette? If he had an issue with Brando then why use another actor as an ashtray???
@@azizcammioneur7311 Val Kilmer can burn some random actors head, he sure as Hell couldn't walk up to Brando and light him on fire. Though I'm sure he wanted to.
@@lazyhomebody1356 I think Brando refusing to learn lines, refusing to show up on time, and acting like a mean bully jackass to almost everyone on set except the little Minnie Me guy is pretty childish as well.
@kraigowaffles2110 But Matthew Broderick said Brando ALWAYS acts like that and is still a great actor. But I don't respect his behavior at all either
Imagine not liking someone because you can't share pleasantries with them.. Bale treats his job like a job.
Bale doesn't know boundaries. Real actors turn it on for the camera, then switch it off.
@KnugLidi define "real actor". Because Bale is just as much of a "real actor" as anyone else.
Oh c'mon, listen to what was being said. It's not just 'not sharing pleasantries' it's unnerving people and acting like an asshole. Bale freaked out Brett Easton Ellis the author of the damn book for godsakes. And lets not forget the rant against the poor tech during the Terminator movie. You don't treat your colleagues on a job like rubbish, especially on something that is entirely collaborative.
@@LFire12yet he killed it playing Bateman. Like he basically always does
I was expecting to see something about Sasha Mitchell here, that the director of Kickboxing described as something like “too dumb to exist”, or JCVD coked out of his mind during Street Fighter filming
I think the island of dr moreau is pretty much symbolic of what America is these days. People acting like animals out of control.
James Woods is infamous for his on set behaviors....
As is Denis Leary.
He’s also just a creepy guy off the set as well.
@@kellidinit3725
Oh really?
Examples?
Tierney was one scary dude. Everyone on Seinfeld was afraid of him (on and off camera).
I wonder why Denzel didn't get mention after refusing to kiss/play intimate scenes with Julia Roberts during The Pelican Belief since he didn't want to 'piss off ' or let his black fans down. He simply would not do anything with a white woman, and treated her quite badly. Remember being disappointed reading that. No one should ever treat anyone of a different colour/ethnicity badly/differently.
So....refusing to kiss someone is treating them badly?
Actors and crews have complained about Daniel Day-Lewis and his extreme method acting, because he stays in character throughout the shoot, includes on breaks but they all praise him for the end results.
If he wants to stay in character throughout his shoot that is HIS choice to make, as long as he doesn't make anyone's life miserable.
@@murrayroodbaard207 That's the deciding factor I think. He never needlessly inflicted others with his method acting.
POOR SHIA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Snipes was pissed at what they were doing to the Blade character and legacy. They made it camp, and he wasn't having it, and I think he just made it clear by treating people like shit, and copping an attitude. I still liked Blade III. I liked all the Blade movies, even though they didn't have as much continuity as I wanted to see. Snipes was the bedrock character, who held it all together, but every director/producer wanted to put their own stamp on the franchise, without regard for what came before or what might come after. Kind of sucks. I probably would've watched 5 or 6 Blade movies.
The best Blade movie is the 1st. It got "interesting" w. the second film.
The 3rd film was too campy.
Brando was notorious for acting like a spoiled child. One of his last movies The Score he refused to wear pants.
They had to change all his scenes to sitting behind objects.
Everyone he ever met must gave hated a gentlemen by the name of Klaus Kinski.
It's a massive stretch to call Steven Seagal an actor :P
Mandy Patankin was a huge asset except for the Princess Bride and I think Andre had a lot to do with that.
Apparently he was terrible to deal with during filming of Criminal Minds. Hence getting the boot after 3 seasons.
The reason actors and actresses, bands, singers, people at work in a store whatever effin place or situation you can think of do this……is because they’re allowed to.
It’s really not that complicated.
Is number 10 filler that doesn't belong on the list? Yes Absolutely.
I still love hearing about it. I appreciate the slop :)
Lawrence Tierney was the guy that played Elaines father in the one Seinfeld episode. Even all the Seinfeld cast was intimidated by him on the set especially. That is probably why that was the only episode he was in.
Steven seagal was a overhyped action star, he delivered the same tone, same action scenes and he thinks he’s the best? I only liked under siege
List of actors who think, "I'm cast as an asshole, so I will be an asshole".
