10 Actors Who Hated Their Own Movie Death Scenes

Marion Cotillard hates her Dark Knight Rises death scene even more than you do.

Jessica Alba death Fantastic Four
Fox

Death is a part of cinema just as it is a part of life - it is present in all genres of filmmaking because who among us isn't going to meet their maker one day?

A great death scene can help elevate a movie's story and characters, imbuing them with fierce emotion and making everything in its vicinity mean so much more.

A bad death, meanwhile, can leave audiences with a majorly sour taste in their mouths, perhaps even feeling that the entire movie has been ruined as a result.

But viewers aren't the only ones liable to loathe a death scene - sometimes actors themselves have few kind words to say about the ways in which they've ben dispatched.

Whether feeling that it wasn't time for their character to go, hating the way in which the scene was filmed, or taking issue with the director's choices in the editing room, these 10 actors all hated their own deaths in major movies.

In some cases audiences most certainly felt the same, while in others the results were totally iconic and unforgettable, regardless of the experience the actor had...

10. Thandiwe Newton - Solo: A Star Wars Story

Jessica Alba death Fantastic Four
Lucasfilm

Thandiwe Newton appeared in Solo: A Star Wars Story as Val, the wife of outlaw Tobias Beckett (Woody Harrelson).

Though the marketing suggested an actress of Newton's repute would be sticking around for most if not all of the movie, she ends up perishing during the coaxium heist sequence at the end of the first act.

Val sacrifices herself, detonating a bomb to help her husband and the others escape, and if her demise seemed strangely hasty, that's precisely because it was.

As Newton revealed in a recent interview, Val was originally supposed to fall off the train platform, leaving the door open for her to return in a future film, but hurried on-set rewrites due to the movie's intense production schedule changed plans:

"That's what it originally was: that the explosion and she falls out and you don't know where she's gone. So I could have come back at some point. But when we came to filming, as far as I was concerned and was aware, when it came to filming that scene, it was too huge a set-piece to create, so they just had me blow up and I’m done."

Thandie additionally held nothing back with voicing her displeasure at Val's death:

"I remembered at the time thinking, 'This is a big, big mistake' - not because of me, not because I wanted to come back. You don't kill off the first Black woman to ever have a real role in a Star Wars movie. Like, are you f**king joking?"

No lies detected, Thandiwe.

Contributor
Contributor

Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.