MovieChat Forums > Mission: Impossible II (2000) Discussion > Question: Why isn't Dougray Scott a majo...

Question: Why isn't Dougray Scott a major international star?


Answer: Mission Impossible 2.

A clear example of how fate plays a part in stardom. Because he got stuck working on this over it's schedule - allegedly due to a broken limb suffered in a sequence - he was forced to withdraw playing Wolverine in the first X-Men movie, and an unknown named Hugh Jackman took his place. Jackman rocketed to super stardom, and the rest is history.

Dougray Scott should thank Tom Cruise every year with an angry prank, for screwing his career like that.

"Everyone else may be an a**hole, but I'm not!" - Harlan Ellison

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Missing out on X-Men was definitely a blow to Dougray's career but there's no reason he couldn't have recovered with another high profile role. I suspect he's purposefully avoided big blockbuster movies after doing M:I2 or else he just has a really bad agent, but he seems to have made a conscious decision to not do anything BIG since M:I2.

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I doubt he would had brought something to the table as Wolverine that Jackman brought.

Its that man again!!

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Much as I love playing 'alternative history' with actors who just missed out on famous roles, there's no way of knowing if X-Men would have worked with a different actor playing Wolverine. Same as we don't know Pretty Woman would have worked had they gone with Molly Ringwald instead of Julia Roberts.
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The thing was, he didn't miss at the audition stage - he HAD the role. It waiting for him as soon as he was done in Sydney. But fate got him screwed out it it.

But I'm not complaining about Hugh Jackman; he was fantastic as Wolverine.

"Everyone else may be an a**hole, but I'm not!" - Harlan Ellison

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Ha ha! He missed out on Wolverine to finish off this TC crapola. Man, that's gotta hurt!

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I agree. Scott is a fine actor, but he doesn't have the swagger of Jackman. I think only Jackman can pull of Wolverine.

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Jackman in Australia had a reputation as a comedian and for musicals I believe. He wasn't known for being an action hero nor for being a dramatic intense actor, so we really don't know what Scott could've been. You never know the potential and range of an actor until they are given a chance like Jackman was given or even Hugh Laurie.

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I think the problem is that Dougray Scott doesn't have Hugh Jackman's charisma or even Tom Cruise's charisma here. So in M:I2, he overcompensates from not naturally being charming by acting like a large ham.

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When Dougray Scott was working on CW's Batwoman show with Ruby Rose, it was alleged that he was abusive and difficult on the set. These are claims that Scott understandably, refuted:
https://www.reddit.com/r/television/comments/qca7rd/dougray_scott_refutes_batwoman_costar_ruby_roses/

Some people in that Reddit thread suggested that the real reason why he lost the Wolverine role to Hugh Jackman was because of his behavior.

https://www.reddit.com/r/television/comments/qca7rd/comment/hhi1jyy/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=web2x&context=3

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No, it's because he still pees the bed.

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His perfomance in MI2 is, i think, outstandingly brilliant. He sizzles with malevolence- it should have brought him more roles of this type. I think its his decision not to take them.

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If you ever get a chance to see Mathew "Film Brain" Buck's "Bad Movie Beatdown" of M:I2, he in particular criticized Dougray Scott's performance as being too hammy and way over his head (and the fact that he missed out a chance at playing Wolverine was actually a good thing).

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Who? And there's your answer.

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It's not as if MI2 did badly at the box office... in fact, I think it was the top grossing film of 2000.

And we can thank fate for Jackman entering at the last second; I just don't see Scott as Wolverine.

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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HollywoodHypeMachine

Dougray Scott got a lot of hype after his role as Prince Charming in Ever After and soon became the front-runner for roles such as Wolverine and James Bond. But after Mission: Impossible II went over schedule, he was forced to give up the Wolverine role to a little-known Australian actor named Hugh Jackman. While Jackman became a huge star, Scott's career fell into a tailspin as he's spent much of his career toiling away in TV movies, short-lived TV series (plus a single season on Desperate Housewives, just as the show was beginning its long descent in ratings and buzz) and little-seen movies (his possible low point being the 2011 film Love's Kitchen, which grossed just £121 at the UK box office).

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121 pounds???????

what 10 people saw it????

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Answer: He's nothing special.

Proud member of the Pro-film Anti-digital Society (PFADS).

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He fucking sucked in this. Worst of the M:I villains. Including bipolar Jon Voight.

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Dougray Scott: A Man For All Seasons

https://lebeauleblog.com/2020/03/19/dougray-scott-a-man-for-all-seasons/

Dougray Scott was originally cast as Wolverine in the first X-Men movie. He had to drop out due to reshoots on Mission: Impossible 2. Those Mission: Impossible movies have a habit of interfering with superhero movies, don’t they. Today, you can catch Scott on the Batwoman TV show where he plays the hero’s father. This profile from the February 1999 issue of Movieline magazine came before Scott’s mutant heartbreak when he was still a rising star.

Dougray Scott had years of hard grind in British theater and television behind him, and he’d done his share of disappointing movies before he got to the point where everything could look so easy. It was his standout performance as a brutal, psychotic, drug-dealing cop in Twin Town (an inferior Trainspotting rip-off) that led to a screen test for Ever After, and if that seems an unlikely transition, it’s just one of many in his career. Scott’s resume includes a role on the TV series Highlander, a bit part in the Phoebe Cates vehicle Princess Caraboo, a serious turn as poet Robert Graves in the small British film Regeneration, and a part in Another 9 1/2 Weeks, Mickey Rourke’s sequel to 9 1/2 Weeks.

Try telling a self-described “character actor” who’s done a range of good, bad and indifferent material that he’s now a new heartthrob–or, worse, a sex symbol–and incomprehension sets in. “I never look in the mirror if I can help it, it’s em-baaarr-assing,” he says in the beguiling Scottish burr he can convert to the Queen’s English or convincing American with little effort. “Embarrassed” is one of Scott’s most frequently used words–he’s embarrassed by adulation, by questions about his personal life, by poor scripts (many of which he is now sent), and by the thought of giving anything less than his best performance.

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