Bryan Cranston will reprise his role as Philip Lacasse in the planned sequel to the Neil Burger film The Upside. The actor confirmed this during a recent appearance on Bill Maher's Club Random podcast where he revealed he is working with his co-star, Kevin Hart, to bring a sequel to life.
Following his appearance in the 2017 film, Cranston received much flak for portraying a quadriplegic, given that he's able-bodied. The Breaking Bad actor acknowledged the criticism stating "I got a lot of shit for that. I am an able-bodied actor playing a disabled actor."
Cranston admitted he was surprised at the disapproval and took a moment to ruminate on the situation. In his words, "I was pretty surprised that I got some blowback to it, and I thought, 'There's a good point, that disabled actors are not given an opportunity.' It's a kind of a catch-22 that… it's like, 'Do you have the cache to be able to carry a film?"
He concluded that if actors had embraced limitations, audiences would have missed some of the greatest performances in cinema history. He pointed to Al Pacino's portrayal of a blind retired army officer in the 1992 film Scent of a Woman, as well as method actor Daniel Day Lewis's acting as an Irish man with cerebral palsy in the 1989 film My Left Foot, as examples.
