The Star Malaysia - Star2

Stars who left successful film franchises

- B y DANIEL B UB B EO

W ITH razor-sharp accuracy – and claws – Hugh Jackman nailed the character of W olverine, so it was dishearten­ing when he announced that Logan would be his last outing as mutant in the Marvel Comics film franchise. But the actor cited several reasons – age and his skin cancer diagnosis – as factors in his decision.

No one can claim it was a lack of moviegoers – Logan debuted with box-office sales of US$85.3mil (RM378mil), the fourth-largest March opening weekend. Jackman can join these other actors who bid farewell to a successful movie series at the peak of its success.

Sean Connery in the B ond franchise

After 1967’s You Only Live Twice, the virile Scotsman shook up his final martini primarily because he felt underpaid, given his box-office performanc­e. Connery (pic) may have been right: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969) with replacemen­t George Lazenby was the least successful Bond film to date. Connery returned for Diamonds Are Forever (1971) for a salary bump up to US$1.25mil and 12.5% of the profits, but then left the series again. (He did make a surprising, final, return for 1983’s Never Say Never Again.)

Steve Guttenberg in the Police Academy franchise

No one expected the low-budget, lowbrow Police Academy (1984) to take in US$81.2mil and spawn six sequels. Guttenberg played recruit Mahoney through the fourth entry, Citizens On Patrol. The reason he stopped pounding the Police Academy beat was simple: “They just decided they’d had enough of paying me,” Guttenberg told the entertainm­ent website The A.V. Club in 2015. “It was one of those deals: they just didn’t want to pay me any more.”

Megan Fox in the Transforme­rs franchise

Fox reportedly opted not to reprise her role as Mikaela Banes, the girlfriend of protagonis­t Sam W itwicky (Shia LaBeouf ), in Transforme­rs: Dark Of The Moon (2011) because she had clashed with director Michael Bay. “He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is,” she told Wonderland magazine in 2009.

Jennifer Lawrence in the X-Men franchise

Even before the release of last year’s X-Men: Apocalypse, the Oscarwinni­ng actress had indicated that this might be her final appearance as the blue-toned, shape-shifting Mystique. “It is my last one, actually,” she told MTV in 2015, although Lawrence did say last year that she might consider coming back if co-stars James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender returned. – Newsday/ Tribune News Service

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Photo: Filepic

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