"10 Fictional Characters Who Look Like Other People (And Know It)"

in fictionalcharacters •  7 years ago 

There are so many faces, and given the impossibly chiseled features of superheroes, it’s no wonder they often end up looking like celebrities, or even other fictional characters. Here are 10 of the more amusing times this has happened – and was commented on either by the character or the celebrity. For example, did you know that…

10: Deadpool once described himself as looking just like Ryan Reynolds

Deadpool is a fictional character who breaks the trope of having cheekbones sharp enough that you can get papercuts from the front of the pages he appears on by looking like a melted candle with scabies. The comics establish that the reason Deadpool looks the way he does is because his body is riddled with cancer that his mutant healing factor is constantly fighting. However, the Merc with a Mouth takes this in his stride, describing himself in one comic as looking like Ryan Reynolds (who’d just been voted the sexiest man alive at the time) crossed with a Shar Pei.

According to Ryan Reynolds someone recommended the Deadpool comics to him on the set of Blade: Trinity, and the panel of Deadpool describing himself like this was literally the first thing he saw after turning to a random page. The actor described it as “F***ing destiny” and made a promise to himself that he’d portray Wade Wilson on screen if it was the last thing he did.

As interesting as that all is, we think it’s more strange that Deadpool, a character known for breaking the fourth wall, somehow hand-picked the actor to play him and it worked.

9: Patrick Stewart thought he was Professor X the first time he saw him

For years before the release of the live-action X-Men movies, Patrick Stewart was consistently put forward by fans as the perfect man to play Professor Charles Xavier. This sentiment was echoed by the people making the first X-Men movie, who likewise considered Stewart to be their number one pick to play the wisest and baldest X-Man.

This was all news to Stewart, who had no idea what the X-Men were until he walked into a meeting about potentially appearing in the movie and someone held up a comic book with Professor X on the front of it. According to Stewart, his reaction was to simply exclaim “What am I doing on a comic book?”, to which the person holding it let out an exasperated “EXACTLY!”

The striking similarity between himself and Xavier convinced Stewart to meet with Bryan Singer, who subsequently cast him in the first X-Men movie. As if this wasn’t all strange enough, Stewart’s casting and his resemblance to Professor X was previously hinted at by, in a way, himself, because…

8: There’s a comic where Captain Picard and Professor X realize they look alike

Released in 1998, the comic Planet X is a crossover story in which the cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation meet the X-Men. Largely unheard of today, the comic is notable for a brief scene in which Captain Picard (who was played by Patrick Stewart in the TV show) meets Professor X on the ship’s holodeck. The two men study each other for a moment, and Picard’s internal monologue reveals that he thinks they look alike.

Remember, this happened before Stewart was cast as Professor X so it’s not like it was playful nod to the live action movies or anything. It was just a throwaway line about two bald men looking kind of like each other, and less than a year later it was announced that they were both going to be portrayed by the same actor. Speaking of which…

7: Han Solo admits he feels connected somehow to Indiana Jones in an obscure comic

Harrison Ford is an actor known for playing two characters: Han Solo and Indiana Jones. Though it’s believable, given the time-travel and interdimensional shenanigans that often go on in X-Men comics, that Professor X could meet Captain Picard, the idea of Han Solo meeting Indiana Jones is kind of ridiculous. Ladies and gentlemen, let us introduce you to the comic Into the Great Unknown.

In this comic, Han Solo crash lands on Earth sometime in the past and is killed by natives. Chewbacca survives and, owing to the longevity of his species, continues to live in the woods where they crashed for over a century, becoming a legendary monster similar to Bigfoot or the yeti. This legend just so happens to be investigated in the modern day by one Indiana Jones, who stumbles across Solo’s corpse slumped in the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon.

Rather than doing his job and plundering the ancient spaceship filled with world-changing technology that could probably cure cancer or something, he simply notes that he feels connected to the corpse somehow and leaves it, and Chewbacca, in peace. Aren’t comics fun?

6: Dr. Levinson from Independence Day met Jeff Goldblum in an ad nobody saw

We won’t be breaking any new ground by saying that the film Independence Day: Resurgence kind of sucked. We may break ground, however, by revealing that Jeff Goldblum exists and is famous within the Independence Day universe and that he’s canonically met and spoken to the character he plays, Dr. David Levinson.

In an official 20th Century Fox YouTube video that has, at the time of writing this, about 96,000 views, it’s established that Jeff Goldblum exists in that universe. The video goes on to note that since the events of the 1996 film, a conspiracy theory arose that he and Levinson are the same person. The video debunks this by having both men meet. Oddly, Levinson – despite him and Goldblum having the same face – only feels they have a “fleeting” resemblance and even appears to not know how to pronounce Goldblum’s name.

