17 Actors Who Literally Played One Type Of Character Their Entire Career Until They Surprised Us All With Something New

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Once an actor gets known for playing a certain type of role, they're often stuck in that type for a loooong time. Still...some actors have impressively managed to break out.

"We're breaking free"
"We're breaking free"

Disney Channel

Well, recently, Reddit user roosterkun asked about actors who actually broke out of their typecast, and people had a ton of great responses. Here's 17 stars who managed to pull it off!

1.Adam Sandler rose to fame in a number of slapstick '90s and 2000s comedies like Billy Madison and Happy Gilmore. Not only was he not considered a serious actor, but by the 2010s, he was considered a bad one. He appeared in a number of notoriously unfunny flops, including Jack and Jill and Pixels, and was nominated for almost FORTY Razzies by 2017.

Closeup of Adam Sandler

But he completely changed direction with the 2019 crime thriller Uncut Gems. Sandler's performance was critically lauded and proved he could do dramatic roles. While he's clearly still interested in his regular low-quality comedy films (check out Murder Mystery 2), he proved it wasn't a complete one-off with a dramatic role in Hustle, which wasn't quite Uncut Gems was was still a respectable drama.

Closeup of Adam Sandler in "Uncut Gems"

2.Jeff Daniels did the opposite — he had been known for serious, celebrated roles prior to appearing in Dumb and Dumber alongside comedic legend Jim Carrey.

Closeup of Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels

3.Daniel Craig is a great recent example. Best known for playing James Bond, Craig had appeared in a number of serious thrillers and dramas. While starring in another crime story — Knives Out — may have seemed right on brand for Craig, anyone who's seen the movie can tell that the thoughtful southern detective with a flair for dramatic "whodunnit" speeches is a MASSIVE departure for him.

Closeup of Daniel Craig and Ana de Armas

The character is the opposite of these more reserved, formal characters and in fact is often out of place among the rich and powerful...and yet, Craig nails it, to the point where people are requesting endless Knives Out films led by Benoit Blanc.

Closeup of Daniel Craig in "Glass Onion"
Netflix / Courtesy Everett Collection

4.Craig's Knives Out: Glass Onion costar Dave Bautista has also eschewed type. Formerly a wrestler, it seemed Bautista would have a path similar to The Rock and do mostly comedic, family, action-heavy roles...especially after he starred in Guardians of the Galaxy.

Dave Bautista in "Guardians of the Galaxy"

After Guardians, though, Bautista tried his hand at a few more serious action roles and even villainous roles. With his role in sci-fi hit Blade Runner 2049, sci-fi epic Dune, and psychological horror film Knock at the Cabin, Bautista proved himself a surprisingly strong dramatic actor who could portray many different character archetypes.

Screenshot from "Knock at the Cabin"

5.In the 2000s, Steve Carell was best known for starring roles in The Office and films like The 40-Year-Old Virgin.

Screenshot from "The Office"
Ron Tom / NBC / courtesy everett collection

But he broke from tradition when he starred as a depressive scholar in indie hit Little Miss Sunshine — and he proved it wasn't a one-off with strong performances in dramas like Foxcatcher (for which he was nominated for an Oscar), The Big Short, and Beautiful Boy.

Screenshot from "Little Miss Sunshine"

6.Jason Bateman was another sitcom star who seemed capable of a single deadpan sort of comedy after a long tenure on Arrested Development. He also appeared in rom-coms like The Switch, The Break-Up, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Couples Retreat, Horrible Bosses, The Change-Up, Identity Thief, etc.

Screenshot from "Arrested Development"

However, Bateman proved his dramatic skill in the psychological thriller The Gift — before going on to star in the extremely dark and heavy series Ozark, which premiered to massive critical acclaim, much of which focused on Bateman's performance.

Screenshot from "Ozark"
Jackson Davis / Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection

7.Bryan Cranston in Breaking Bad is one of my favorite examples — it's an example not just of stellar acting but of stellar casting. Cranston was beloved for playing sitcom dad Hal in Malcolm in the Middle.

Hal in "Malcolm in the Middle"

Putting him as another dad in the tonal opposite of the sitcom was a genius move, because it made his eventual transformation into hardened drug dealer that much more interesting. Cranston nailed the shift, proving his prowess as an actor and a true jack of all trades.

Closeup of Walter White in "Breaking Bad"
Gregory Peters / AMC / courtesy Everett Collection

8.Another one of my favorite examples? Mary Tyler Moore in Ordinary People. Moore was a beloved sitcom fixture for years on The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

Closeup of Mary Tyler Moore

Appearing in a serious drama like Ordinary People was a huge departure for Moore — even more so by the fact that she played a horribly cold mother. Moore was nominated for an Oscar for her performance.

Screenshot from "Ordinary People"
Paramount / courtesy Everett Collection

9.Woody Harrelson was best known throughout the '80s and early '90s for his role on the sitcom Cheers. He made the jump to film with similarly comedic roles in movies like White Men Can't Jump, Wildcats, and Cool Blue.

