post_page_cover

“Ditched It 2 Weeks Before They Started”

Sep 13, 2024


James McAvoy recalls replacing Joaquin Phoenix after he dropped out of Split. McAvoy played Kevin Wendell Crumb, an individual with 23 distinct personalities, including the Beast, in the 2016 film directed by M. Night Shyamalan. Split’s ending and final plot twist revealed the film was a secret sequel to Shyamalan’s 2000 film Unbreakable. It would set up a third and final installment, Glass, that tied the two stories together and concluded the trilogy.

While speaking with Josh Horowitz on the Happy Sad Confused podcast, McAvoy explained how he joined Split when Phoenix left the film two weeks before filming began. Check it out below:

McAvoy acknowledged the challenges he faced by joining Split so soon before production commenced, while admitting that coming on board at the last minute also had its advantages. He also described how he began navigating playing his character’s 23 different personalities. Read McAvoy’s comments below:

He’s an amazing actor. I think he’d give a very different performance to the one I did. Sometimes, coming in last minute is the best way. I think he ditched it like two weeks before they started shooting. It was really last minute. The script was well put together, so a lot of it was pretty clear what I actually wanted to do straight away. There was a couple of characters it took a little bit longer to find. Patricia came real quick, Dennis came real quick, Hedwig took a little while.
I hadn’t even found some of the characters and then it just came on really quick, and then Night actually said to me, “I want you to give Hedwig a speech impediment,” and I was like, “What, just at the last minute? You want me to just go for it?” and he was like, “Yeah, we need to try something.” So we did it in the readthrough and after one scene of doing it, were like, “Done!”

What James McAvoy Stepping In Last Minute Meant For Split
He Saved The Movie.

With so much of Split hinging on the performance of Kevin and his many personalities, losing Phoenix could have been detrimental to the film. Instead, McAvoy saved it, which became the best-received film that Shyamalan had directed and written since 2002’s Signs. Shyamalan’s work once again felt unpredictable, bold, and exciting, leading to a renewed interest in not just Glass but in his other projects released in subsequent years.

Movie Tomatometer Score Popcornmeter Score Release Year Split 78% 79% 2016 The Visit 68% 52% 2015 After Earth 12% 36% 2013 The Last Airbender 5% 30% 2010 The Happening 18% 24% 2008 Lady in the Water 25% 49% 2006 The Village 44% 57% 2004 Signs 75% 67% 2002 Unbreakable 70% 77% 2000

McAvoy’s performance received critical acclaim and is a defining moment in an impressive career that also includes X-Men, His Dark Materials, It Chapter Two, Speak No Evil, and award-winning acting in West End productions. With Glass receiving a 37% critical score and 66% audience score, Split proved to be the most well-regarded installment in the Unbreakable trilogy, largely because of McAvoy’s many impressive portrayals being at the forefront of the story. Even next to Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson, McAvoy stole the show in Glass as well.

Split’s Last-Minute Change Worked Out Better Than Anyone Could Have Anticipated.

As McAvoy indicated in his comments, Phoenix is a tremendous actor who likely would have delivered an entirely different performance, but it was ultimately for the best that McAvoy was the one to lead Split. He made the film memorable through the incredible range he demonstrated in each of the personalities he embodied. The faith that Shyamalan put in McAvoy as early as the table read went a long way in ensuring that the actor and the film as a whole reached their full potential, making Split a high point in both Shyamalan and McAvoy’s respective careers.

Source: Happy Sad Confused

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Over 2 Years Later, Hulu’s Historical Romance Feels Like a Completely New Show

In 2023, Hulu quietly released The Artful Dodger over the holiday season. The series presented itself as an inventive twist on Charles Dickens’ Victorian masterpiece, Oliver Twist. But rather than focusing on Dickens’ titular orphan, the series took the eponymous…

Feb 7, 2026

Mickey Haller Faces the Ultimate Test in His Own Murder Trial

There’s an old legal adage that says, “A man who represents himself has a fool for a client,” but not every man is Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo). If you’ve watched the previous three seasons of the Netflix series The Lincoln…

Feb 7, 2026

The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants Review

It raised more than a few eyebrows when The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants was selected as a closing night film at AFI Fest. It made more sense within the screening’s first few minutes. Not because of the film itself, but the…

Feb 5, 2026

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Review: An Evolving Chaos

Although Danny Boyle started this franchise, director Nia DaCosta steps up to the plate to helm 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, and the results are glorious. This is a bold, unsettling, and unexpectedly thoughtful continuation of one of modern…

Feb 5, 2026