Brando was famous for intentionally sabotaging movies if he didn't like the script or the director.
Julia Roberts. Steven Spielberg refused to ever work with her again after Hook.
Imagine all these hard to work with actors under one set!!! THEY would turn into the real housewives!!!!!!!
I heard RAchel McAdams COMPLETELY hated Ryan Gosling in The Notebook
Val Kilmer you could also add Batman Forever
I thought Disney would never bring Wesley Snipes back after what happened on the set of BLADE TRINITY
Especially considering their zero tolerance on people with a criminal record
lol taxes man he’s fine😂
If zero tolerance for criminal records is true at Disney, Tim Allen wouldn't have a career.
You must've forgotten about Robert Downey Jr
Zero tolerance about criminal record??? Lol. What about Downey Jr?
@@azizcammioneur7311 Disney was nowhere near when the first Iron Man got made
In defense of Wesley, I think he had a lot of outside stuff going on and I think the Trinity production just wound up being the lightning rod for all his anger at the time. I think he was getting screwed over with his taxes during all that. And like they mentioned, him and Ryan buried the hatchet.
That's not a defense. It's an excuse.
@murrayroodbaard207 ...and also a defense lol. You seem like a ray of sunshine dude
@@stephengrigg5988
No. It's just an excuse.
He was being paid to do a job.
Nice attempt at distraction though.
@@murrayroodbaard207 whatever you say dude. You seem to think your opinion carries a ton of weight, so I won't burst your bubble. Take care.
Are we getting the same list over and over at different periods of time🤔
Ahhhh..clickbait thumbnails...where would WatchMojo be without you?
Brando’s performances in Apocalypse now & The island are just selfish man 🤣
I had a friend in college whose great uncle was a screenwriter who won an Oscar in the 1940s for Best Screenplay. He had other families that also were connected to Hollywood in the 1940s & he told me his grandmother or great aunt (can't remember which) used to be drinking buddies with Lawrence Tierney. Based on what I've heard, it sounds like Tierney was a major alcoholic for decades & it's probably a reason why he never got bigger parts, but was limited to character roles, mostly in B movies.
I worked in Denver Tech Center back in 1996-1998, and we hired a new secretary in 1998.
She was Steven Seagals' assistant during the filming of Executive Decision, and told us that he's "an asshole".
She shared a story about Executive Decision and why they killed his character off in the first scene. He demanded to be the lead roll, that Kurt Russell was slated for. So, instead of putting up with Stevens attitude, they killed off his character.
Marlin Brando in Apocaplyse Now is legendary.
Jeremy Piven acts like a tenting 5 year old on set. Constantly looking for him and trying to get him to go to set when it’s his scene but he refuses outright or takes a hundred detours on the way.
Tenting??
Klaus Kinski in "Fitzcarraldo" and literally - anywhere else :D
Who’s the German actor that had a string of films with a controversial director and was considered the best actor ever, but was also a NIGHTMARE to work with…..??? The director made a documentary called “My Best Fiend” about their relationship.
Klaus Kinski?
@ BINGO!!!!
This video seems to make out that Shawn Andrews is Rory Cochrane who played stoner Slater in Dazed and Confused.
Faye Dunaway supposedly angered William Holden so much with her diva-ish behavior, including being late to the set every day, that he held her up against a wall and threatened to push her through it if she didn't stop her crap. There are other horror stories about Faye, including the one where she threw a cup of pee on Roman Polanski because he plucked out one of her hairs. And, of course, there was Bette Davis calling Faye the worst person in the world.
On the other hand, William Holden was an alcoholic that killed a man in Italy while drunk driving. Roman Polanski is a child-molester - And Bette Davis was hardly a prize either. Of course, none of this means that Dunaway _isn't_ an ass, just that one always has to consider the source....
Heard Bret Easton Ellis tell a story about how Christian Bale insisted that he wanted the author's approval of his casting and so a dinner meeting was arranged. Patrick Bateman turned up and refused to break character. Really unnerved him. To top it all off it was a vegan or vegetarian restaurant so Bret couldn't even have a steak. Great performance. Intense human being.
If you have seen videos of interviews with him he is nothing like any of his roles. Really a great actor.
