
Let’s be real: even the greatest of the great aren’t above taking a role that leaves viewers cocking their head to one side and going, Wait… what happened here? There’s something perversely fascinating about seeing a great actor blow it in a movie that’s otherwise hitting it out of the park. It doesn’t necessarily break the film, but it’s definitely the thing you’re walking away remembering. Here are ten notable examples of great actors who just didn’t quite bring their A-game-even when everything else around them was firing on all cylinders.

10. Rinko Kikuchi – Pacific Rim
Pacific Rim is a neon explosion of robots and kaiju, but Rinko Kikuchi’s iteration of grown-up Mako Mori never hits its stride. While child Mako is vividly emotional, Kikuchi’s iteration comes off much more subdued and disconnected. In a film where energy and momentum are crucial, that dampens the performance to the point where it weakens what should have been the emotional core of the story.

9. Orlando Bloom – Kingdom of Heaven
Fresh from The Lord of the Rings, Orlando Bloom was handed an all-out historical epic to anchor. But as Balian, he struggles to bring the emotional heft and inner turmoil the role demands. Even in the superior director’s cut, which fixes many of the film’s issues, Bloom’s performance still feels like its softest point, a lightweight center in an otherwise weighty drama.

8. Katie Holmes – Batman Begins
Christopher Nolan loaded Batman Begins with powerhouse performances, but Katie Holmes’ take on Rachel Dawes just doesn’t quite fit. The sincerity is there, but the intensity and chemistry that are called for in such a high-stakes story just aren’t. When Maggie Gyllenhaal stepped into the role in The Dark Knight, the contrast made Holmes’ version look even weaker in retrospect.

7. Cameron Diaz – Gangs of New York
With a movie chock full of savage performances, the usually reliable Cameron Diaz ends up miscast as pickpocket Jenny Everdeane. An uneven Irish accent and lighter tone feel at odds with the raw world Scorsese builds. Amidst heavy-hitters like Daniel Day-Lewis and Leonardo DiCaprio, Diaz is jarringly conspicuous and not in any positive manner.

6. Kevin Costner – Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves
Alan Rickman is having the time of his life in this film, while Kevin Costner’s Robin Hood… isn’t. The wandering accent, the uneven delivery, and the lack of chemistry all add up to a performance out of sync with the playful swashbuckling tone. Costner looks and sounds like he accidentally walked onto the wrong set.

5. Tom Hanks – Elvis
Tom Hanks is as reliable as they come, but his turn as Colonel Tom Parker is one of his rare misfires. The prosthetics, the exaggerated accent, the almost cartoonish villainy—none of it meshes with Austin Butler’s grounded and electric portrayal of Elvis. That, of course, was no surprise when he walked away with a Razzie nomination for this one.

4. Daryl Hannah – Wall Street
Wall Street is razor-sharp drama, and yet, Daryl Hannah’s performance as Darien feels curiously lifeless. Reportedly unhappy during production, she speaks her lines with such low energy that it presents a peculiar mismatch with the otherwise intense momentum of the movie. Thin as the role is, her disengaged performance would render it even thinner.

3. Andie MacDowell – Four Weddings and a Funeral
This RomCom classic clicks on nearly every level except for Andie MacDowell’s take on Carrie. Opposite Hugh Grant’s awkward charm, MacDowell’s overly flat line delivery drains the spark out of key emotional moments. The chemistry feels so one-sided that it’s hard to buy the romance that holds the whole film together.

2. George Clooney – Batman & Robin
Clooney will be the first to joke about how badly this went. His version of Batman is more smirking socialite than tortured hero, and in a movie already packed with camp, neon, and puns, his laid-back vibe only adds to the chaos. The infamous batsuit didn’t help either. It’s a classic case of the wrong actor in the wrong version of the right character.

1. Halle Berry – Catwoman
Halle Berry is incredibly talented, but Catwoman sits on a different planet. The movie is a mess, but Berry’s overly campy, awkward performance is the most memorable thing about it for the wrong reasons. To her credit, she took her Razzie win with humor, but no amount of charm can change the fact that this was a full-throttle misfire.

Even the best actors bomb sometimes, but that’s part of what makes their successes shine even brighter. A bad performance is not the death knell of a career; it’s just a reminder that even Hollywood legends are human.