Five Celebs Whose High Salary Quotes May Be In Trouble

Five Celebs Whose High Salary Quotes May Be In Trouble

Published: June 12, 2009 @ 5:43 pm
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By Lucas Shaw

With some recent flops behind them, these actors are probably a little worried about their perch atop the salary heap.

 

Everyone's going to work for millions, so nobody's sad for them. But with the movie studios restructuring their economic models in the face of a global recession, nobody's a slam dunk anymore...especially for their usual asking price.

 
Will Ferrell
 “Old School,” “Elf,” and “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy” catapulted Ferrell to stardom and made him a comedy must-have. Movies such as “Starsky & Hutch” and ”Wedding Crashers” were cameos, hoping for a boost just from his appearance on screen.

 

After a few forays into more serious material, Ferrell further entrenched himself at the top of the comedy world with “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” and “Blades of Glory,” both of which earned upwards of $100 million domestically.

 

However, as reviewers have begun to sour on his routine, audiences are also giving him reason to worry. 2008’s “Step Brothers” topped the $100 million mark, but it was book-ended by the dud “Semi Pro” and this summer’s “Land of the Lost.” “Semi Pro” earned just $33 million domestically and even Universal acknowledges that “Land of the Lost” is a bust.

 

With audiences shifting to newer, raunchier movies like “The Hangover” or “Pineapple Express,” Ferrell has lost some of his comedic appeal. His inability to establish himself as commercially viable beyond comedy only makes matters worse, and may make studios reluctant to fork over the sums that they used to pay off of his one-line pitches.

 

Eddie Murphy
Murphy made enough hit movies by the end of the 1980s to retire, and his shift to family comedies in the late 1990s earned him box office success with franchises like “The Nutty Professor” and “Dr. Doolittle.”

 

Murphy entered the first real slump of his career with three back-to-back flops — “Showtime,” “The Adventures of Pluto Nash” and “I Spy” -- all of which grossed less than $40 million. After rebounding with films like “Daddy Day Care” and “Norbit,” Murphy bottomed out with last summer’s “Meet Dave,” his worst box-office showing since “Pluto Nash.”

 

His next film,  “Imagine That,” opened this weekend and tanked at $5.6 million. Though Murphy’s movies have been routinely panned by critics for the past several years, their earnings have kept him working and well-paid. If “Imagine That” replicates “Meet Dave,” Murphy could find himself mired in another slump.
 

Russell Crowe
Scott’s 2000 smash “Gladiator” not only gave Crowe his highest grossing film but an  Academy Award. A year later, “A Beautiful Mind” nearly topped “Gladiator,” as Crowe went on to record a string of box office successes.

 

However, the Aussie is no longer a guaranteed crowd-pleaser. 

 

In 2006, “A Good Year” was a disappointment, netting just $7.5 million, and Crowe’s last two films have both failed to meet expectations.

 

“Body of Lies,” which reunited Crowe with Scott and also starred Leonardo DiCaprio, grossed just $39 million domestically while this year’s “State of Play” has also failed to top $40 million.

Tags: A Beautiful Mind, box office, Eddie Murphy, Elf, Gladiator, Leonardo DiCaprio, Mike Myers, Movies, Old School, Russell Crowe, salary, The Nutty Professor, Will Ferrell, William Morris
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