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The following is a list of unproduced Marlon Brando projects in roughly chronological order. During his long career, American film Actor, Marlon Brando had worked on a number of projects but has either turned down or has to turned down. Some of these projects were made or were oficially cancelled.
Film projects turned down or incomplete
[edit]Year | Title | Role (If taken) | Actor(s) Take The Role | Director | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1950 | Sunset Boulevard | Joe Gillis | William Holden | Billy Wilder | He was deemed too much of an unknown. | |
1952 | High Noon | Will Kane | Gary Cooper | Fred Zinnemann | ||
1952 | Sudden Fear | Lester Blaine | Jack Palance | David Miller | Joan Crawford approached Brando for the role | |
1954 | The Egyptian | Sinuhe | Edmund Purdom | Michael Curtiz | ||
1954 | Senso | Franz Mahler | Farley Granger | Luchino Visconti | According to his book, Include me Out, Farley Granger states that he was the second choice for the leading male role after Brando turned it down. History would repeat when Brando also turned down the starring role in "the Egyptian" which in turn Granger turned down. | |
1954 | Le rouge et le noir (The Red and the Black) | Julien Sorel | Gérard Philipe | Claude Autant-Lara | Brando accepted the part, but he walked off production of the film after clashing with French director Claude Autant-Lara. | |
1954 | A Star Is Born | Norman Lester | James Mason | George Cukor | ||
1955 | East of Eden | Cal Trask | James Dean | Elia Kazan | Kazan considered casting Brando as Cal, before deciding he was too old for the role at 30. | |
1955 | Marty | Marty Piletti | Rod Steiger | Delbert Mann | United Artists pushed for Harold Hecht and Burt Lancaster to cast Marlon Brando in the title role. The studio felt that Brando was a more recognizable star and would make the film more appealing to the audience. Hecht and Lancaster balked at the suggestion and pursued a lesser-known cast for the film | |
1956 | Baby Doll | Archie Lee Meighan | Karl Malden | Elia Kazan | ||
1956 | The Conqueror | Genghis Khan | John Wayne | Dick Powell | Shot near a nuclear test site in Nevada, Of the 220 film cast and crew members, 91 (comprising 41.36% of the crew) developed cancer during their lifetime, while 46 (or 20.91%) died from it, including John Wayne and Susan Hayward. | |
1956 | Giant | Jett Rink | James Dean | George Stevens | ||
1956 | Autumn Leaves | Burt Hanson | Cliff Robertson | Robert Aldrich | Joan Crawford wanted Marlon Brando to play opposite her as the mentally ill Burt Hanson | |
1956 | Rebel Without A Cause | Jim Stark | James Dean | Nicholas Ray | Producer Jerry Wald had Brando lined up for a movie version of Dr. Robert M. Lindner's non-fiction work about the analysis of a young criminal. The project was shelved, but later, reconstituted with another script concept and leading man. | |
1957 | A Face in the Crowd | Larry "Lonesome" Rhodes | Andy Griffith | Elia Kazan | ||
1957 | The Man with the Golden Arm | Frankie Machine | Frank Sinatra | Otto Preminger | ||
1958 | The Defiant Ones | John "Joker" Jackson | Tony Curtis | Stanley Kramer | ||
1959 | Ben-Hur | Judah Ben-Hur | Charlton Heston | William Wyler | ||
1961 | Judgment at Nuremberg | Hans Rolfe | Maximilian Schell | Stanley Kramer | In a rare effort to actually obtain a part, he showed interest in the role, even approaching Kramer about it. | |
1962 | Lawrence of Arabia | T. E. Lawrence | Peter O'Toole | David Lean | Brando preferred to appear in Mutiny on the Bounty instead due to its pleasanter filming location, Tahiti,[1][2] and munificenter pay.[3][4] "I'll be damned if I'll spend two years of my life on some fucking camel," he said.[1] | |
1962 | Lolita | Humbert E. Humbert | James Mason | Stanley Kubrick | Stanley Kubrick approached Brando for the role | |
1963 | Cleopatra | Marc Anthony | Richard Burton | Joseph L. Mankiewicz | He chose to make Mutiny on the Bounty instead. | |
1965 | Doctor Zhivago | Victor Ipolitovich Komarovsky | Rod Steiger | David Lean | ||
1967 | The Graduate | Mr. Robinson | Murray Hamilton | Mike Nichols | ||
