Dungeons & Dragons movie’s wild Bradley Cooper cameo, explained

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is chock-full of references aimed directly at the most dedicated D&D players. However, it does contain at least one element that everyone can enjoy: an absurd and unexpected cameo by a well-known actor.

It is important to be brief with all cameos. But in the rules of Dungeons & Dragons, where every person has a set of numerical statistics associated with, for example, how well they can flirt, even the briefest appearance can inspire curiosity.

So let’s categorize Honor among Thieves’ big — well, OK, not big, but genuinely funny cameo.

[Ed. note: This post contains spoilers for Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves.]

LtR: Justice Smith plays Simon, Sophia Lillis plays Doric, Michelle Rodriguez plays Holga and Chris Pine plays Edgin in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. Simon holds up a glowing wand as the others look on, in a rocky, lava-filled cave.

Image by Paramount Pictures

Honor among Thieves’ little surprise is the sudden appearance of Bradley Cooper. He’s an actor well known for playing a different diminutive character, but this cameo is a smaller role in every sense. In an effort to restore what was once their love, our brave and gold-hearted adventurers visit Holga (Michelle Rodriguez)’s former home.

Here, Honor among ThievesThis reveals two facts: The first is that Marlamin has been played by Bradley Cooper. Marlamin stands only 3ft tall. Cooper and Rodriguez are comical in their stoic faces while discussing Marlamin’s dissolution and Marlamin’s new life. These are, in fine romantic-drama style, two people who sacrificed everything to be together, then realized they weren’t that compatible at all. It’s just that one of them is a fur-and-leather-wearing barbarian, and the other is a guy whose wee legs are dangling off the seat of his human-size armchair.

Honor among Thieves doesn’t hang out with Marlamin long enough to explicitly call out his species in the way it does for half-elf Simon or tiefling Doric. What is this small dude meant to be, within the Dungeons & Dragons canon? It’s up to us, the staffOf Polygon, the nexus of gaming and entertainment, to make our own call — applying the canonical descriptions from the Player’s Handbook of Dungeons & DragonsThe 5th Edition, the Source Book the World of Honor among ThievesThis was taken from.

Bradley Cooper’s D&D movie character is a halfling

Dungeons & Dragons Mordenkainen’s Tome of Foes - a halfling father wrestles with his daughters, who are fighting over the family goat.

Illustration of a halfling family Mordenkainen’s Tome of Foes.
Image: Wizards of the Coast

Our confidence is high in the ability of directors to Honor among Thieves — Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley — intended Marlamin to read as a halfling.

Here are some direct quotes from how 5th edition D&D describes this species:

  • At 3′ tall [halflings]It can appear quite harmless.
  • Their preference is for simple and comfortable clothes that are practical, as well as bright colours.
  • They treasure the closeness of their family, friends and comforts at home. However they have few hopes for gold and glory.
  • Many halflings live among other races, where the halflings’ hard work and loyal outlook offer them abundant rewards and creature comforts.

It would be a shame to lose. Really specific, we’d say that Marlamin is more likely to be a Stout Halfling than a Lightfoot, as Lightfoot halflings are “more prone to wanderlust than other halflings,” and Marlamin is clearly a homebody who couldn’t reconcile himself to Holga’s traveling lifestyle. (Although Lightfoots also “often dwell alongside other races,” so it’s anybody’s guess.)

If he’s a Stout Halfling, he gets some resistance to poison and a slightly better constitution score; if he’s a Lightfoot, he’s better at sneaking and is slightly more charismatic. These are facts that we’re sure have enhanced your viewing experience of Honor among Thieves.

But wait, he’s wearing shoes. I thought hobbits don’t wear shoes?

The One Ring lies on the floor of Bag End, Bilbo’s toes out of focus in the background in The Fellowship of the Ring.

Image by New Line Cinema

Ah ah ah! There’s a hugeJ.R.R. made the distinction between hobbits. Tolkien, and the halflings that appear in Wizards of the Coast’s Dungeons & Dragons tabletop role-playing games and licensed media based on them.

You see, the Tolkien Estate owns the rights to hobbits, who have hairy feet and don’t wear shoes.

Wizards of the Coast has material to publish. HalblingsWho? DoWear shoes on top of their naturally hairy feet.

If you’d like further clarification on this matter, just ask any attorney working for Wizards of the Coast.

Oh, come on — maybe Marlamin is a gnome?

That argument could be made. D&D’s 5th edition describes gnomes as standing “slightly over 3 feet tall,” just like Marlamin, and gnomes are more likely to have facial hair, like Marlamin, than the generally barefaced halflings.

But they’re also described as wearing elaborately styled beards and speaking “as if they can’t get the thoughts out of their heads fast enough.” According to the Player’s Handbook, unless a gnome is the adventurous sort, they’ll probably live in a hidden, underground gnomish community rather than finding fellowship with other species.

Gnomish traits simply don’t fit the gentle, patient, homebody qualities we see in Marlamin, everything that made him such a poor match for Holga.

So he’s probably a halfling.

Hang on — isn’t this all reductive, bordering on racist?

A snarling orc in Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power

Image: Prime Video

How about universally accrediting certain psychological and physical qualities to everyone of a given origin? It is unambiguous: Yes. It’s a foundational crack in the fantasy genre, one that tabletop role-playing games have had a not-insignificant hand in perpetuating.

Fortunately, it’s something Wizards of the Coast has slowly come to address, both by retrofitting 5th edition D&D with later updates and in the development of future rulesets for the game, which will reportedly emphasize that all species in Dungeons & Dragons come with the same beautiful variability as our actual real-life human species does.

From the standpoint of story and film analysis, though we can take a good guess at which D&D species the creators of Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among ThievesMarlamin intended Marlamin’s reading to read like. But if he was a real person, we’d certainly hope that nobody would crouch down next to him and ask, “OK, but, so, like, where are you, y’know, From?”

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