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10 Actors Who Played Near-Identical Roles In Totally Different Movies

screenrant.com 2024/10/6
Russell Crowe in The Popes Exorcist and The Exorcism
Custom image by Yeider Chacon

Summary

  • It's not uncommon for actors to play similar characters in different films, especially if they are typecast as cops, romantic leads or cowboys.
  • It's a lot stranger when an actor plays a less common type of character more than once.
  • Great actors like Judi Dench, Jeffrey Wright and Octavia Spencer have all played strikingly similar characters in completely unrelated movies.

Many actors stick to the roles that suit them best, but this can lead to actors playing practically identical characters in completely unrelated movies. There are plenty of actors who are known for playing Western gunslingers or film noir detectives, for example. It's a little less common for actors to make two movies where they inhabit a similar niche role, and this leads to some strange coincidences.

Being typecast in Hollywood is one thing, but choosing two weirdly similar roles is far weirder. Any actor can play a gangster or a soldier more than once without raising any eyebrows, but playing something a little rarer, like a stunt double or an animal sidekick, is unusual. Many different actors have taken on surprisingly similar roles during their careers, and it often seems like a conscious choice to draw parallels between two of their movies so that their body of work can be seen holistically.

Custom image of Clint Eastwood and Denzel Washington
Related

Great cop movies need protagonists who are just as interesting as the cases they investigate, and the right actors can elevate these characters.

10 Russell Crowe

The Pope's Exorcist (2023) & The Exorcism (2024)

Although it's fairly common for actors to play similar roles at some point if they enjoy a long career, Russell Crowe has recently played two strikingly similar characters just a year apart. The Pope's Exorcist stars Crowe as an exorcist working in Italy. 2024's The Exorcism has a different angle, with Crowe playing a movie star, who is himself playing an exorcist.

The writers of The Exorcism publicly hoped that the serendipity of the two movies being released so close together would give them a boost.

In a way, it seems as though The Exorcism is a twist on the production of The Pope's Exorcist, but there is no direct relation between the two movies. The writers of The Exorcism publicly hoped that the serendipity of the two movies being released so close together would give them a boost. The Pope's Exorcist received mixed reviews from critics, but it was a surprise box office hit.

9 Michael Caine

Gambit (1966) & The Italian Job (1969)

For whatever reason, Michael Caine has always been drawn to heist movies. Perhaps it's his tough guy persona which fits the archetype of on-screen British gangsters so well. He lends this roguish charm to Harry and Walter Go to New York, Now You See Me and King of Thieves. Even considering this pattern, his characters in Gambit and The Italian Job are strikingly similar.

For whatever reason, Michael Caine has always been drawn to heist movies. Perhaps it's his tough guy persona which fits the archetype of on-screen British gangsters so well.

Both movies are among the best heist movies ever, and Caine deserves credit for providing much of their allure. In both movies, he plays an affable cockney thief who delights in constructing elaborate schemes.The Italian Job's Charlie Croker is the leader of a big gang, while Gambit's Harry only recruits Nicole when he deems it to be strictly necessary, but the two men have a lot in common.

8 Judi Dench

Mrs. Brown (1997) & Victoria and Abdul (2017)

Judi Dench doesn't just play similar roles in Mrs. Brown and Victoria and Abdul; she plays the exact same character. Both movies focus on one of Queen Victoria's odd platonic relationships with male servants following the death of her husband. This means that not only does Dench play Victoria in both movies, but she's dealing with a lot of the same emotions, and the two movies are structured in similar ways.

Dench has had the opportunity to play Victoria at two different stages of her life. It's just a shame she didn't begin sooner.

Dench has a supreme sense of gravitas that helps her play royalty. She also famously played Queen Elizabeth I in Shakespeare in Love. Dench's Victoria is more vulnerable and human than her Elizabeth, but both portrayals showcase her powerful screen presence. Dench has had the opportunity to play Victoria at two different stages of her life. It's just a shame she didn't begin sooner.

7 Jeffrey Wright

The French Dispatch (2021) & American Fiction (2023)

Jeffrey Wright earned his first Oscar nomination for his performance in American Fiction, but he had already played a similar character two years earlier in The French Dispatch. American Fiction stars Wright as Thelonious "Monk" Ellison, a highbrow author who achieves massive commercial success when he dumbs down his writing and plays up to the stereotypes of Black literature, with a story about inner-city strife written in AAVE.

Jeffrey Wright earned his first Oscar nomination for his performance in American Fiction, but he had already played a similar character two years earlier in The French Dispatch.

In Wes Anderson's The French Dispatch, Wright also plays an intellectual writer. Here, he is Roebuck Wright, a journalist seemingly based on James Baldwin, who uses his remit as a food critic to examine the world around him. Monk and Roebuck both have an unflappable sense of integrity. They want to stay true to who they are, even when Monk sees the racial stereotyping of the publishing world, and Monk sees the inside of a jail cell.

6 Andy Serkis

Black Panther (2018) & Luther: The Fallen Sun (2023)

Andy Serkis is most famous for his motion-capture work. After his brilliant performance as Gollum in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy, he went on to star as the 21st century's two most famous cinematic apes, King Kong in 2005 and Caesar in the Planet of the Apes franchise. He has taken on more live-action roles in recent years, but he has still found himself playing similar characters even when he's a human.