1968 | Planet of the Apes | George Taylor | Charlton Heston | Franklin J. Schaffner | ||
1969 | Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid | Either Butch Cassidy or the Sundance Kid | Robert Redford | George Roy Hill | He felt it was too similar to One-Eyed Jacks and made Burn! instead. | |
1969 | The Arrangement | Eddie Anderson | Kirk Douglas | Elia Kazan | He was Kazan's original choice, but he pulled out, citing that he couldn't make such a lightweight film following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. | |
1970 | Little Big Man | Old Lodge Skins | Chief Dan George | Arthur Penn | ||
1970 | Performance | Chas | James Fox | Donald Cammell | Cammell sent Brando the first draft of a screenplay entitled The Liars. Notwithstanding the prospect of co-starring with Mick Jagger, Brando wasn’t keen on playing an American hitman in London and was so busy with other projects that Cammell decided to cut his losses and approach James Fox for what was now called Performance | |
1970 | Ryan's Daughter | Major Randolph Doryan | Christopher Jones | David Lean | He was Lean's original choice for the role, but he had to drop out when filming of Burn! overran in South Africa. | |
1971 | Dirty Harry | Harry Callahan | Clint Eastwood | Don Siegel | ||
1972 | Deliverance | Lewis Medlock | Burt Reynolds | John Boorman | ||
1972 | Child's Play | Joseph Dobbs | Robert Preston | Sidney Lumet | Brando backed out just before principal photography was to begin when he realized James Mason had the better part. Brando subsequently was sued by producer David Merrick for breach of contract. | |
1972 | Fat City | Billy Tully | Stacy Keach | John Huston | Huston initially wanted Brando to star. When Brando informed Huston repeatedly that he needed some more time to think about it, Huston finally came to the conclusion that the star wasn't really interested and looked out for another actor until he finally cast the then relatively unknown Stacy Keach. | |
1973 | The Exorcist | Lankester Merrin | Max von Sydow | William Friedkin | The studio wanted Brando to play Father Merrin but Friedkin felt he was too big a star. | |
1974 | The Great Gatsby | Jay Gatsby | Robert Redford | Jack Clayton | Paramount studio brass wanted him to appear as the titular character, but he wanted $4 million, an unheard-of salary at the time. | |
1974 | The Godfather Part II | Vito Corleone | Francis Ford Coppola | Brando was scheduled to make a cameo appearance in the film, in the flashback at the end of the film in which Vito Corleone comes back to his home and is greeted with a surprise birthday party. In fact, he was expected the day of shooting but did not show up due to a salary dispute. | ||
1974 | The Conversation | Harry Caul | Gene Hackman | Francis Ford Coppola | Coppola envisioned Brando for the role. The director shared that the script pre-dated their first meeting, but when he sent the screenplay to Brando, he casually rejected Coppola’s overtures by flatly informing him that “it’s not for me.” | |
1975 | One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest | Randle Patrick "R.P." McMurphy | Jack Nicholson | Miloš Forman | Brando declined the offer to play the role. | |
1976 | A Star Is Born | John Norman Howard | Kris Kristofferson | |||
1976 | Taxi Driver | Travis Bickle | Robert De Niro | Martin Scorsese | ||
1977 | Equus | Martin Dysart | Richard Burton | Sidney Lumet | ||
1980 | Superman II | Jor-El | Richard Lester | Marlon Brando finished all his scenes for both two Superman films early into production, successfully sued the Salkinds, producers of the film, for $50 million over grossed profits gained from the first film. In response, the Salkinds cut Brando from the film, replacing his scenes with actress Susannah York. His scenes were restored in the 2006 re-cut of the film, titled Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut. | ||
1982 | Gandhi | Mahatma Gandhi | Ben Kingsley | Richard Attenborough | Archives from Richard Attenboroughs estate reveal that Attenborough wanted Brando for the role | |
1984 | Nineteen Eighty-Four | O'Brien | Richard Burton | Michael Radford | ||
