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One underrated part of learning more and more movieeaster eggsis that you can mildly amuse (or annoy) someone watching something for the first time. In some cases, this behavior has become so common that it actually spawns its own memes.For example, fans of the secondLord of the Ringsfilm,the Two Towers, will generally bombard new viewers with the fact that actor Viggo Mortensenbroke a toein real life when he kicked a helmet on screen. His cry of pain is completely real and the director, Peter Jackson decided to simply leave it in the film.
One underrated part of learning more and more movieeaster eggsis that you can mildly amuse (or annoy) someone watching something for the first time. In some cases, this behavior has become so common that it actually spawns its own memes.
For example, fans of the secondLord of the Ringsfilm,the Two Towers, will generally bombard new viewers with the fact that actor Viggo Mortensenbroke a toein real life when he kicked a helmet on screen. His cry of pain is completely real and the director, Peter Jackson decided to simply leave it in the film.
What sets apart a casual fan and a true fanatic is the knowledge that this was in some ways the least of theinjuriessuffered on set. Actor Sean Astin stepped on a piece of glass and punctured his foot when wading in a river scene, requiring him to be evacuated via helicopter from their remote shooting location in New Zealand.
Given the practical effects and frequent stunts, it might not be surprising to learn that most actors in the Lord of the Rings films suffered at least some kind of injury.Orlando Bloombroke a rib falling off a horse, while others chipped teeth and received all sorts of bumps and bruises while filming the battle scenes.
The river is commonly called the “River of Five Colors” or the “Liquid Rainbow,” and is noted for its striking colors.
After he wanted Miramax to cut the trilogy down to one film (and all that other stuff) before a deal was made and New Line Cinema rescued the epic saga.
In general, filmmaking is such a massive and collaborative process that it’s no wonder that all of these creatives combined start to add their own little details. After all, from costumes, to props and sets, most background details are hand-made somewhere. Once you include the writers, director, actors and the hundreds of others involved, there is a lot of space to hide somethinginteresting.
Director Peter Weir saw how friendly they were with the film’s cast and crew, so he hired them as actors.
Bean taped his lines to his knee so he could read them when needed. Some of the characters frustrated expressions in the scene are actually the actor glancing at his lines.
When asked why the other members of the gang weren’t included, the director said “In a post-apocalyptic world, Velma would have been the only one to have survived. The other kids wouldn’t have made it.”
They were the first magazine to ever interview him about being a filmmaker and he wore the shirt as a ‘thank you’ to them.
When Selina asked him “Who are you pretending to be? " he replied “Bruce Wayne, eccentric billionaire”.
When He Leaves, Chewbacca Hands It Back To Him, And He Reacts With Confusion. This Part Was Improvised By Chewbacca’s Actor Joonas Suotamo, Who Went Off Script, Confusing Harrison Ford
They made a gentleman’s agreement to pay for every accidental hit. $50 for each light hit, $100 for each hard blow. Pitt ended up paying Bana $750. Bana didn’t owe Pitt anything.
The 5-year-old got the part because she was the only child who wasn’t terrified of Jolie in her Maleficent makeup. Several other younger children auditioned and wouldn’t go near her.
She isn’t real. She is a hallucination, part of John’s schizophrenia. Therefore the birds don’t react to her presence and scatter
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The production crew had to get permission from her to use their image.
It took approx 100 hours to render each frame in the physics and VFX engine. Meaning every second you see took approx 100 days to render the final copy.
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They kept falling off, so Heath would lick his lips to keep them in place. Gradually, it became a part of the Joker’s character.
So the prop master withdrew several thousand dollars of his own money to use. At the end of each take, no one was allowed to leave the set until all the money was returned & counted.
The costume designer added this detail to show Ransom’s nonchalance towards his wealth and disrespect for his family.
Apple doesn’t let villains use iPhones on camera. Ransom, the murderer, doesn’t use an iphone
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Linas Simonaitis
Saimonas Lukošius
Entertainment