Mark Ruffalo Slapped The ‘S— Out’ of Channing Tatum
Mark Ruffalo didn’t hold back when it came to slapping Channing Tatum when they were co-stars nearly ten years ago. As the actor appeared on Hot Ones ahead of the…

Channing Tatum and Mark Ruffalo attend the Sony Pictures Classics TIFF celebration dinner during the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival at Creme Brasserie on September 5, 2014 in Toronto, Canada.
Jonathan Leibson/Getty ImagesMark Ruffalo didn't hold back when it came to slapping Channing Tatum when they were co-stars nearly ten years ago. As the actor appeared on Hot Ones ahead of the release of Poor Things, host Sean Evans asked him about the time he accidentally popped Tatum‘s eardrum on the set of Foxcatcher. The 2014 sports thriller starred the two actors as Olympic wrestlers Mark and David Schultz. Ruffalo played David, who was murdered in January 1996 by wealthy John du Pont (played by Steve Carell) after John recruited the brothers to help train them.
Ruffalo said in the Thursday (December 7) episode that Channing asked him to "slap the s--- out of him," something that was "easy to do" because he had "beaten the s--- out of" the Hulk actor "so many times." He recalled the two of them spent four months learning how to wrestle together.
The Magic Mike alum first told the popped eardrum story at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, where Foxcatcher's director, Bennett Miller, won the festival’s best director prize. Tatum said that at the time, his ear made a "screeching noise," and he couldn't hear anything. He added, "Eardrums heal, so I’m fine." The film was nominated five times for Academy Awards, including Ruffalo as best supporting actor.
In his new film starring opposite Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, Margaret Qualley, and Ramy Youssef, there was a lot of smacking on set. Dafoe told the New York Times recently he had Stone slap him across the face more than 20 times during the filming of one scene in which he doesn't even appear on camera. Stone slaps his character, who is off-camera in the shot. But that didn’t stop Dafoe from wanting to be present on set even though he wasn’t required to be there. Poor Things premieres in theaters on Friday, December 8.
14 Actors Who Hated Their Own Movies
There are movies that we love and those we can't stand. For the actors starring in these films, some are proud of the work they did, while others wish they didn't sign up for certain projects. Actors of high and low status have regrets about the roles they've taken on during the course of their careers. Unfortunately for them, these movies will live on forever to haunt them. Some have openly bashed the films they starred in, while others have taken it in stride and made jokes about their poor choices. However, some of the movies on this list have become cult favorites, like the 2004 Catwoman movie Halle Berry starred in. Critics may have hated it, with a Rotten Tomatoes rating of a low 8%, but it still gained a cult following. While appearing on What What Happens Live in 2017, the actress was asked to rate the movie and while laughing, she says, "100."
Cult Followings
Another film that has a large cult following is the Twilight film franchise. Robert Pattinson starred as Edward Cullen, the brooding heartthrob vampire of every teenage girl's fantasies during the late aughts. During the Twilight mania, Pattinson was overwhelmed by the intensity of it all, and his disinterest in the franchise was reflected in his press tour for the films. In a 2019 interview with USA Today, Pattinson revealed he has "very warm memories" since the mania died down. He told the publication, "People come up [to me] and just have very fond memories of it. It's a really sweet thing. I think the only scary part was right in the thick of it all, when it was very, very intense." The actor also spoke highly of the film's soundtrack. He said as he recently watched part of New Moon on TV. "It genuinely does have an incredibly good soundtrack. I completely forgot, but the soundtracks were quite ahead of their time." The New Moon soundtrack featured artists like Grizzly Bear, Bon Iver & St. Vincent, Lykke Li, Death Cab For Cutie, Muse, and The Killers.
Take a look below at which 14 actors hated the movies they starred in.
Arnold Schwarzenegger -- 'Red Sonja'

Of the 1985 fantasy film, Schwarzenegger called it "the worst film I have ever made." He once said the film is so bad, he used it to punish his kids. "When my kids get out of line, they’re sent to their rooms and forced to watch 'Red Sonja' 10 times. I never had too much trouble with them."
Ryan Reynolds -- 'Green Lantern'

2011's 'Green Lantern' was so bad, Reynolds couldn't bring himself to watch the movie all the way through. Even his Deadpool character made fun of it in the first 'Deadpool' movie, saying, "Please don’t make the super-suit green…or animated."
Michelle Pfeiffer -- 'Grease 2'

In a 2007 interview with 'Hollywood,' Pfeiffer said that she hated the 1982 sequel "with a vengeance." She said she was young at the time and "could not believe how bad it was." The actress rose to prominence the following year after starring in 1983’s 'Scarface.'
Jessica Alba -- 'Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer'

