All-Star Cast: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (spelling)
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
{{Examples Need Sorting}}
{{quote|''"Would it have been faster to say who ''isn't'' in this movie? Jesus, it's like the [[Super Smash Bros.]] of Hollywood!"''
{{quote|''"Would it have been faster to say who ''isn't'' in this movie? Jesus, it's like the [[Super Smash Bros.]] of Hollywood!"''
|'''[[The Quest for Geekdom|Arthur Knowledge]]''' on ''[[Mars Attacks!]]''}}
|'''[[The Quest for Geekdom|Arthur Knowledge]]''' on ''[[Mars Attacks!]]''}}
Line 95: Line 96:
* The 2010 film ''Valentine's Day'' has Ashton Kutcher, Jamie Foxx, [[Julia Roberts]], [[Shirley MacLaine]], Kathy Bates, [[Jessica Alba]], Jessica Biel, [[Taylor Lautner]], [[Taylor Swift]], [[Anne Hathaway]], Bradley Cooper, and about a dozen more.
* The 2010 film ''Valentine's Day'' has Ashton Kutcher, Jamie Foxx, [[Julia Roberts]], [[Shirley MacLaine]], Kathy Bates, [[Jessica Alba]], Jessica Biel, [[Taylor Lautner]], [[Taylor Swift]], [[Anne Hathaway]], Bradley Cooper, and about a dozen more.
* ''[[Tropic Thunder]]'' parodied this in its script, while playing it straight with the casting. [[Ben Stiller]], [[Jack Black]], [[Robert Downey, Jr.]]., Nick Nolte, Matthew McConaghey and [[Tom Cruise]] all had a great time lampooning the things that go along with this.
* ''[[Tropic Thunder]]'' parodied this in its script, while playing it straight with the casting. [[Ben Stiller]], [[Jack Black]], [[Robert Downey, Jr.]]., Nick Nolte, Matthew McConaghey and [[Tom Cruise]] all had a great time lampooning the things that go along with this.
* ''[[Lord of the Rings]]''. [[Christopher Lee]], [[Cate Blanchett]], [[Hugo Weaving]], [[Orlando Bloom]], [[Sean Bean]], [[Ian McKellen]], John Rhys-Davies, [[Liv Tyler]], plus a reboot for Sean Astin. Oh, plus actors like Elijah Wood and Viggo Mortensen, who became A-list after the movie.
* ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]''. [[Christopher Lee]], [[Cate Blanchett]], [[Hugo Weaving]], [[Orlando Bloom]], [[Sean Bean]], [[Ian McKellen]], John Rhys-Davies, [[Liv Tyler]], plus a reboot for Sean Astin. Oh, plus actors like Elijah Wood and Viggo Mortensen, who became A-list after the movie.
* The 1982 film adaptation of ''[[Annie]]'' cast its net wide for stage and screen stars to fill the adult roles: Carol Burnett as Miss Hannigan, Albert Finney as Oliver Warbucks, Ann Reinking as Grace, [[Tim Curry]] as Rooster, Bernadette Peters as Lily, and Edward Herrmann as FDR (who had already played that president in two acclaimed TV movies in the late 1970s).
* The 1982 film adaptation of ''[[Annie]]'' cast its net wide for stage and screen stars to fill the adult roles: Carol Burnett as Miss Hannigan, Albert Finney as Oliver Warbucks, Ann Reinking as Grace, [[Tim Curry]] as Rooster, Bernadette Peters as Lily, and Edward Herrmann as FDR (who had already played that president in two acclaimed TV movies in the late 1970s).
* ''[[The Prestige]]'' is headed by Hugh Jackman, [[Christian Bale]], Michael Caine, Scarlett Johannson, Andy Serkis and David Bowie.
* ''[[The Prestige]]'' is headed by Hugh Jackman, [[Christian Bale]], Michael Caine, Scarlett Johannson, Andy Serkis and David Bowie.
Line 188: Line 189:
[[Category:Characters and Casting]]
[[Category:Characters and Casting]]
[[Category:Ensembles]]
[[Category:Ensembles]]
[[Category:Examples Need Sorting]]

Latest revision as of 16:41, 11 April 2024

"Would it have been faster to say who isn't in this movie? Jesus, it's like the Super Smash Bros. of Hollywood!"

Any show, movie, etc., where the majority of the lead roles are played by name actors. They don't have to be A list. B, C, and even D will do, although in that case, relying on their talents is preferable to relying on their names. If the character list is really big, this can spill over into supporting roles as well.

In the days of the studio system, this was easy to do, but once actors' salaries started rising, this practice gradually declined. Compare the casts at the beginning of the Disaster Movie Era with those at the end of it.

These days, you'd either need a lot of money to pull this off, convince the actors that this is just a fun breather film or be willing to settle for loads of cameos. The exception is animated films, where stars are willing to get paid a lot less just to do voice work.

A good way of being able to tell if it is an all star cast is by an examination of the theatrical poster, if it has more than five names listed on it it is usually big names.

Compare Massive Multiplayer Crossover, Celebrity Voice Actor, Dream Team.

Examples of All-Star Cast include:

Unsorted

Music

  • This is the entire point of a posse cut in hip-hop. Some well-known examples:
    • "Scenario" by A Tribe Called Quest & Leaders of the New School
    • "Flava in Ya Ear (Remix)" the original was by Craig Mack, but the remix featured the breakthrough verse of The Notorious B.I.G., as well as one of the first by Busta Rhymes.
    • DJ Khaled is known for these; some examples are "All I Do is Win", "We Takin' Over", and "Out Here Grindin'"
  • The intersection of films and songs is of course concert movies, and Martin Scorsese's The Last Waltz, which documented and celebrated the last performance of The Band, assembled a murderer's row of talent. Aside from the group themselves, there were performances from Eric Clapton, Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Van Morrison, Muddy Waters, Dr. John, Paul Butterfield, and Bobby Charles (Neil Diamond too, but we don't like to talk about him)--and of course, a set by Bob Dylan, who brought The Band to prominence as his backing group before they went solo. Oh, and just for completeness sake, the last song adds in Ringo Starr and Ron Wood as backing musicians.
  • This trope is the Raison d'être of the Supergroup, which assembles a group of famous musicians (or members of famous bands) and draws in fans with the promise of awesomeness by amalgamation. A special mention needs to go to The Traveling Wilburys, who assembled an utterly unbelievable amount of talent (to quote its own trope page," Bob Dylan. Roy Orbison. Tom Petty. George Harrison. Jeff Lynne. Holy Shit.")-- and then released the entire thing under a Stage Name, with no reference to who they really were, because they were doing it to have fun and work with each other.
  • Chickenfoot is composed of Joe Satriani, Sammy Hagar, Michael Anthony and Chad Smith.
  • This is a staple of the Charity Motivation Song genre, as seen in "Do They Know It's Christmas?" and "We Are the World", and the charity benefit concert, as in the case of Live Aid.
  • Kanye West's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, especially on All of the Lights.

Theatre

  1. who's actually playing the Captain he served under on D-Day