Woody Harrelson in "Cheers"
Paramount TV/ Courtesy: Everett Colleciton

In 1993, he tried his hand at a more serious role in Indecent Proposal. But the true shift came the next year, when Harrelson portrayed a mass murderer in Natural Born Killers. Since then, Harrelson has portrayed a plethora of different characters in different genres, franchises, and plays. He's been nominated for three Oscars.

Screenshot from "Natural Born Killers"

10.Bruce Willis was similarly a TV lead before Die Hard. His most notable role had been starring as David in Moonlighting and in the rom-com Blind Date, and he seemed to be poised to continue to play romantic leads.

Closeup of Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd

When he was cast in Die Hard, he became a major action star, completely changing his career (which would go on to become extremely action-heavy, though he did break out of that type, too, with the critically acclaimed The Sixth Sense).

Bruce Willis in "Die Hard"

11.Jonah Hill was widely known for comedy roles in the 2000s, such as Knocked Up and Superbad. He surprised everyone with a supporting role in 2011's Moneyball, garnering an Oscar nomination.

Jonah Hill in "Moneyball"
Melinda Sue Gordon/Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

While he continued to appear in comedies (like 21 Jump Street), he started racking up an impressive track record, working on the Tarantino film Django Unchained and more prominently in the Scorsese film The Wolf of Wall Street, a role he took for SAG's minimum salary because he wanted to be in it so badly. He's even forayed into directing with the critically acclaimed Mid90s, proving himself far more than just a funny guy.

Jonah Hill in "The Wolf of Wall Street"
Mary Cybulski/Paramount Pictures / courtesy Everett Collection

12.While Matthew McConaughey did a large variety of roles earlier in his career, he started to get typecast as a romantic comedy lead with a series of hits like The Wedding Planner, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, Failure to Launch, Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, and Fool's Gold.

Matthew McConaughey and Kate Hudson in "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days"

However, in 2012–2014, there was a huge shift in the way the public saw McConaughey after he appeared in Mud, Dallas Buyers Club, The Wolf of Wall Street, True Detective, and Interstellar all within a two-year period, culminating in him winning an Oscar in 2014 for Dallas Buyers Club, and getting nominated for an Emmy for True Detective.

Matthew McConaughey in "Dallas Buyers Club"
Anne Marie Fox/Focus Features / courtesy Everett Collection

13.Robin Williams was a beloved comedic actor for decades, appearing in comedies like The Birdcage and family films like Mrs. Doubtfire and Hook.

Screenshot from "Mrs. Doubtfire"
20th Century Fox / courtesy Everett Collection

While Williams did memorably appear in a few dramas (including Dead Poets Society and Good Will Hunting), he usually portrayed a heroic, beloved figure. In the early 2000s, however, he proved he could take on dark roles after starring in Insomnia (in which he played a murderer), One Hour Photo, and The Final Cut.

Al Pacino and Robin Williams in "Insomnia"

14.Ralph Fiennes built a career on appearing in serious, heavy dramas (often in villainous roles) like The English Patient, Schindler's List, The Hurt Locker, and The Reader, and also gained more widespread fame playing Harry's Potter's villain Voldemort.

Closeup of young Ralph Fiennes
Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Fiennes rarely appeared in anything even comedy-adjacent...until his role in the comedy The Grand Budapest Hotel (and a subsequent role in the Coen brothers' comedy Hail, Caesar!).

Screenshot from "The Grand Budapest Hotel"

15.And finally, let's end on three actors who broke out of HUGE typecasts after starring in the 2000s' biggest franchises. First up, we have Elijah Wood, who led the Lord of the Rings trilogy as the hobbit Frodo.

Screenshot from "The Lord of the Rings"

After LOTR, Wood appeared in indie hit Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, then went dark with roles in Green Street Hooligans and Sin City (in which he portrayed a literal cannibal).

Elijah Wood in "Sin City"

16.Next, we have Daniel Radcliffe, who played Harry Potter in the series of the same name, a role many struggle to divorce him from. His first role after the series ended was the horror film The Woman in Black.

Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter

From there, Radcliffe seemed on a quest to take the strangest roles possible in a number of offbeat indie projects. From playing a talking dead body in Swiss Army Man to a man who grows horns in Horns to a dog walker in a fictional romance movie-within-a-movie in Trainwreck to the Weird Al biopic literally titled Weird, Radcliffe has proven he can play virtually any role. To any who doubted his acting, Radcliffe has also proven himself onstage in a variety of roles such as Equus, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, and more recently, Merrily We Roll Along.

Poster for "Swiss Army Man"
A24 / courtesy Everett Collection

17.And finally, we'll end on Robert Pattinson, who memorably starred as the vampire Edward in the Twilight series. After Twilight (which were, by the way, critically panned films), Pattinson appeared in a number of really interesting and different indie roles in acclaimed films, including The Lighthouse.

Robert Pattinson in "Twilight"

But the true break from his typecast came in his next major commercial role as Bruce Wayne in The Batman. It was a controversial casting choice, but after the film's release, Pattinson garnered major critical acclaim for his performance.

Screenshot from "The Batman"
Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection

What actor surprised you when they played out of their typecast? Let us know in the comments!

Submissions have been edited for length/clarity.