Hollywood’s brightest stars headlined the year’s biggest flops
THERE’S an easy one: what do George Clooney, Johnny Depp, Reese Witherspoon, Adam Sandler, Mila Kunis, Hugh Jackman and Bradley Cooper have in common?
They’re some of the highest-paid hotshots in Hollywood, of course.
But they’re members of another group, too — paragons of Tinseltown nobility, who have headlined some of the biggest box office flops of the year. And they’re not the only A-listers who have failed to get moviegoers to theatres.
A year of high-profile bombs that kicked off with Mortdecai and Jupiter Ascending has culminated in a few more failures in the last couple weeks. By the Sea barely made a splash despite the star power of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt; Our Brand Is Crisis tanked, even though it starred Sandra Bullock; and this past weekend, the combined wattage of Julia Roberts, Nicole Kidman and Chiwetel Ejiofor wasn’t enough to get audiences interested in Secret in Their Eyes. The movie’s $6.6 million box office failed to reach even the studio’s ultra-conservative predictions.
It isn’t always an actor’s fault if his or her movie doesn’t click with audiences. But the fact that 2015’s biggest debacles featured so many high-profile stars begs a question: why do studios put so much faith in big-name actors when they clearly aren’t reliable money-makers?
The belief that a movie is only marketable if it has a major star is antiquated but also stubbornly commonplace. Look at Ridley Scott’s explanation for his casting choices in Exodus: Gods and Kings, for example. When people complained that all the Egyptians were played by white men, the director explained to Variety: “I can’t mount a film of this budget, where I have to rely on tax rebates in Spain, and say that my lead actor is Mohammad so-and-so from such-and-such. I’m just not going to get it financed. So the question doesn’t even come up.”