John Malkovich is set to make his Marvel debut as a mystery character in this summer’s “The Fantastic Four: First Steps,” but it wasn’t the first Marvel role the Oscar nominee has been offered over the years. The actor revealed an interview with GQ magazine that he’s turned down a few Marvel offers in the past because the pay just wasn’t sufficient enough.
“The reason I didn’t do them had nothing to do with any artistic considerations whatsoever,” Malkovich said. “I didn’t like the deals they made, at all. These films are quite grueling to make… If you’re going to hang from a crane in front of a green screen for six months, pay me. You don’t want to pay me, it’s cool, but then I don’t want to do it, because I’d rather be onstage, or be directing a play, or doing something else.”
What Malkovich was surprised to discover was that filming “The Fantastic Four” was “not that dissimilar to doing theater” because “you imagine a bunch of stuff that isn’t there and do your little play.” He told GQ that he took a role in the movie primarily because he wanted to work with director Matt Shaman again after 2014’s “Cut Bank.”
John Malkovich is one of those folks whose quotes I invariably read in their voice.
with malkovich! malcovich! ringing in my head almost immediately
I have tremendous respect for John Malkovich, and I’ll continue to be a fan of his work, but I don’t like how it sounds when a multimillionaire says “pay me”. I don’t mean that he should accept bad deals, I just mean it’s a bad look.
Knowing your value isn’t a bad look.
True. I’m just bugged by his use of “pay me”, which I’ve only ever heard in the context of working people who are struggling to pay their bills.
It’s no different, though - literally the same exact sentiment. If you want my labor: fuck you, pay me.
I get what you’re saying, but I also get what he’s saying.
Don’t accept less than what you’re worth, or than what the job is worth.
He’s an old dude. The kind of work filming an action movie is way harder than some other types, so if it isn’t paying a reasonable amount for the physical pain, hassles, and potential risks, there’s no reason to do it.
And, yeah, he’s rich. But that doesn’t change the principal. He could he a brand new, young actor and it would still be a good way to look at it. The fact that the only reason he can get away with saying it is after a long career, with the funding that gives him to not give a shit if the companies like it is the real problem
Yeah. I was just being picky about wording, but you expressed it well. Thanks!
In my version of the Afterlife, there’s a theater where you can watch any movie or show and see every version of it with every different actor that was considered for the roles.
I want him as The Impossible Man.