Brendan Fraser has earned the right to lose it — earned it across a career that gave audiences some of the most genuinely joyful, most physically committed, and most warmly human performances of the 1990s and early 2000s, earned it again through years of industry exile that the Hollywood Foreign Press and the Academy eventually acknowledged with the kind of belated, standing-ovation recognition that means more when it is overdue, and earned it most completely through a decade of watching Universal take the franchise he built from the ground up with
The Mummy and its sequels — the films that made him a genuine action star and gave a generation of fans a hero they never stopped loving — and drive it so comprehensively into the ground with the 2017 reboot that the wreckage is still visible from space. When Brendan Fraser finally lost his composure over the Mummy 4 decision that has been quietly circulating through Hollywood and reached his ears in a way that apparently crossed the last line he had been carefully maintaining — the words that came out were not the polished, considered statements of a man protecting his industry relationships but something rawer, more direct, and more devastatingly on point than anything a publicist would have approved, the kind of response that only arrives when someone has been holding something back for so long that the container simply gives way and the truth comes out all at once, unstoppable and completely, electrifyingly honest.