Typecasting/Playing With: Difference between revisions
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* '''Parodied''': Andy is typecast, but as a ridiculously broad role like "guy wearing a hat" or "businessman". He still complains about it though. |
* '''Parodied''': Andy is typecast, but as a ridiculously broad role like "guy wearing a hat" or "businessman". He still complains about it though. |
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* '''Deconstructed''': Eventually, he gets tired of playing the same role all the time, which either leads him to quit entirely, or to try - and fail - to reinvent himself. |
* '''Deconstructed''': Eventually, he gets tired of playing the same role all the time, which either leads him to quit entirely, or to try - and fail - to reinvent himself. |
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* '''Reconstructed''': He fails to reinvent himself, so he charges a higher rate in return for playing the typecast role. |
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* '''Reconstructed''': ??? |
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* '''Zig Zagged''': So it seems like Andy is [[Playing Against Type]], but the marketing for that movie was misleading. But in the sequel, his character really ''does'' become an [[Anti-Hero]]... But only temporally, on a strange case of [[Super Dickery]]. Then the third part rolls out, and he has turned into a [[Villain Protagonist]]... Or has he?! |
* '''Zig Zagged''': So it seems like Andy is [[Playing Against Type]], but the marketing for that movie was misleading. But in the sequel, his character really ''does'' become an [[Anti-Hero]]... But only temporally, on a strange case of [[Super Dickery]]. Then the third part rolls out, and he has turned into a [[Villain Protagonist]]... Or has he?! |
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* '''Averted''': He plays the same roles occasionally, but has some broadness as an actor. |
* '''Averted''': He plays the same roles occasionally, but has some broadness as an actor. |
Latest revision as of 21:48, 22 December 2016
Basic Trope: An actor seems to always play the same type of character.
- Straight: Andy Bigstar always plays The Cape (trope) in his movies.
- Exaggerated: Andy Bigstar always plays an incredibly specific variant of The Cape (trope) (red costume, blond hair, tragic origin story).
- Justified: He does a good job at playing that role, and everyone's used to seeing him in those types of movies.
- Inverted: Andy makes it a point to never play the same type of character twice.
- Subverted: The trailer for a new movie comes out, featuring Andy as an Anti-Hero.
- Double Subverted: But you can Never Trust a Trailer, and the movie turns out to play out like his other ones.
- Parodied: Andy is typecast, but as a ridiculously broad role like "guy wearing a hat" or "businessman". He still complains about it though.
- Deconstructed: Eventually, he gets tired of playing the same role all the time, which either leads him to quit entirely, or to try - and fail - to reinvent himself.
- Reconstructed: He fails to reinvent himself, so he charges a higher rate in return for playing the typecast role.
- Zig Zagged: So it seems like Andy is Playing Against Type, but the marketing for that movie was misleading. But in the sequel, his character really does become an Anti-Hero... But only temporally, on a strange case of Super Dickery. Then the third part rolls out, and he has turned into a Villain Protagonist... Or has he?!
- Averted: He plays the same roles occasionally, but has some broadness as an actor.
- Enforced: "That new superhero movie is about to start production. Who's playing the lead?" "Who else? Andy Bigstar!"
- Lampshaded: During one of his many superhero movies, the Big Bad quips to Andy that "You Look Familiar".
- Invoked: Meta Casting, Adam Westing
- Exploited: ???
- Defied: Playing Against Type
- Discussed: "Remember Andy Bigstar?" "Oh, the guy who's always playing the same goody-two-shoes?"
- Conversed: ???
Back to Typecasting. Funny how I can only get work playing trope pages...