Playing the Invisible Woman in the 2007 superhero sequel, Alba previously told 'Elle,' "I hated it. I really hated [it]." She recalls a scene she was dying in and the director Tim Story told her, "'It looks too real. It looks too painful. Can you be prettier when you cry? Cry pretty, Jessica.'" At the time, the experience made her question not only her worth as an actor, but also her worth as a human being and said, "F--- it. I don't care about this business anymore."
Channing Tatum -- 'GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra'

Of the 2009 action/adventure movie based on the toy line, Tatum said, “I’ll be honest, I f---ing hate that movie." Not only was he pushed into doing it, he also said the script wasn't any good. On top of that, Tatum said didn’t want to do something that was bad, as he was a fan of GI Joe animated series from the '80s and "watched every morning growing up."
Brad Pitt -- 'The Devil’s Own'

Pitt called the 1997 thriller, in which he starred alongside Harrison Ford, a “disaster” and “the most irresponsible bit of filmmaking, if you can even call it that, that I’ve ever seen." There was even drama between Ford and Pitt, with the two butting heads about agreeing on a director and Ford's desire to have his character have a more complex storyline like Brad's.
Halle Berry -- 'Catwoman'

When the actress accepted her Razzie for Worst Actress in 2005, she told the audience, "Thank you so much. I never in my life thought I would be up here." She then hilariously thanked her manager, saying, "He loves me so much that he convinces me to do projects even when he knows that it is s---." Berry took the criticism in stride, later telling 'Vanity Fair' in 2021, "I always learned that if you can't be a good loser, then you don't deserve to be a good winner. So I went there and made fun of myself. I had a great time and then I set that thing on fire."
Charlize Theron -- 'Reindeer Games'

In this 2000 crime-thriller starring alongside Ben Affleck, the actress told 'Esquire' in 2007 it was "a bad, bad, bad movie. But even though the movie might suck, I got to work with John Frankenheimer. I wasn’t lying to myself – that’s why I did it.” Director Frankenheimer was known for his classic 1960s films like 'Birdman of Alcatraz' and 'The Manchurian Candidate.'
Ryan Reynolds -- 'Green Lantern'

2011's 'Green Lantern' was so bad, Reynolds couldn't bring himself to watch the movie all the way through. Even his Deadpool character made fun of it in the first 'Deadpool' movie, saying, "Please don’t make the super-suit green…or animated."
Robert Pattinson -- 'Twilight'

Though I was absolutely a "Twi-hard" when the movie came out and read the entire series, it was well-known that Pattinson hated playing the role of Edward Cullen. Interview footage of the actor circulated social media before the final 'Twilight' film hit theaters. He said, "It’s weird kind of representing something you don’t particularly like." A few weeks later, he said he would have “mindlessly hated” the series if he wasn't starring in it. He also joked that he "stopped mentally progressing around the time when I started doing those movies."
Sylvester Stallone -- 'Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot'

In 2006, Sly called the 1992 action-comedy, "Maybe one of the worst films in the entire solar system, including alien productions we’ve never seen… a flatworm could write a better script than 'Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot.'" Stallone signed onto the project after he heard that his infamous action rival, Arnold Schwarzenegger, was interested in the part. However, in 2017, Schwarzenegger revealed he pretended to be interested in the movie to lure Stallone towards the “really bad” script.
Alec Baldwin -- ' Rock of Ages'

The actor said of the jukebox musical comedy: "It was a complete disaster." Baldwin told 'The Wrap' of the remorse he felt early on: "A week in you go, 'Oh God, what have I done?'" He even Baldwin to have his role replaced shortly before the beginning of production. The film's ensemble cast of Julianne Hough, Paul Giamatti, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Malin Åkerman, Mary J. Blige, Bryan Cranston, Russell Brand, and Tom Cruise still couldn't save the negative critic reviews.
Ben Affleck -- 'Daredevil'

Before he landed the role of Batman, Affleck played the role of Daredevil in the 2003 Marvel movie. The actor told 'Entertainment Weekly' in 2007, "'Daredevil' didn’t work at all. If I wanted to go viral, I would be less polite."
George Clooney -- 'Batman & Robin'

There have been many actors who took on the role of Batman over the years, but only one had a batsuit with nipples -- and that was Clooney's in the 1992 Joel Schumacher-directed film. The actor thought he "destroyed the franchise until somebody else brought it back years later and changed it," adding that at the time he thought it was going to be a very good career move. "It wasn’t."