This post contains spoilers for “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.”
Those who revisited Tim Burton’s original 1988 “Beetlejuice” before seeing the long-gestating sequel (or who have that first movie ingrained in their movie-watching DNA) may have noticed that, amid the return of familiar faces like Michael Keaton and Winona Ryder, a few main actors are largely absent from the follow-up.
As the trailer for “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” reveals, the film sees the Deetz family reunited for the funeral of patriarch Charles Deetz, played by “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” actor Jeffrey Jones in the original movie. As we learn in a flashback that features exaggerated stop-motion puppetry, Charles died on a bird-watching vacation overseas when his plane went down in the ocean and he was eaten by a shark. Throughout the movie, we see glimpses of Charles wandering around the afterlife, his entire upper body missing after being chewed off by the shark. In keeping with Burton’s largely tactile approach to this franchise, Charles’ mangled body is a gnarly, mostly practical effect, constantly spraying blood everywhere he goes. (There’s also a brief shot that includes a photo of Jones’ face on a gravestone.)
Burton has explained why Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis don’t make an appearance in this sequel, but what about Jeffrey Jones? Why does the movie kill Charles off, then basically only show him as a stop-motion puppet, and then have him exist as a walking practical effect with no head/face?
Beetlejuice actor Jeffrey Jones is a registered sex offender
As far as I can tell, Burton hasn’t been specifically asked about this in any interviews yet (we’ll update this article if he speaks on the matter), but it’s probably safe to presume the reason Jeffrey Jones doesn’t appear in “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” is because the actor was arrested in 2002 and pleaded no contest to inducing a 14-year-old boy to pose for sexually explicit photographs. Jones was sentenced to five years probation and ordered to register as a sex offender, and was subsequently arrested two more times for failing to update his sex offender status, tacking on more years of probation as a result.
Jones’ career took a significant hit after that initial arrest, as you might expect (and, frankly, as it should have). He did some voice work on a “Stuart Little” TV show and the series “Invader ZIM,” and is only credited in a few feature films since 2002 — “Who’s Your Caddy?” and “10.0 Earthquake” among them. His highest profile work this century has been on the HBO series “Deadwood,” where creator David Milch had hired Jones before he was first arrested and continued to support him through the aftermath of that incident. (In an interview that appears in Matt Zoller Seitz’s “The Deadwood Bible,” Jones even says Milch lent him money for a defense in a civil suit that was brought against him for the same crime.)
From the outside looking in, it seems obvious that Warner Bros. Discovery made the decision to avoid any potential controversies by bringing Jones back. Under the leadership of CEO David Zaslav, the studio has not been doing well since its merger, so they’re clearly eager for “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” to be a hit — and, with no controversies in sight, it looks like the movie is on track to accomplish that mission.