10 Strangest Reasons Actors Turned Down Famous Movie Roles

10. Laurence Fishburne Thought It Glorified Heroin Use - Pulp Fiction

The Role

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Jules Winnfield, the smooth-talking, no-nonsense associate of crime boss Marsellus Wallace (Ving Rhames), as was ultimately played by Samuel L. Jackson to iconic, Oscar-nominated success.

But Quentin Tarantino's original choice was none other than Laurence Fishburne - in fact, Tarantino wrote the part entirely with him in mind, while Jackson was his second choice.

Why He Turned It Down

Though Tarantino claimed at the time that Fishburne declined the role because he didn't see it as a starring role, the actor clarified in a recent interview that he actually had misgivings with how the film depicted heroin use.

Namely, he felt that Tarantino's script effectively glamorised the drug, which made him uncomfortable. In his own words:

"I just had a problem with the way the heroin use was dealt with... I just felt it was a little cavalier, and it was a little loose. I felt like it made heroin use attractive... It was about the way in which the heroin thing was delivered. And the whole f**king thing with the hypodermic and the adrenaline shot? No."

Fishburne added that the size of the role had nothing to do with him turning it down, and that he has no qualms about Jackson taking the part and making it his own: "Sam f**king sticks the movie in his pocket and walks away from it, walks into a f**king leading-man career."

While no movie reads exactly the same on the page as it does on the screen, it's still tough to appreciate that Fishburne could come away from Tarantino's script thinking it was in any way making heroin use look sexy or aspirational. Just no.

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