Luther: The Fallen Sun is more grounded than Black Panther, but Serkis' characters are surprisingly similar.

Serkis' most notable live-action movie role could be his part as Ulysses Klaue in Black Panther. Klaue is a flashy, eccentric villain who uses his technological genius to challenge the hero. In the Luther movie, he also plays a villain with a sense of showmanship and a deep understanding of cutting-edge technology. Luther: The Fallen Sun is more grounded than Black Panther, but Serkis' characters are surprisingly similar.

5 Ralph Brown

Withnail and I (1987) & Wayne's World 2 (1993)

Ralph Brown had his breakthrough role in the British comedy Withnail and I as Danny the drug dealer. His performance was so popular that it inspired Dana Carvey to write a similar role for Brown in Wayne's World 2. Although Brown's two characters have different names, they have identical styles, and they speak with the same laconic cockney drawl. Wayne and Garth are immediately taken in by his idiosyncratic character.

Although Brown's two characters have different names, they have identical styles, and they speak with the same laconic cockney drawl.

Ralph Brown's character in Wayne's World 2 initially seems to be little more than a tribute to his work in Withnail and I, but the legendary roadie develops into a much stranger creation as the plot progresses. Del Preston and Danny the drug dealer both spout bizarre conspiracy theories, but Del is put in a position of power in Wayne's World 2, so he has the opportunity to drag others into his warped logic.

4 James Stewart

Rope (1948) & Rear Window (1954)

Alfred Hitchcock's collaborations with James Stewart often played with the director's favorite story archetype: an ordinary man drawn into a dangerous criminal plot. In Vertigo, Stewart plays a retired detective who works as a private eye on one last case, but Rope and Rear Window both feature him as a regular Joe who has to take on the role of a detective, putting himself in danger in the process.

Alfred Hitchcock's collaborations with James Stewart often played with the director's favorite story archetype: an ordinary man drawn into a dangerous criminal plot.

Rope is a masterful feat of contained storytelling, with the entire narrative playing out in one room over the course of one evening. Stewart plays a publisher who slowly cottons on the fact that his two hosts at the dinner party have murdered one of their associates. In Rear Window, Stewart is a photographer who suspects his neighbor of murdering his wife. Both movies utilize Stewart's charms as a relatable everyman.

3 Octavia Spencer

The Help (2011) & The Shape of Water (2017)

Octavia Spencer rarely plays the lead. More often than not, she manages to shine in supporting roles. Spencer has an inherent warmth about her, and this helps her play the part of a supportive friend to the main character. In The Help, she delivers one of her best performances as Minny, a maid who provides a moral compass for Viola Davis' main character, as well as showing another side to the hardships that Black maids in wealthy white neighborhoods are forced to endure.

Octavia Spencer rarely plays the lead. More often than not, she manages to shine in supporting roles.

Six years later, Spencer once again garnered praise for portraying a cleaner who helps to stabilize her best friend, this time in Guillermo del Toro's The Shape of Water. The sci-fi romance features Sally Hawkins as a mute woman who falls in love with a strange amphibious creature at a government research facility. Both The Help and The Shape of Water are set in the early 1960s.

2 Eddie Murphy

Mulan (1998) & Shrek (2001)

Although he has an instantly recognizable voice, Eddie Murphy doesn't often play animated characters. His two most famous voice roles are surprisingly similar in some ways, even though the two characters aren't even the same species. In Mulan, Murphy plays a wise-cracking animal sidekick to the titular character, just as he does in Shrek. Donkey may be a little more important to the plot in Shrek, but he provides comic relief just like Mushu does in Mulan.

In Mulan, Murphy plays a wise-cracking animal sidekick to the titular character, just as he does in Shrek.

Shrek and Mulan are two of Eddie Murphy's best movies, because they both give him free rein to play around with his character. Donkey and Mushu are a little annoying, but ultimately endearing, and their movies wouldn't be the same without them. One strange connection between the characters is that Donkey's love interest in Shrek is a dragon, although Mushu never falls in love with a Donkey.

1 Ryan Gosling

Drive (2011) & The Fall Guy (2024)

In both Drive and The Fall Guy, Ryan Gosling plays a Hollywood stunt performer who has to engage in some dangerous extracurricular activity. Despite the similarities in their premises, Drive and The Fall Guy take completely different approaches. Drive is a tense crime thriller, while The Fall Guy is a fun action romcom. This allows Gosling to show two different sides to his talent.

Both movies show Gosling's character being motivated by a love interest, played by Carrey Mulligan in Drive and Emily Blunt in The Fall Guy.

The Fall Guy is filled with dangerous action as a tribute to the global community of stunt performers, which is no surprise considering that David Leitch started his career in Hollywood as a stunt double. Drive is just as thrilling, but it's less splashy and more grounded. Both movies show Gosling's character being motivated by a love interest, played by Carrey Mulligan in Drive and Emily Blunt in The Fall Guy.

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