1986 | Salvador | Richard Boyle | James Woods | Oliver Stone | ||
1987 | The Untouchables | Al Capone | Robert DeNiro | Brian De Palma | ||
1987 | Angel Heart | Louis Cyphere | Robert De Niro | Alan Parker | ||
1987 | The Sicilian | Don Masino Croce | Joss Ackland | Michael Cimino | Brando was offered 5 Million for 3 weeks of work playing a Mafia don, but Brando turned the offer down. | |
1987 | The Last Emperor | Reginald Johnston | Peter O'Toole | Bernardo Bertolucci | ||
1988 | Tucker: The Man and His Dream | Preston Tucker | Jeff Bridges | Francis Ford Coppola | The director wanted Brando to appear as Preston Tucker in his biopic of the maverick automotive executive that Coppola planned to make after completing The Godfather Part II. Brando was not interested. | |
1988 | The Adventures of Baron Munchausen | Vulcan | Oliver Reed | Terry Gilliam | ||
1988 | The Presidio | Ross Maclure | Jack Warden | Peter Hyams | ||
1990 | Dances with Wolves | Major Fambrough | Maury Chaykin | Kevin Costner | ||
1990 | The Field | Bull McCabe | Richard Harris | Jim Sheridan | ||
1991 | Nostromo (incomplete) | David Lean | Brando was scheduled to appear with co-stars Paul Scofield, Peter O'Toole, Isabella Rossellini, Christopher Lambert, and Dennis Quaid. However, when director David Lean died, the production came to a halt. | |||
1991 | JFK | X | Donald Sutherland | Oliver Stone | ||
1995 | Divine Rapture (incomplete) | A Priest | The project included stars like Johnny Depp, Debra Winger, and John Hurt. Production was never completed due to a lack of financing. | |||
1997 | U Turn | Blind Man | Jon Voight | Oliver Stone | ||
1998 | The Big Lebowski | Jeffrey "The Big" Lebowski | David Huddleston | Joel Coen | The Coen Brothers wanted Brando to play the role and even had him in mind while writing the script but Brando couldn't star in the movie due to ill health.[5] | |
1998 | American History X | Cameron Alexander | Stacy Keach | Tony Kaye | ||
1998 | Elizabeth | Pope Pius V | John Gielgud | Shekhar Kapur | According to the director's commentary, Kapur mentioned that the role of the Pope (played by Sir John Gielgud) was originally offered to, and accepted by, Marlon Brando. However, plans changed when Kapur noted that many on set would probably be concerned that Brando would be sharing the set with them for two days. | |
1999 | Sleepy Hollow | Headless Horseman | Christopher Walken | Tim Burton | ||
1999 | Magnolia | Earl Partridge | Jason Robards | Paul Thomas Anderson | ||
2001 | Scary Movie 2 | Father McFeely | James Woods | Keenen Ivory Wayans | Brando had to withdraw when he was hospitalized with pneumonia in April 2001. | |
2004 | Man on Fire | Paul Rayburn | Christopher Walken | Tony Scott | Brando was the original choice to play Rayburn, less than a year before he died. | |
N/A | Big Bug Man (incomplete) | Mrs. Sour (voice) | Bob Bendetson Peter Shin |
Brando recorded for the voice of Mrs. Sour a month before his death on July 1, 2004. He thought it would be fun to voice a girl for this project. Since Brando's death, there has been no update on the film's progress.[6] |
- ^ a b Maxim Staff (December 11, 2008). "Last Tango on Brando Island". Maxim. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
- ^ Jokinen, Pauli (July 19, 2004). "Marlon Brandon muistokirjoitus". Film-O-Holic.com (in Finnish). Retrieved August 10, 2019.
- ^ Lyttelton, Oliver (May 18, 2012). "5 Things You Might Not Know About David Lean's 'Lawrence Of Arabia'". IndieWire. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
[Sam] Spiegel initially wanted Marlon Brando, but the actor turned it down in favor of 'Mutiny on the Bounty,' which was paying better.
- ^ Alikhan, Anvar (July 19, 2015). "Dilip of Arabia?". The Times of India. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
To play Lawrence, [David] Lean had originally wanted Marlon Brando, but Brando turned him down because the money wasn't good enough.
- ^ "23 Huge Facts About the Big Lebowski | Mental Floss". Archived from the original on May 12, 2021. Retrieved May 12, 2021.
- ^ "Brando's Last Role: An Old Lady". CBS News. July 14, 2004. Retrieved 2008-02-28.