10 Most Distracting Cameos In 21st Century Films

10. Mike Myers - Inglourious Basterds

Inglourious Basterds is arguably Quentin Tarantino's magnum opus with not a single line of dialogue wasted, managing to create one of cinema's most compelling villains in Hans Landa and featuring some incredibly tense scenes.

Advertisement

Looking at some of Tarantino's earlier work, he has taken some incredible risks when casting his films. He famously met a lot of resistance when making Pulp Fiction after Michael Madsen was unavailable for the role of Vincent Vega and he decided to pursue John Travolta for the part instead.

The studio was reluctant to cast Travolta who prior to Pulp Fiction had starred in the box office bomb Look Who's Talking Now, which is one of the rare films to have a 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. While Travolta's casting was ultimately inspired the same cannot be said of the bold casting of Mike Myers, who had slowly faded out of Hollywood post-Love Guru, who played British officer Ed Fenech in Inglourious Basterds.

Myers is one of the most influential comedic actors of his generation but his exaggerated English accent had more than a whiff of Austin Powers about it, and is impossible to take seriously in this otherwise fairly grounded scene. The cartoonish performance is so tonally off compared to the rest of the film that this scene sticks out like a sore thumb, which says something in a film where Hitler is gruesomely machine gunned to death in the third act.

Advertisement