Ben Affleck says skipping Stuck on You kept the bromance alive, while The Rip proves the duo still crackles when the script—and the stakes—are deadly serious.
Ben Affleck has finally answered the question every fan secretly asks: which Matt Damon blockbuster does he wish he’d crashed? The twist—he’s grateful he didn’t co-star in the 2003 Farrelly brothers comedy Stuck on You. During a joint Entertainment Weekly interview for their new Netflix thriller The Rip, Affleck admitted that playing Greg Kinnear’s conjoined twin “would’ve been pushing it… people would’ve been sick of us forever.” Damon instantly agreed: “That’s it. No more!”
Why ‘Stuck on You’ Still Matters
The film was a box-office shrug—$65 million global on a $55 million budget—and critics split down the middle. Yet its real legacy is mythic: the almost moment when Boston’s dynamic duo became literally inseparable on-screen. Affleck’s logic is brutally honest: saturation kills chemistry. By 2003, the pair had already shared credits in Good Will Hunting, Dogma, and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. Another joint venture—especially one requiring them to share a prosthetic torso—could have tipped the culture from affection to annoyance.
The Rip: A 30-Year Bromance Rebooted
Fast-forward twenty-three years and the duo is side-by-side again, but this time the genre is grime, not gag. In The Rip, Damon and Affleck play corrupt Miami cops who stumble on millions in cartel cash. The script—described by Damon as “a page turner”—forces each man to decide how far he’ll go for friendship and fortune. Director Steven Soderbergh reportedly pushed the pair through ride-alongs with real Miami-Dade officers, mining wardrobe quirks and off-hand slang to keep the dialogue authentic.
Box-Office Math: Why Timing Beats Togetherness
- 1997-2003: Five joint projects in six years—audience fatigue risk: high.
- 2004-2025: Only two shared credits—The Last Duel and Air—allowing each star to build separate Oscar and blockbuster lanes.
- 2026: The Rip lands as event television on Netflix, not a $150 million theatrical gamble, lowering financial risk and maximizing subscriber buzz.
Inside the Research Lab
Affleck credits the cops, not the writers, for the show’s grittiest beats. “All the stuff I’m proud of comes from research,” he says, citing a sergeant who keeps his badge on a frayed lanyard “because metal against skin in Miami humidity is misery.” Damon confesses the duo treated the officers like “wardrobe libraries,” interrogating them on everything from holster height to donut preferences.
What’s Next: A Damon-Affleck Cinematic Universe?
With The Rip already charting in Netflix’s global top five within 24 hours, expect the streaming giant to fast-track a second season. Insiders say Damon and Affleck have first-look veto power—meaning no conjoined-twin plotlines allowed. Meanwhile, Damon is circling a solo McU project, and Affleck is prepping his next directorial effort about the 1980s Boston mob wars. Translation: the separation strategy that saved them in 2003 is now a permanent blueprint.
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