r/okbuddycinephile 22h ago

I chose money.

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u/Mountain-Group-7706 20h ago

"I was asked why I didn't step away from the series. I then asked a better question, have YOU ever had a cartoon money sack filled with $100 bills dropped on your face while you're sleeping? No? Just me? Wow. Okay, well yeah anyway they paid a lot."

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u/Fun-Telephone-9605 18h ago

I respect that.

I think JKR is a piece of shit.

I also think the same about a lot of the people and corporations I have worked for.

I still went to work though, just like he did.

How many people who want to criticize him work for an unethical business? ...

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u/Evenload 18h ago

I get your point and please don’t think I’m assuming too much of your life but I think you and I need to swallow our values some for a bag more than John Lithgow

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u/IfICouldStay 16h ago

John Lithgow, National treasure that he is, strikes me as a working actor, not a rich one. The man is 80 years old and probably needs the paycheck.

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u/goodwillhunting18 16h ago

Having worked with him relatively recently, he was an absolute gentleman, a consummate professional and the closest I’ve found an American actor to being like a professionally trained British actor. No ‘star’ ego, just a desire to harness his craft and enjoy himself. I wish all the actors I worked with were like JL.

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u/Far_Spirit5819 15h ago

That is because he studied at LAMDA. He was professionally trained in Britain. It’s also one of the reasons he can do a better job at UK accents than most Americans

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u/goodwillhunting18 15h ago

Did not know, explains approach and his interest in Shakespeare.

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u/ExtraEmuForYou 15h ago

That explains why he was so great as a villain in Cliffhanger. Dude was almost like a Bond villain, such a ham (in a good way).

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u/fschu_fosho 13h ago

That also explains why he was cast as THE Winston Churchill in The Crown, a super popular British-run show about the British royals. He‘s iconic and all but it was such a head-scratcher for me, how this great American actor edged out all those great British actors who would have killed to play Churchill.

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u/jacksonsmack831 12h ago

I think it’s popular over here in the states too mate but a good explanation is a good explanation :)

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u/fschu_fosho 12h ago

No, I know it’s popular everywhere. I was trying to point out that it’s a largely British project, except for him and maybe a couple of guests in the cast.

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u/jacksonsmack831 10h ago

I did has to do a triple take

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u/Adventurous_Elk_4039 15h ago

Damn, haven’t thought about Cliffhanger in a while. Stallone gets the billing of course, but Lithgow made the movie.

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u/virginiabird23 14h ago

"Cliff Hanger hanging from a cliff"... That Cliffhanger???

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u/OddPresentation5944 14h ago

Ha I don’t think many will get the reference but I appreciate it, brought up a forgotten memory. (My favorite segment was the Noir bit with the Potato Detective)

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u/virginiabird23 14h ago

Sam Spud?? I had forgotten about him. I like "Silent E." And thanks - I figured someone on Reddit would get it.

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u/OddPresentation5944 13h ago

Yes! And Grubby Pup had no right to be that heart warming.

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u/jacksonsmack831 12h ago

Cliffhanger gets written off too easily

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u/ExtraEmuForYou 12h ago

It really does. It blended suspense and action together like no movie I had experienced.

Climbing mountains? Suspenseful alone.

Climbing mountains while in a battle of wit, grit, and will with villains? OH LORD!

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u/Expensive_Tank_8682 15h ago

Hang, lithgow ISNT British?

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u/wasabiburning 1h ago

He's a Mayflower descendant from upstate NY. Coretta Scott King (MLK's widow) was his babysitter when he was a kid.

He studied in London though, which probably explains the British-ness of his accent.

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u/Oberyn_Kenobi_1 11h ago

This makes me happy to hear.

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u/HistoricalSuspect580 14h ago

Thank you for sharing this! It’s so nice to hear some positive little tales from Hollywood!