14 Actors Who Demanded (And Got) Changes To The Script

1.The original ending of The Avengers had Iron Man waking up after crashing to the ground and asking, "What's next?" But that didn't impress Robert Downey Jr.

The shawarma scene

2.Chris Farley was the original voice of Shrek, but after he died in 1997, Mike Myers was hired to replace him. Myers re-recorded all of Shrek's dialogue in his natural Canadian accent, only to ask to re-record it again in the now-iconic Scottish brogue.

Chris Farley, Shrek, and Mike Meyers

3.When Samuel L. Jackson arrived in Vancouver to film Snakes on a Plane and discovered that New Line Cinema executives had changed the title to Pacific Flight 121, he insisted that it be changed back.

Snakes on a plane movie poster with title replaced with Pacific Flight 121

Jackson argued that audiences should know what they're getting into, and reminded the folks at New Line that A Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th had succeeded in part because of "snappy titles."

New Line Cinema / Courtesy Everett Collection

4.Shakira thought that Gazelle, the pop star she voiced in Zootopia, was too skinny at first. She implored the creators to "give her some meat," and they agreed, resulting in a curvier Gazelle.

Shakira on the red carpet and as gazelle
Dee Cercone / Disney / Courtesy Everett Collection

5.In Gone Girl, Ben Affleck's character was supposed to wear a baseball cap in an airport to avoid attention, but a spat between the actor and director David Fincher over which team's hat it would be shut down production for four days.

Ben Affleck putting on his Mets hat

6.Michelle Rodriguez almost quit The Fast and the Furious over a love triangle between her character, Letty Ortiz, Dominic Toretto, and Brian O'Conner, because she didn't want to cheat "in front of millions of people," even fictionally.

Rogriguez as Letty
Universal / Courtesy Everett Collection

7.Leonard Nimoy came up with the "Vulcan nerve pinch" while filming a Star Trek scene where he was supposed to knock Captain Kirk unconscious with a phaser.

Nimoy as Spoke using the nerve pinch

Nimoy thought that this gratuitous display of violence was out of character for Spock, and thus the nerve pinch was born.

Paramount / Courtesy Everett Collection

8.Anna Kendrick rejected a "fucking problematic" storyline in Pitch Perfect 3 that would've seen her character romantically linked to a music executive, Theo, with whom she already had a professional relationship.

Rebel Wilson's character hugs Anna Kendrick in Pitch Perfect 3

Kendrick also said no to a kiss between the two during the film's ending.

Universal Pictures / courtesy Everett Collection

9.When Dwayne Johnson read the script for Rampage, he wasn't happy that his gorilla sidekick, George, was supposed to die, so for about two months, he argued for the character's survival — and won!

Dwayne Johnson with his white gorilla sidekick, George

Johnson explained in a later interview, "I don't like a sad ending. Life brings that shit — I don't want it in my movies."

Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection

10.Liam Neeson agreed to star in Seth MacFarlane's A Million Ways to Die in the West...so long as he was allowed to use a "very broad Irish accent."

Neeson on horseback as the Irish outlaw

11.Prince requested a cameo role on New Girl, but he made it very clear that he wouldn't appear in the same episode as Khloé Kardashian and Kris Jenner.

Zooey Deschanel, Prince, and Jake Johnson during Prince's episode

Prince apparently said that the Kardashians, who were supposed to appear as guests at an event he was hosting, would "never be invited to a Prince party." Their appearances were cut.

20th Century Fox / Courtesy Everett Collection

12.Alan Rickman secretly rewrote parts of the "terrible" Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves script with two friends, Ruby Wax and Peter Barnes, meeting up with the latter for editing sessions in a Pizza Express.

Alan Rickman as the Sheriff

Barnes came up with the sequence when Rickman's character, the villainous Sheriff of Nottingham, sees two "wenches" and tells the first one, "You. My room, 10:30." He then tells the second, "You, 10:45." Wax added another line: "And bring a friend."

Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection

13.Dacre Montgomery asked the Duffer Brothers, creators of Stranger Things, for two sequences that would humanize his character, Billy.

Billy is pinned against a wall by his dad

14.And finally, Universal "contractually guaranteed" Tom Cruise almost complete control over The Mummy, and Cruise took it to heart.

Tom Cruise in The Mummy