All is not success and smile in the career of Hugh Grant. We all have a weird spot on our resumes and even the iconic actor of international hits like Love Actually, Bridget Jones Diary, Four Weddings and a funeral there Gentlemen recognized that among the many titles that we find in his filmography, there are some that he would like to eliminate.
Specifically, Grant confessed in an interview with James Corden on the US program The late show in which he either answered an uncomfortable question or had to eat a cake of worms and mayonnaise, that if he had to choose one film as the worst he had done and eliminate it from his program, it would be the one -there love in the woodsa TV movie he worked on in 1987 with Emma Samms and Michael York.
“I was a bandit, I was supposed to be sexy, low budget, bad wig, bad hat… I look like Deputy Dawg,” Grant told the late-night audience to acknowledge more later than in this workwhen he was tense his voice “went up two octaves”. “was very poor“, pointed out the actor of the romantic film set in 17th century England.
In addition, Grant made a point of explaining that, although this is the only title that he dares to give publicly, there are other projects that he regrets having accepted. However, he does not wish to make their names public so as not to discredit the work of his colleagues in these films. “As someone who works in the industry, it’s one thing to say I was wrong, but I can’t bring down the rest of the wonderful colleagues who have worked with me on any film by saying that it was bad. So that’s my dilemma,” he said.
Dungeons and Dragonsa new project that he does not regret
Hugh Grant in “Dungeons and Dragons”. / assigned
What Grant does not regret, at least for the moment, is having been part of the cast of Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Thievesa film based on the popular role-playing game of the same name which will be released in Spanish theaters this March 31 in which the actor plays a thief named Forge Fletcher who ends up becoming the lord of Neverwinter.
The Sense and Sensibility actor has decided to distance himself from his romantic roles and bet on a much riskier new format in which, in his own words, he feels comfortable playing a “script that deals with losers”. “I love that taste for losers… Maybe it’s an English predilection. We like losers,” he said in an interview with Collider magazine.