More Classifieds
|
Foreclosure Sale
|
Real Estate
|
Cars.com
|
Jobs
LAT Home
|
My LATimes
|
Print Edition
|
All Sections
SEARCH
Movies
TV
Music
Interactive
The Biz
Celebrity
Awards
Photos
Hollywood A-Z
Reviews
Charts
You are here:
LAT Home
>
Entertainment
1 of 9
Next Photo
(Paramount Pictures)
Email
Most Viewed
1.
How Paramount let 'Twilight' get away
2.
'American Idol's' David Cook gets some help for new album
3.
After more than 400 lawsuits, disabled man can sue no more
4.
CSU may cut future enrollment by 10,000
5.
Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown urges high court to let Prop. 8 take effect
More Galleries
'High School Musical 3': post-grad plans
Best & worst: TV stunt casting
SHOWBIZ 7s: 'High School Musical 3' star Corbin Bleu's favorite high school movies
Famous celebrity denials
Leo's big-screen posse
Summer movie cameos: Funny or superfluous?
By Patrick Kevin Day, Times Staff Writer
Hollywood has a lot of stars and an ever decreasing number of character-driven stories to cast them in. What's an actor to do? Many take what they can get and film cameos. And during no time is the cameo more prevalent than in the summer months, when high-concept franchises throw money around on big effects and winking walk-ons from familiar faces.
In Hollywood, big franchises enjoy fist-bumping other franchises. Look no farther than
David Hasselhoff
in his time-honored "Baywatch" trunks as he takes a dip with SpongeBob in "The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie."
Used wisely, the cameo can add cachet and novelty to a movie: audiences loved Sean Connery's last-minute appearance in "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves" in 1991. But done without panache, the cameo can become nothing more than a cheap gag: Consider Kevin Smith's "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back" in 2001.
This summer has had a high number of cameos and we're only at the halfway point.
ADVERTISEMENT