Okay, Carrie Ann Moss didn't opt out of a recurring role in a TV show. Since you were talking about her too, I thought we were talking about the literal interpretation ("Carrie Ann Moss might disagree with the literal interpretation."), not your clarified position.
I have no idea which point we're talking about now, to be honest, so I'll stop.
I'm pretty sure that movies-based-on-genre-TV (e.g. Star Trek) don't count for any more than the original TV.
I was talking about that.
edit: whoops, sorry, that was a clarification. My bad.
Alan was also in two big movies in 2004, Dodgeball and I, Robot. Combined with Spamalot, I'd say he's the most "going places" of the cast.
Just as, dammit, Seth Green made absolutely the right career decision about leaving Buffy.
Just as, dammit, Seth Green made absolutely the right career decision about leaving Buffy.
Though Allyson Hannigan didn't, and I'd say she's got the most play of any of them other than SMG.
The cover of the Serenity trade.
And has anyone heard anything about this book?
Supposedly, it's an original novel set in the Serenity universe, written by the gentleman who wrote the movie novelization, Keith R. A. Candido. However, he posted on the official movie board back in August that no such book existed nor was it planned to exist. Make of this what you will.
Also, this about Alan: ferocious acting chops. I'm just in awe of the guy. And can I just say again, somebody needs to create a vehicle co-starring Alan and Seth--movie, TV show, whatever. Their energies would so complement one another's. Would that be awesome, or am I just being tiresome?
I'd pay money to see that, Mikey, but I think on the whole their percieved strengths would overlap, and casting people would sooner cast opposites than people with similar talents.
You know when I saw that message on lj about a post-Serenity book listed on Amazon, I was kinda sorta hoping it was the one that had been mentioned over in Literary.