There’s a casting story from 1988 that feels almost impossible to imagine today. Before settling on Bruce Willis, Joel Silver, the producer of Die Hard, considered a number of candidates, including Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, Mel Gibson, and Clint Eastwood. He had choices. actual ones. a strong bench of men whose names could sell tickets on their own. The notion that four of Hollywood’s biggest stars could legitimately be considered for the same role in a single movie says something about the time period unrelated to nostalgia.
That era is gone. Furthermore, it did not disappear silently.
After the video went viral, Anthony Mackie, who has worked for Marvel for more than ten years, stated quite bluntly: “There are no movie stars anymore. The Falcon is a movie star, not Anthony Mackie. It’s the kind of comment that, until you give it more than thirty seconds of thought, seems like a joke. The attraction is the character. In a way, the costume is the actor.
The change was not the result of a single studio decision and did not occur overnight. The pre-sold story proved to be more dependable than human charisma due to the combined weight of a business model. Of the 53 films to have crossed a billion dollars at the box office, only one can genuinely be called a star vehicle in the traditional sense: Tom Cruise in Top Gun: Maverick. And even that is a sequel. Two of the three highest-grossing movies ever made feature Sam Worthington. Zoe Saldaña appears in four films that crossed two billion dollars. On its own, neither name consistently packs a theater. That’s what the franchise does. They’re along for the ride.
It’s worth being precise about what’s actually being mourned here, because the conversation tends to get muddled. It hasn’t gotten worse for actors. If anything, compared to the peak of the star system, the performance-related craft discourse is now more serious. The economic reasoning has altered.
Sometime in the 2000s, studios realized that audiences would regularly turn out for a familiar universe, such as a Marvel movie, a Star Wars movie, or a Harry Potter spinoff, in a way that they wouldn’t consistently turn out for a particular face. Recent data bears this out: IP-based and adapted films earn a median worldwide gross of roughly $538 million, compared to around $193 million for original films. Everyone’s decision was determined by the math.
Timothée Chalamet is frequently cited as proof that the actor is still alive. He is a magazine cover salesman. The public is genuinely interested in him. In 2025, his Marty Supreme was discussed as a test case with authentic star attachment and original content. It barely broke even, scraping past $150 million globally. Dune, Dune: Part Two, and Wonka—a literary adaptation, its follow-up, and the story of the franchise’s beginnings—are his top three earners. For those, audiences turned out. He may have contributed to their appearance, but it’s difficult to distinguish between his and the brand’s appeal.

Some of the harm was also caused by social media. Ana de Armas put it well, noting that the old concept of a movie star required someone “untouchable” — a figure seen only through the controlled aperture of a film or a magazine cover. That distance is gone. Actors are now provided continuously, algorithmically, and at no cost. “Why would they pay to see you on a weekend if they see you all week for free?” Denzel Washington reportedly asked Michael B. Jordan. The question remains unanswered.
What remains is something that works in a different way. Actors used to have the kind of marquee weight that directors like Greta Gerwig and Christopher Nolan now possess. Two audience members reportedly reacted excitedly to the appearance of a familiar face next to Nolan’s name at a recent trailer screening, rather than the idea of a movie. Nowadays, the director as brand is a true phenomenon. Original storytelling still exists, and films like Sinners have demonstrated that a genuinely charismatic actor in the right role can still do meaningful work at the box office. However, those seem to be exceptions that are being highlighted just because they are.
A recast won’t harm the franchise. Whether or not a specific actor returns, the universe goes on. In this way, the brand is more resilient than the wearer. That’s not a criticism of any specific performer. It’s simply the business’s current logic, and there’s no clear indication that it’s pointing in a different direction.
