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Actors Who Were Too Old/Too Young For Their Roles


Of course, actors playing characters much older or younger than they are is pretty common in movies (especially high school movies), and sometimes it works, but other times the age difference is too noticeable. What are some movies you guys can think of where an actor was too old or too young for the part they played—that is, you as a viewer had a hard time seeing them as the age of their character?

My picks:

Ingrid Bergman as Joan in Joan of Arc (1946). I love this movie, but I think Ingrid was too old at the time to convincingly play a teenage girl.

John Mills as Pip in Great Expectations (1946). This is another one I like, but John Mills, at almost 40, wasn’t believable as 23-year-old Pip.

Jennifer Lawrence as Tiffany in Silver Linings Playbook (2012). I couldn’t see then 21-year-old Jennifer Lawrence as 39-year-old Tiffany.

Winona Ryder as Susanna in Girl, Interrupted (1999). Ryder was almost 30, playing an 18-year-old girl.

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[deleted]

I just had a conversation about Greer Garson in Pride & Prejudice. Way too old.

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Tom Cruise, in the alleged reboot of The Mummy. First, his charcter was supposed to be significantly younger than Dr. Jeykel, yet Cruise is 4 years older than Russel Crowe, and looks it. Second, Cruise is too blowsey and puffy to be playing action roles any longer.

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[deleted]

No, you don’t seem difficult at all, and asking questions is one of the best ways to learn. Blowsey means bloated, and what I meant by puffy is that, to me, Cruise looks like he has boils in this movie. He looks shockingly bad in it, worse than what I thought his ego would allow.

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My go-to answer to this question is William Holden in Picnic. He was 37 years old playing a much younger character - say mid-20s. But for me, it's not his actual age, it's that he looked every one of his 37 years. Kim Novak was 22, playing a character only slightly younger than herself.

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In " Sunset Boulevard" there's a lot of scandalized talk about fifty-year-old Gloria Swanson dating a much younger man. which seemed a bit wrong as he also looked fifty!

He was what, 32? 35? But he always looked older than his official age, the only film where he seemed at all young was "Sabrina".

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Except that Swanson also looked older. I really don't think she looked that good for fifty.

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Holden didn't look that great for fifty either, except he wasn't fifty!

Montgomery Clift should have played the role, back when he was young and beautiful and brilliant. And still slightly boyish.

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[Montgomery Clift should have played the role, back when he was young and beautiful and brilliant. And still slightly boyish.

Bless your heart, Otter, you nailed it. He-was-all-of-that.

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I've heard that Clift was considered for the role, but he didn't want to do it because of his earlier relationship with faded beauty and wealthy recluse Libby Holman.

If he'd been cast instead of the testosterone-laden Holden, the relationship between Joe and Norma would have seemed very different.

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Fifty is a bit extreme, he still had some youth in his face. Holden looked close to fourty. But since Swanson also looked older than fifty, the age gap still worked. I don't really have a problem with the casting.

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I was just on the individual board for the 50's version of The Desperate Hours the other day. Many people, me included, feel that Gig Young was definitely too old for the part he played in that movie. He was in his early 40s when the movie was made. The actress who played his love interest was 24. The characters were both suppose to be in the 18- 24 year range. Gig Young was actually Gig Old!

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Somewhat on point...

Back in the 60s, there was a great suspense movie called Seconds, directed by John Frankenheimer.

It was a bit like a Twilight Zone episode. A middle-aged man in his 50s undergoes a mid-life crisis. He contacts a secret organization that arrange for him to undergo medical procedures to give him a new, younger face, as well as set him up with a new identity and career.

They fake his death with the body of another man so that he can start a new life under his new identity. (Self/less anyone?)

The new, young version was played by Rock Hudson. The older version was played by veteran character actor John Randolph. (He played Clark Griswold's father in Christmas Vacation, as an example.)

When I re-watched this a few years ago, I was struck by how old John Randolph looked in his role as a 50-ish man. At the time, I was only slightly older and he seemed much older than me, more like mid-60s. This was based on his style of clothing, his weary demeanour, somewhat frail physique, thinning hair, etc.

But, when I look at IMDB, I learned that he was actually younger than me and playing his actual age!

John Randolph was never a particularly robust man -- more like the kindly newspaper-and-comfy-slippers fatherly type -- but I think it had more to do with the fact that older people today are much healthier and active than back in the sixties.

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Rock was way taller also

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J Law in that film was the first one that came to mind. Nothing against her performance, which I thought was excellent, but she just did not seem old enough to have the life experience of the character she was playing.

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50 year old Roberto Benigni playing a 12 year Pinocchio. PURE. GENIUS.

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I want to see that movie just to check out how bad it is... I've heard things. Whispers. Rumors.

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Haha it's not that bad once you realize the ridiculous casting is deliberate. Sort of like The Rock playing "Tooth Fairy". I think Benigni loses people on his hyper crazy Italianness. If you've never seen him before, try this short from Coffee & Cigarettes, you'll know right away if he's funny or you want to kill him...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBa-2nXCc7g

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