What makes this weird is that this was revealed in a piece of viral marketing that will, in all likelihood, end up having less views than the video we’ll make of this article, and it kind of ruins the franchise. Think about: a piece of official media related to the films has noted that Jeff Goldblum exists in the universe and that he and Levinson look exactly the same. If that’s the case, why does nobody, at all, in the first movie mention that the guy who saves the world with an Apple Powerbook looks just like the guy from Jurassic Park? Speaking of people who were in Jurassic Park, get ready to hold onto your butts, because…

5: Nick Fury once explained that only Samuel L. Jackson could play him, before Jackson was involved with Marvel

The Ultimate Marvel series of comics is a reimagining of the Marvel universe, exploring the comic giant’s sizeable roster of heroes and villains from a different perspective. To this end, characters have different backstories, motivations, and in the case of Ultimate Nick Fury, a lot more melanin.

Specifically, Ultimate Nick Fury is Samuel L. Jackson. To be clear, we don’t mean that the character looks like Sam Jackson. The artist who reimagined the head of SHIELD explicitly based his appearance on Jackson without his permission. This understandably annoyed Jackson, who called Marvel after seeing a comic with his own face on it staring back at him in a comic store. Rather than suing for unauthorized use of his likeness, Jackson instead used them jacking his look as leverage to secure himself a 9-picture deal.

The really funny part is that the very first comic Ultimate Nick Fury appears in features a conversation between the character and the Avengers where he’s asked who he’d pick to play him in a theoretical movie. Fury’s response? “Mister Samuel L. Jackson of course.”

4: Spider-Man thinks the baby of his clone looks suspiciously like actor Tobey Maguire

The live-action Spider-Man series has been rebooted more times than a PC running on Windows 10 and right now, there are three actors known for playing him. Of these actors, though, only one – Tobey Maguire – enjoys the unique honor of being name-dropped by Peter Parker himself.

In the comic Spider-Girl #82, Spider-Man’s clone, Ben Reilly (a near-perfect clone of Spider-Man who is identical to him in almost every single way) has a baby. Upon seeing this baby, Mary Jane notes that she thinks the baby looks like Peter, which makes sense because the baby is the son of a clone who has his face. Peter, on the other hand, dismisses this, instead insisting that the baby more closely resembles Tobey Maguire. This suggests the two share at least a passing resemblance.

It’s worth noting that Tobey Maguire makes another appearance as himself in the Ultimate Universe, in which he’s shown playing Spider-Man in a movie based on his exploits. However, Spidey never comments that the two look alike in that universe.

3: Loki looks like Harry Styles in one comic and has to move because of it

Being a trickster god, Loki is, of course, no stranger to using his magic and nigh-infinite power to mess with lowly mortals. In the series Loki: Agent of Asgard, though, the god decides to use his powers in a decidedly more human way: tricking girls into thinking he’s Harry Styles from One Direction.

This apparently goes over a little too well, though, and Loki’s uncanny resemblance to the singer causes so many girls to throw themselves at him in one comic that he has to use his powers to warp his entire apartment across the city. This causes endless amusement for his teammates, who routinely spend entire pages making fun of the fact he looks like he should be in a boy band.

2: The Brain is based on Orson Welles and the producers spent $250,000 on a joke to prove it

Pinky and the Brain is a cartoon with more layers than an onion-filled lasagna. It’s a cartoon simultaneously intended for kids that also once, for no real reason, featured a joke so obscure only adults with an unhealthy obsession with Orson Welles would get.

The joke was basically the entire punchline of the short Yes Always, which spoofs a now infamous argument the legendary director had with a producer while recording a spot for frozen peas. The short not only rips some lines from Welles’ outburst wholesale, but features the Brain’s voice actor, Maurice LaMarche, channeling his best impression of the director.

Dubbed “a $250,000 inside joke” by the crew because they figured nobody would get it but them, the short was written to emphasize that LaMarche was basically parodying Welles every time he delivered a line as the Brain.

1: The DC character Lucifer was redrawn until he looked like David Bowie

Lucifer Morningstar is a DC character who possesses a plethora of god-like abilities, ranging from omnipotence to the ability to fire lasers from his eyes. Created by writer Neil Gaiman, the character is similar to his religious counterpart in that he is a fallen angel who defied God eons ago. However, the comics note that this Lucifer eventually got bored with running Hell and retired to open a bar in Australia, a plotline we think the Bible should totally steal.

Gaiman reportedly had only one instruction for the artist that helped bring Lucifer to life: he must look like David Bowie at all times. Every time the artist sent a piece of concept art that didn’t look like Bowie, Gaiman would return it with a picture of Bowie and a note saying he’d continue to do so until he got David freaking Bowie. Eventually, he did. What’s more, Gaiman has since explained that the only reason his interpretation of Lucifer looks like David Bowie is because he felt the singer was the only person cool enough to pull off being the Prince of Hell.

Although Lucifer himself never comments on the fact he looks like the late singer in any comic, the TV show Lucifer, which is an adaptation, does show that the fallen angel is a massive fan of his music. Which is amazing, because it means it’s the official position of DC that the devil is a fan of David Bowie.

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  ·  7 years ago Reveal Comment

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