beamish14 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 25, 2025 3:26 am
I’m trying to think of any living male actors who get the “difficult” tag, and Jason Patric is one of the few who comes to mind
Val Kilmer, Steven Segal, Edward Norton, Shia LaBeouf, Charlie Sheen, Russel Crowe, Mike Myers, Chevy Chase, Richard Dreyfuss, and Wesley Snipes are just a few of the actors rumored to be notoriously difficult to work with. Some have had their careers affected by their reputations (Norton was not asked back to play the Hulk, Val Kilmer ended up in B-movies, Crowe's career cooled off significantly), others may have mellowed over time or kicked a drug habit that affected their on-set behavior.
The other actor besides Fiorentino that Kevin Smith publicly complained about was Bruce Willis, but since Willis was a huge star (and Fiorentino was not), it had no effect on his career. Smith apparently later reconciled with Fiorentino.
No doubt there is a double standard when it comes to female actors, who get away with much less. While I don't think the "difficult" label is only applied to actresses who refuse to sleep with producers, etc. (though Weinstein apparently ruined actresses' careers for this reason, Mira Sorvino went on record about him spreading false rumors about her, which cost her major roles). In some cases, actresses have called out the work they appear in for sexism and gotten a bad rap for it. In retrospect, Katherine Heigl's complaints about
Knocked Up were probably valid. Megan Fox got fired after complaining about Michael Bay and I can't blame her considering how grossly objectified she was in what are essentially kids' movies. Both were crucified by the media at the time.
Sorry for derailing the
Possession thread with the Fiorentino discussion, but her work in
The Last Seduction is one of my all-time favorite performances, and one that singularly elevates a movie from what might have been merely decent to great. Then again, I feel similarely about Isabelle Adjani's performance in
Possession.