| Peter Morae - www.denofgeek.com
Russell Crowe will be both Robin Hood and the Sheriff
of Nottingham, but he won’t be the first to pull a double-shift
in movies…
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Keanu Reeves
(Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey)
Playing an evil version of his own character was no great challenge
even for Keanu Reeves since ‘evil’ robot Ted is
basically exactly the same as real Ted but does one or two nasty
things, with all the same glee and brainlessness as his template.
It was the same deal for Alex Winter (playing Bill). |

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Roger Moore
(The Man Who Haunted Himself)
Smooth Roger gave possibly his best ever screen performance
as the man who discovers that he has apparently split in two
after a car accident. The scene where he walks around himself
is an ambitious special effect on this budget and in this period,
and it’s really Moore’s conviction and desperation
that sell the concept. |
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Michael J. Fox
(Back To The Future part 2 & 3)
There are one or two slightly clunky dissolve tricks in the
numerous scenes of the various Fox McFlys interacting in the
hugely popular Robert Zemeckis sequels, but these were very
ambitious set-ups, and Fox managed a range of performances.
As a woman, he’s strictly a female impersonator though.
Elizabeth Shue and Thomas Wilson also had to face off against
themselves at different ages. |

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William Shatner
(Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)
Kirk often had to face off against himself in Star Trek TOS,
but in Nicholas Meyer’s swansong for the old Enterprise
crew, the Shat had a full-on fight with morphing alien Iman,
who decides to take on the great man in a form that he is least
likely to injure and most likely to adore – himself.
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Ewan Mcgregor
(The Island)
The Scottish actor dropped his brogue to play Logan-style clone
Lincoln 6 echo* in Michael Bay’s 2005 actioner, but kind
of dropped back into it when Lincoln 5 came face to face with
the original template from which he had been struck, a dying
and irredeemable boat-designer from somewhere between Stirling
and Chicago, from the sound of it. McGregor’s scenes with
himself are some of the best double-work since Dead Ringers.
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Mike Myers
(Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery, The Spy Who Shagged
Me, Goldmember)
Myers has played both the over-sexed and buck-toothed Brit hero
Powers and his arch-nemesis Dr. Evil in three films now, with
a fourth coming up, though it’s perhaps his zeppelin-sized
turn as Fat Bastard that leaves, in every sense, the deepest
impression. |
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Jeremy Irons
(Dead Ringers)
Irons was lauded for not merely playing ‘nice’ and
‘nasty’ in David Cronenberg’s grisly1988 tale
of twin gynaecologists, but captured the very subtle tonalities
of difference between two very similar characters who had grown
up co-dependent. Irons won several awards for his rendition
of the brothers Mantle. |
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Arnold Schwarzenegger
(Sixth Day/Last Action Hero/Total Recall)
The governator has a long history of playing with himself. Not
content to play both the fictional ‘Quaid’ and his
nasty alter-ego in Total Recall, he also met himself as ‘Jack
Slater’ in Last Action Hero and in 2000 he teamed up extensively
with himself to defeat the cloning nasties in Roger Spottiswoode’s
The Sixth Day. |

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Jean Claude Van Damme
(Double Impact)
The Mussels From Brussels doubled up to play twins in one of
his most popular action outings in 1991. As Alex and Chad Wagner,
twins separated at birth, and now determined to take revenge
on the criminals who robbed them of their parents. |
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John Malkovich
(Being John Malkovich)
Malkovich, Malkovich, Malkovich…we don’t necessarily
know what the hell this film was really about, but what it was
nominally about was John Cusack and Cameron Diaz trying to turn
a buck selling tours in John Malkovich’s brain. One eye-popping
restaurant scene finds the great actor playing every single
person in the place, including the women. |