
What’s more ruthless than a box office failure? When it brings down the entire movie-star fantasy with it. Hollywood is filled with stories of near-A-listers actors who possessed the looks, the hype, and the breakthrough performance, only to see it all disappear after one (or two) career-killing decisions. It’s the sort of behind-the-scenes soap opera that’s as intriguing as it is merciless.

For pop culture fans, these stories aren’t just about schadenfreude they’re snapshots of how quickly the industry can turn. One minute, you’re headlining a tentpole blockbuster the next, you’re quietly sliding back into TV, indie films, or disappearing altogether. And often, the reasons are a mix of bad scripts, mismatched roles, and the sheer unpredictability of audience taste. From superhero flops to sci-fi fiascos, these are eight actors whose screen momentum crashed in ways nobody predicted.

1. Taylor Kitsch and the ‘John Carter’ Disaster
Having impressed on Friday Night Lights, Taylor Kitsch was destined to be Hollywood’s next action star. Disney gave him the lead on John Carter, an enormous sci-fi epic with franchise potential. Instead, it ranks as one of the highest money-losers in studio history. The movie’s failure was so massive that it not only sank the proposed sequels indeed, it practically shut down Kitsch’s bid for blockbuster leading-man status. Although he later scored success with television productions, his film career never regained its initial promise.

2. Alicia Silverstone’s Post-‘Clueless’ Freefall
During the mid-’90s, Alicia Silverstone was the teen queen, having scored her iconic role as Cher in Clueless. But her subsequent big-budget role as Batgirl in Batman & Robin was a box office bomb. The film’s campy style and clumsy dialogue secured it a place in flop annals, and Silverstone even won a Razzie Award. She has since said the experience made her “stop loving acting for a very long time.” Though she has worked steadily ever since, she never recaptured that A-list glow.

3. Sam Worthington: The Invisible ‘Avatar’ Star
Yes, Sam Worthington leads the Avatar franchise, but this is the surprise most don’t even know his name. Off of Pandora, outside of James Cameron’s virtual reality, his own pursuits at stardom (Terminator: Salvation, Clash of the Titans) fell flat. His body of work during the past 15 years outside of Pandora has been a series of forgettable films, revealing that being the face of a billion-dollar film doesn’t necessarily make for enduring star status.

4. Cara Delevingne’s Transition from Catwalk to Box Office Flops
With her daring brows and high-fashion background, Cara Delevingne was set to translate modeling success into film celebrity. Alas, her grand swings Suicide Squad and Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets either put her on the sidelines of the ensemble or bombed entirely. She’s since turned to TV and the stage, with a 2024 West End role as Sally Bowles, but her blockbuster phase was over nearly as quickly as it started.

5. Brandon Routh and the Superman Curse
When Brandon Routh wore the cape in Superman Returns, it was going to be his ticket to superstardom. Instead, the movie’s mediocre box office torpedoed any talk of sequels. Routh picked up steady work on The CW’s Arrowverse, but his professional trajectory deviated far from the Hollywood swagger many envisioned. His tale is a cautionary one that even starring as one of pop culture’s greatest icons isn’t necessarily a path to a golden ticket.

6. Charlie Hunnam’s ‘King Arthur’ Knockout
Following Sons of Anarchy, Charlie Hunnam was poised to take over the box office. He booked leads on Pacific Rim and The Lost City of Z, but neither of those made him a marquee player. The real setback came with Guy Ritchie’s King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, which tanked spectacularly. Hunnam has been stuck in ensemble pictures or low-key projects ever since, his blockbuster break firmly in the rearview.

7. Emilia Clarke’s Post-‘Game of Thrones’ Struggle
As Daenerys Targaryen, Emilia Clarke was TV’s most familiar face. Hollywood knocked with big franchises Terminator Genisys, Solo: A Star Wars Story but they both disappointed and attracted lukewarm critical reception. Even the rom-com Last Christmas couldn’t ignite a new path for her. Even though Clarke has talent, her film career never reached the pinnacle of her TV popularity.

8. Taylor Lautner’s Vanishing Act After ‘Twilight’
When Twilight mania struck, Taylor Lautner was an official teen idol. His own solo starring vehicle, Abduction, was intended to be his demonstration of carrying a movie. In stead, his acting was likened by critics to “an advanced robot mimicking human dialogue,” and the film bombed. Several Adam Sandler comedies and low-budget films followed, but Lautner’s stint as Hollywood leading man was over nearly as soon as it had started.
In Hollywood, momentum is the key and once lost, getting it back is practically impossible. These performers demonstrate that a single misstep, either a misguided script choice or a big box office bomb, can change a career path forever. Yet some have managed to find new paths in TV, theater, or specialty film projects, illustrating that even though A-list status is hard to attain, redefinition is always an option.