@@ironmonkey1512 He is indeed. Once was enough with The Machinist. But the man gives a role his everything. Before and during the shoot.
Dude is vegetarian, I think people can tolerate one effin dinner without meat, no?
@@mollyneversmiles7930 That depends on the person I guess. The point of the story was that he was sitting across from a serial killer his imagination had created. Being acted out by a manic and very muscular Christian Bale. The comfort of a food you enjoy, plus having the nice sharp steak knife he would have been given, at hand, would have been reassuring.
I loved Jessica Biel in Blade Trinity. She was so sexy.
You loved her because she was sexy?
what about The Texas Chainsaw Massacre?
@@brandonrobinson529 and summer catch
My brother thought that she was the best thing about the "Total Recall" reboot.
@@dhenderson1810 She was. That movie should never have happened.
Nothing wrong with not breaking character
Those method people playing a nasty character is really not a fair test.
Charlie Sheen is on this list, isn't he, Watchmojo?
Tierney had a terrible reputation when he guest starred on Seinfeld as Elaine's father. If he'd behaved normally he probably would've been featured on Seinfeld regularly, but he freaked everyone out. He stole a kitchen knife from the set of Jerry,s apartment.
I think Brando was *much* more hated on one of his other sets.... something about butter....
It's okay for you to tell the truth about Ryan Reynolds now, Wesley. hahahaha! No one else likes him either now.
Everyone on your list is a Boy scout compared to the horrors I witnessed working as an assistant director on the reboot of Hawaii 5-0 in 1997, which never aired. Every day brought a new nightmare. I thought our poor producer was going to have a brain aneurism. I hated him just 60 seconds into a preproduction phone call. That actor is Gary Busey.
He tried to get me fired on day one. (Blessing in disguise) He crashed a brand new Honolulu police car…on purpose. He got into a drunken bar fight just hrs before his set call. He has several incidents involving drugs. Etc, etc.
To think that he was also one of the main names in Under Siege, now I feel bad for Tommy Lee jones having to share a stage with both Steven "You want a piece of this pie" Seagal _and_ Gary "Aliens crashed my motorcycle" Busey.
@@krashd Yeah, it really sounds like a nightmare. Really shows how Tommy Lee Jones is amazing to still put out such a great movie.
@@ric010 In fairness, Busey supposedly suffered serious brain-damage in a traffic accident. That wouldn't make him any easier to deal with, but might help explain it a bit....
He claimed he was a born again Christian and was drug free. He had at least 3 incidents involving cocaine that I was privy to. He had several alcohol induced altercations. He ruined the production. He gets no sympathy or ‘pass’ from me.
Patton Oswalt complaining is the definition of the "Pot and Kettle".
He wasn't complaining...just relating a funny moment.
Patton Oswalt himself is thought of quite the pork chop, so not sure his opinion on other people is to be taken seriously.
His opinion shouldn't be taken too seriously. It was just some funny stories.
You Blade fans are silly
@@chalkandcheese1868 Not a Blade fan, silly.
@@BowlCrossy You silly Blade fans are dishonest
@@chalkandcheese1868 What a sad life you lead.
It’s a shame Mutiny flopped because it really is an excellent picture. I have seen it more times than I can count and there are juicy quotable lines which have stayed with me for years. I just saw it again last night on streaming. Yeah, Brando is difficult but he is amazing in this film as are Trevor Howard and Richard Harris and other supporting cast members. Whatever friction there was on the screen, the end product was first rate
Trevor Howard was unforgettable in MotB. The fact that he didn't even get nominated for an Oscar is a blight on the Academy.
@ I think the film itself got short shrift or maybe too much focus on Brando’s antics as well as the criticism of his British accent which did not trouble me. Trevor was brilliant and deserved more recognition. He did have a pretty varied career
Ironman is the safe bet but I’ll be Deadpool’s only if I can be Blind Al. lol
Lebouf has grown up in the last few years. Hes a different man.❤
Marlon Brando raped his costar in Last Tango In Paris. But you chose his poor performance in another movie? Weak.
Wait...whuuut? R*ped? 😮
"Shy Luff"😂😂😂
JARED LETO IS SUCH A BAD ACTOR!
I wish people would stop badmouthing Segal. It would be better if his name just faded away with his crappy movies.
Heard James Woods could be a little difficult