Leslie Nielsen Syndrome: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
(update some work links)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}

[[File:leslienielsentake2 7545.jpg|link=Leslie Nielsen|frame|There has to be a perfectly rational explanation. Maybe there's more than one Leslie Nielsen in Hollywood!<ref>Top: ''[[Night Train to Paris]]'', ''[[Snatched]]'', ''[[Project Kill|Project: Kill!]]''; Bottom: ''[[Surf Ninjas]]'', ''[[Spy Hard]]'', ''[[Scary Movie|Scary Movie 3]]''.</ref>]]
[[File:leslienielsentake2 7545.jpg|link=Leslie Nielsen|frame|There has to be a perfectly rational explanation. Maybe there's more than one Leslie Nielsen in Hollywood!<ref>Top: ''[[Night Train to Paris]]'', ''[[Snatched]]'', ''[[Project Kill|Project: Kill!]]''; Bottom: ''[[Surf Ninjas]]'', ''[[Spy Hard]]'', ''[[Scary Movie|Scary Movie 3]]''.</ref>]]


{{quote|''"Dying is easy. Comedy is hard."'' |'''Edmund Kean'''}}
{{quote|''"Dying is easy. Comedy is hard."''
|'''Edmund Kean'''}}


The casting opposite of [[Tom Hanks Syndrome]]. With this trope, a successful actor with a history of dramatic roles plays against type and stars in a comedy, [[Played for Laughs|playing it for laughs]] and generally acting silly. And it works. Unlike [[Tom Hanks Syndrome]], the change will rarely be permanent: the actor will still dip into serious roles, and may even bounce back and forth from comedy to drama like a rubber ball. But sometimes, the actor finds a new niche (and a new career) as a comedic performer.
The casting opposite of [[Tom Hanks Syndrome]]. With this trope, a successful actor with a history of dramatic roles plays against type and stars in a comedy, [[Played for Laughs|playing it for laughs]] and generally acting silly. And it works. Unlike [[Tom Hanks Syndrome]], the change will rarely be permanent: the actor will still dip into serious roles, and may even bounce back and forth from comedy to drama like a rubber ball. But sometimes, the actor finds a new niche (and a new career) as a comedic performer.
Line 32: Line 32:
* Mark Hamill got his start playing heroic Jedi Knight Luke Skywalker in the original ''[[Star Wars]]'' trilogy. While he still revisits that role from time to time (in films like ''[[The Last Jedi]]'' and ''[[The Rise of Skywalker]]''), these days he tends to be VA for [[The Joker]] in, well, ''any'' [[Batman]] adaptation where the Joker needs a VA. Clearly, the two characters are as different as night and day.
* Mark Hamill got his start playing heroic Jedi Knight Luke Skywalker in the original ''[[Star Wars]]'' trilogy. While he still revisits that role from time to time (in films like ''[[The Last Jedi]]'' and ''[[The Rise of Skywalker]]''), these days he tends to be VA for [[The Joker]] in, well, ''any'' [[Batman]] adaptation where the Joker needs a VA. Clearly, the two characters are as different as night and day.
* John Lithgow was known for his dramatic villains before ''[[3rd Rock from the Sun]]''.
* John Lithgow was known for his dramatic villains before ''[[3rd Rock from the Sun]]''.
** Lithgow pretty much played anything: A transsexual in ''[[The World According To Garp]]'', a scientist/father figure in ''[[The Manhattan Project]]'', a minister in ''[[Footloose]]'', and comedic villains in ''[[Buckaroo Banzai]]'' and ''[[Santa Claus]]: [[The Movie]]''.
** Lithgow pretty much played anything: A transsexual in ''[[The World According To Garp]]'', a scientist/father figure in ''[[The Manhattan Project]]'', a minister in ''[[Footloose]]'', and comedic villains in ''[[The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension]]'' and ''[[Santa Claus: The Movie]]''.
** He breathed new life into ''[[Dexter]]'' in the fourth season, after two seasons of misery, with his awesome performance as a serial killer.
** He breathed new life into ''[[Dexter]]'' in the fourth season, after two seasons of misery, with his awesome performance as a serial killer.
*** And it wasn't the first time he'd played a serial killer, he was also the title character in ''[[Raising Cain]]''.
*** And it wasn't the first time he'd played a serial killer, he was also the title character in ''[[Raising Cain]]''.

Latest revision as of 03:40, 3 December 2020

There has to be a perfectly rational explanation. Maybe there's more than one Leslie Nielsen in Hollywood![1]

"Dying is easy. Comedy is hard."

Edmund Kean

The casting opposite of Tom Hanks Syndrome. With this trope, a successful actor with a history of dramatic roles plays against type and stars in a comedy, playing it for laughs and generally acting silly. And it works. Unlike Tom Hanks Syndrome, the change will rarely be permanent: the actor will still dip into serious roles, and may even bounce back and forth from comedy to drama like a rubber ball. But sometimes, the actor finds a new niche (and a new career) as a comedic performer.

Named after actor Leslie Nielsen, who, after a long career in the fifties, sixties, and seventies as a dramatic lead, turned to comedy in the 80s and thereby rejuvenated his career to the point that, these days, more people know him for his work in Airplane! and Police Squad! than they do for any of his prior dramatic or romantic roles.

Often related to The Comically Serious. See also Playing Against Type. Note that this trope is not about serious performers who have done comedic work here and there. It is about people who once were well known for serious work, and now are primarily doing comedy.

Examples of Leslie Nielsen Syndrome include: