Wait. So Dee Wallace was not supposed to knock ET over, but when she did, little seven year-old Drew Barrymore ad libbed the line, "The man from the moon, but I think you killed him already"?!
@@cookiejarseattle They would have had to reshoot the entire scene, knocking the puppet over on purpose. If you watch her, you can see that she actually says the words. I'm not saying they didn't do that, of course!
"In Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell accidentally smashed a one of a kind, 145-year-old guitar that was on loan from the Martin Guitar Museum. This is the take they kept in the film, and you can see Jennifer Jason Leigh's genuine reaction, as she knew it wasn't the replica."
In Harry Potter and the Chamber of secrets, when Draco asks one of his goonies about his glasses (it was Harry after drinking Polyjuice potion) he answers that they're for reading. Malfoy improvised the line "I didn't know you could read" and it made the final cut.
The scripted amount in its a wonderful life was $20 not $17. He kissed her because she asked for less than everyone else if she asked for 50 cents more he would have no reason to be happy about it.
Still love the fact that the Shawarma shop scene was so thrown in that it was some weeks or months after they finished filming and in that time Chris Evans had grown a beard, hence his hand covering his face for the whole scene, it was to not only show that Cap was exhausted but also hide the beard.
I just liked them all sitting there 'processing' while they're eating. Like they're refueling their bodies, so their brains are catching up with everything that happened.
It was finalized the day of the Hollywood premier. It was a classic Marvel dumping on the VFX teams to meet an impossible demand. We got the footage the night before red-carpet. It required paint outs and clean ups. The stereo version took 9 artists 20 straight hours to complete.
E.T.: If knocking him over was an accident, then Drew's line "I think you killed him already" is an adlib, not only that but a QUICK and PERFECT adlib, and SO funny, NO COMMENT on that???? That is phenomenally quick-witted and apt for an ADULT, and a little kid pulled it off? It was seamless with what I'm pretty sure was a scripted line she started with!
This is known as being "precocious'. Child actors (some of whom end up failing as adults but are insanely great as they first start out) often fit into that precocious mold. It's like for some reason they can handle, and understand things -- some things -- almost as if they are adults. When a child _cannot_ do that, uhm.. they usually don't pass the audition.
In the Avengers scene, you can see Captain America looking bored, this is actually Chris Evans covering his beard that he had been growing for his role in Snowpiercer.
2:53 this is incorrect, according to the series' propmaster, both times Adama wrecked the model ship they were mail order models, not "museum pieces worth hundreds of thousands of dollars" You can stop spreading this myth now
I knew about most of the others, but the Rachel McAdams + falling mop moment definitely felt scripted even though it wasn't! 😂 How awesome. Well... despite her talents being criminally underused for the "Dr. Strange" film.
I've always understood that the final monologue in Blade Runner by Rutger Hauer was improvised. If so, certainly the greatest improvised monologue ever.
I won't disagree ... but a close competitor: I always heard that Quint's USS Indianapolis speech in Jaws was written by Robert Shaw (again, not improvised). Young Steven Spielberg didn't like it, but said they would try it because Shaw was an experienced actor and writer, and allegedly to this day says it is one of the greatest scenes he ever filmed.
@@TeganX7 Yeah, that scene and the dialogue apparently went through several stages and writers with bits of everyone who contributed remaining. Quint's speech, though, was Shaw's and it is riveting.
When I hear this type of thing happening, I wonder if it’s true or not. Did they make it up for the narration option on the video? To add to a back story for the movie to make it more colorful kind of thing. After all, why would a museum loan an expensive piece to a movie production?
there’s museums that specialize in keeping period piece items that they loan for closeups. Directors like to add authenticity to the scene. They do keep replicas on hand if they’re meant for stunts or to break. Actors aren’t usually aware which is real and yeah mistakes are made. 150 year old guitar in Hateful 8 and a $10million banksy in Outlaws. The most valuable props meant to be destroyed end up being vehicles. Think of every car stunt you ever seen and know there were 3 other cars that went with it.
@@Kjleed13 The guitar part is true but claiming the Banksy rat was a $10 million artwork is misleading at best. It was specifically painted by Banksy on that wall for the show. It is not comparable and all (and didn't result in any loss of any kind as it was intended, and Banksy was in on it).
At 7:16, the video mentions the improvised shawarma scene in *The Avengers*. Not only was this scene kept in the movie, but they also added a post-credit scene of the superheroes eating at a shawarma restaurant. Additionally, when Avengers Campus opened at Disney California Adventure, shawarma became a featured food item at one of the food stands, allowing fans to enjoy the same meal as their favorite heroes.
In Iron Man 1, Tony is so tired of middle eastern food that he orders a fast food burger. It seems he grew tired of burgers and went back to arab food. If I had to choose one of them and never eat the other one in my life, I'd choose shawarma every time.
In that post-credits scene, Captain America is blocking his face with his hand because they shot the scene after normal filming, and Chris Evans had grown a beard at that point for his role in Snowpiercer....
I dig your channel and watch every video. Great work! That said, you tend to reuse a LOT of clips, even if they don't apply to the video (For example, RDG in Weird Science IMPROVISED a scene, which is NOT a "blooper". I've seen that clip in a dozen of your videos). Please keep in mind that you have a hardcore audience returning to your videos to discover NEW things/stories about the film industry and their favorite movies. If every new video is just remixed clips from old videos, your hardcore audience is going to get bored, become resentful that they're wasting their time rewatching clips they've already seen one too many times, and stop coming back. Your videos are fun, interesting, and fresh (or as fresh as the material is), thank you for all the hard work!
@largemarge1603 What should I have said instead? "Although", "However", "Even so"? What a weird thing for you to take offense at. You doing all right there largemarge? You need a hug today?
lol bro channels like this dont give a fuck. they out making as much $ as possible with as little effort as possible. pretty pathetic you think braindead content like this is serious in any way
It shouldn't, because it's BS. This story gets trotted out every couple of years, and the price gets hiked every time. In reality, it was a mass-produced ready-made model from a mail order company, cost about $200.
Didn’t even get past the first clip without having to comment. Watched the Black Panther clip a few times looking at different things and when that one goat turns and looks towards the camera and answers him with a bleat I lost it😂
The story about the ending to The Graduate is just a straight up lie. It was not a blooper and they were never supposed to just laugh. It was intentionally shot that way. Hell, most of these aren't even bloopers at all. Just improvisations. Also, showing the most risqué and irrelevant scene of each movie before switching to the actual "blooper" of said movie is pretty cheap and weird.
ET wasn't a puppet. That was a little person actor wearing a suit. I remember readnig about how everyone on set initially freaked out because they thought he might have been injured, but he climbed out of the costume, with a big smile on his face, apparently unhurt.
4:15 The CHARACTER'S name is Louis Creed. The actor in the ROLE of Louis Creed is Dale Midkiff. 6:56 The impromptu dinner as the shawarma joint was filmed months later in pick-ups. This is significant because Chris Evans had grown a moustache for the role he was in at the time and couldn't shave it off just for that one scene. That's why his hand covers his face below his nose.
According to Rosemary Clooney in the movie "White Christmas", Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye's "Sisters" performance was not originally in the script. They were clowning around on the set, and director Michael Curtiz thought it was so funny that he decided to film it. In the scene, Crosby's laughs are genuine and unscripted, as he was unable to hold a straight face due to Kaye's comedic dancing. Clooney said the filmmakers had a better take where Crosby didn't laugh, but when they ran them both, people liked the laughing version better.
Another great one from Jim Carrey's How the Grinch Stole Christmas, while preparing for the whovillation Carrey was meant to pull a clothe off a table and have everything on the table fall off. Surprisingly when Carrey pulled the clothe off none of the items on the table fell over, keeping in character Carrey walked back to the table and knocked everything off of it.
For the graduate it was also the end of the journey for the actors. The actors were realizing that filming was over and we see in them a bit of fear of not knowing what will happen tomorrow.
I'm willing to believe it. Not only do I have 2 girls who say the most hilarious things, but I think Barrymore's subsequent film career amply proves her acting chops. That kind of talent is exactly why she was in the film in the first place at such a young age.
@ I mean I agree it’s definitely possible just cuz she’s a child doesn’t mean she couldnt improvise it just seems unlikely to me but Im gonna disagree with you on her subsequent film career being purely based off talent. Unfortunately there’s more sinister stuff at play there, if you know anything about her background then you’ll see where I’m coming from.
Also unscripted, from _Dirty Dancing:_ Baby keeps laughing as Johnny brushes her underarm at the end of their dance practice. Jennifer Gray was genuinely laughing and Patrick Swayze was genuinely annoyed that she couldn't get the scene right.
So you mention The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers sword blooper, but not the blooper where Viggo Mortensen kicked the helmet and cried out because his toes broke on the take kept in the film, but he continued to act through it and only told someone after "cut" was yelled?
Yes, there's another unscripted bit where an orc throws a sword at Viggo and he has to bat it away with his own sword. Also made the final cut. (BTW, these details are in the DVD extras.)
The gunshot hole on the windshield that was in Mr and Mrs Smith was not added in post-production it was always there it was just out of frame . Not sure where you're getting your info . you should really do your homework
I usually don't like these kind of videos in general because frankly I think most of them are made up for PR, at least the newer ones of most recent years, but one from "Raising cain" (starts at 1:22) seems genuine. I absolutely love the expressions on every ones faces. The last one with Jimmy Stewart seems legit too.
7:16 this scene was actually reshot long after. Chris Evans was shooting another movie and had grown a mustache for the part. He rests his head on his fist in this scene to block it.
According to Ron Moore, it was a very expensive museum-quality model worth several hundred dollars that was being rented for the production. It was insured, according to Moore.
4:48 this is said to be take two, as the actress went to the floor too fast on the first take. On the second take, all of the crew stood naked on the other side of the camera, giving her just that tiny amount of WTF? before she went to the floor. That one is in the movie.
Dirty dancing was a warm up exercise in this clip huh. The director secretly began filming huh. Oh, he did multiple camera shots, movement, all in secret huh. Just making stuff up.
Martin Sheen. Apocalypse Now. Punched a mirror in an early hotel scene, leading to a very bloody hand. This wasn't scripted but fits the movie perfectly.
That ET scene wasn't scripted but Drew Barrymore Says I think you killed him already , Either that was added later or at her young age shows how talented she is. 🤘🤘
3:00 You think things on loan that are valuable would be told to the cast, just as an added precautions. Kind of like the kirk Russel one of destroying a guitar on set.
Don’t forget Scrooged. When the Ghost of Christmas Present smashes Bill Murray in the face with the toaster, not only did she actually make contact with him but she broke his nose - and that’s the clip you see.
That mop falling over was CGI. Pause the video, and use the period key on your keyboard to step frame by frame. It is being either pushed, or CGI. The area around the mop when it bounces also shifts around with the mop. Also her pants closest to the mop look weird when it lands. Compression artifacts? Perhaps. But the rest of her looks fine. The way it lands very unrealistically is also a big tell. I don't know where you get your factoids but it discredits the entire rest of the video.
On b s g commander adama breaks the model ship, in later episodes he can be seen carefully gluing it back together again . This became a running.joke.and he actually broke (a model.ship) it three separate times during the other seasons!
@@JPerry-jw9ikWrong! The scene where he destroyed the boat that he showed when they made the statement was from the episode Malestorm where Starbuck died.
Largely true because of how Swayze had behaved during the filming of Red Dawn. FWIW, Grey did appreciate how well they worked together and how Dirty Dancing became so popular because of their onscreen chemistry.
@@Elderos5 "Slurpee is the brand name for carbonated slushies sold by 7-Eleven" they're made by the same company ICEE, the only difference is that 7-Eleven has made a deal to call them slurpee
@@Dranazere that is not entirely true. Slupee is what 7-Eleven replaced the ICEE machines with when ICEE pulled thier machines out of 7-Eleven in the 70's. ICEE did not, then, own or maintain the Slupee machines.
Curse you! I'd decided never to watch Peter Jackson's 'Lord of The Rings' films again! (They distract from my enjoyment of the book, my all-time favourite novel.) The rest is great, though 🙂
Well. Just to be the comic book nerd. Thor's hammer was supposed to be so heavy that nobody else could pick it up. So the coat rack should've fallen right off the wall.
The fact that others could not lift it had nothing to do with weight. It was about whether the individual was "worthy". The Hulk could not lift it, (in The Avengers) not because it was too heavy, but because he was not worthy. Vision could wield it in Age of Ultron and Cap in Endgame because they were worthy. Not because they are stronger than Hulk (in the MCU, that's certainly not true for Cap.)
The wiki says the BSG ship that Adama broke was only worth hundreds dollars not a several hundred thousand dollar museum piece on loan. "According to Ron Moore, it was a very expensive museum-quality model worth several hundred dollars that was being rented for the production. It was insured, according to Moore" - Production notes.
Wait. So Dee Wallace was not supposed to knock ET over, but when she did, little seven year-old Drew Barrymore ad libbed the line, "The man from the moon, but I think you killed him already"?!
That's exactly what I was wondering too, lol. Either she said that or it was added post production.
@@cookiejarseattle Yeah, that's what I was thinking, too. I call "BS" on that.
@@cookiejarseattle They would have had to reshoot the entire scene, knocking the puppet over on purpose. If you watch her, you can see that she actually says the words. I'm not saying they didn't do that, of course!
no possibility of improv? out of the mouths of babes.
"I think you killed him already" is the funniest line in the movie.
"In Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell accidentally smashed a one of a kind, 145-year-old guitar that was on loan from the Martin Guitar Museum. This is the take they kept in the film, and you can see Jennifer Jason Leigh's genuine reaction, as she knew it wasn't the replica."
I just related that same story after watching this video.
Ooops
In Harry Potter and the Chamber of secrets, when Draco asks one of his goonies about his glasses (it was Harry after drinking Polyjuice potion) he answers that they're for reading. Malfoy improvised the line "I didn't know you could read" and it made the final cut.
The scripted amount in its a wonderful life was $20 not $17. He kissed her because she asked for less than everyone else if she asked for 50 cents more he would have no reason to be happy about it.
Still love the fact that the Shawarma shop scene was so thrown in that it was some weeks or months after they finished filming and in that time Chris Evans had grown a beard, hence his hand covering his face for the whole scene, it was to not only show that Cap was exhausted but also hide the beard.
Indeed. He had already started filming scenes for Snowpiercer, where he has said beard.
LOL superhero movies, what are you 9?
I just liked them all sitting there 'processing' while they're eating. Like they're refueling their bodies, so their brains are catching up with everything that happened.
It was finalized the day of the Hollywood premier. It was a classic Marvel dumping on the VFX teams to meet an impossible demand. We got the footage the night before red-carpet. It required paint outs and clean ups. The stereo version took 9 artists 20 straight hours to complete.
E.T.: If knocking him over was an accident, then Drew's line "I think you killed him already" is an adlib, not only that but a QUICK and PERFECT adlib, and SO funny, NO COMMENT on that???? That is phenomenally quick-witted and apt for an ADULT, and a little kid pulled it off? It was seamless with what I'm pretty sure was a scripted line she started with!
This is known as being "precocious'. Child actors (some of whom end up failing as adults but are insanely great as they first start out) often fit into that precocious mold. It's like for some reason they can handle, and understand things -- some things -- almost as if they are adults. When a child _cannot_ do that, uhm.. they usually don't pass the audition.
Yup, this whole channel specialises in recycled content and straight up BS.
I wondered the same thing. Or was it added on another take. 🤔🤔
Probably dubbed in after.
In the Avengers scene, you can see Captain America looking bored, this is actually Chris Evans covering his beard that he had been growing for his role in Snowpiercer.
2:53 this is incorrect, according to the series' propmaster, both times Adama wrecked the model ship they were mail order models, not "museum pieces worth hundreds of thousands of dollars"
You can stop spreading this myth now
99% of this video is straight up lies lmao
@@keepyourcalm2494 99% of UA-cam is lies.
Fun fact: 3:05 was actually footage of Edward James Olmos AFTER they told him what the ship was worth.
Top notch comment, right here!!!!
Fred Astaire didn't "crush" the hat, he collapsed it. They were designed to do that.
I knew about most of the others, but the Rachel McAdams + falling mop moment definitely felt scripted even though it wasn't! 😂 How awesome. Well... despite her talents being criminally underused for the "Dr. Strange" film.
I've always understood that the final monologue in Blade Runner by Rutger Hauer was improvised. If so, certainly the greatest improvised monologue ever.
It was
I don't think it was improvised but Hauer did write a portion of it.
@@beeskneesplees I think that's about right. Hauer composed the monologue, which wasn't part of the original screenplay.
I won't disagree ... but a close competitor: I always heard that Quint's USS Indianapolis speech in Jaws was written by Robert Shaw (again, not improvised). Young Steven Spielberg didn't like it, but said they would try it because Shaw was an experienced actor and writer, and allegedly to this day says it is one of the greatest scenes he ever filmed.
@@TeganX7 Yeah, that scene and the dialogue apparently went through several stages and writers with bits of everyone who contributed remaining. Quint's speech, though, was Shaw's and it is riveting.
The coat rack was worthy
How many valuable props have been destroyed over the years? And why weren't replicas used in those scenes?
When I hear this type of thing happening, I wonder if it’s true or not. Did they make it up for the narration option on the video? To add to a back story for the movie to make it more colorful kind of thing. After all, why would a museum loan an expensive piece to a movie production?
there’s museums that specialize in keeping period piece items that they loan for closeups. Directors like to add authenticity to the scene. They do keep replicas on hand if they’re meant for stunts or to break. Actors aren’t usually aware which is real and yeah mistakes are made. 150 year old guitar in Hateful 8 and a $10million banksy in Outlaws. The most valuable props meant to be destroyed end up being vehicles. Think of every car stunt you ever seen and know there were 3 other cars that went with it.
@@Kjleed13 The guitar part is true but claiming the Banksy rat was a $10 million artwork is misleading at best. It was specifically painted by Banksy on that wall for the show. It is not comparable and all (and didn't result in any loss of any kind as it was intended, and Banksy was in on it).
@@Scottie8740 This one was true I think. Heard the story a few times before.
@ Just because you hear it multiple times doesn’t make it true.
At 7:16, the video mentions the improvised shawarma scene in *The Avengers*. Not only was this scene kept in the movie, but they also added a post-credit scene of the superheroes eating at a shawarma restaurant. Additionally, when Avengers Campus opened at Disney California Adventure, shawarma became a featured food item at one of the food stands, allowing fans to enjoy the same meal as their favorite heroes.
this video literally shows the post-credit scene you're talking about...
@@elliott9628 its probably a bot
In Iron Man 1, Tony is so tired of middle eastern food that he orders a fast food burger. It seems he grew tired of burgers and went back to arab food. If I had to choose one of them and never eat the other one in my life, I'd choose shawarma every time.
In that post-credits scene, Captain America is blocking his face with his hand because they shot the scene after normal filming, and Chris Evans had grown a beard at that point for his role in Snowpiercer....
@@holobolo1661 ...a bot with 400 subscribers and 89 videos
7:09 I don't even blame him. Shawarma rocks.
I dig your channel and watch every video. Great work! That said, you tend to reuse a LOT of clips, even if they don't apply to the video (For example, RDG in Weird Science IMPROVISED a scene, which is NOT a "blooper". I've seen that clip in a dozen of your videos). Please keep in mind that you have a hardcore audience returning to your videos to discover NEW things/stories about the film industry and their favorite movies. If every new video is just remixed clips from old videos, your hardcore audience is going to get bored, become resentful that they're wasting their time rewatching clips they've already seen one too many times, and stop coming back. Your videos are fun, interesting, and fresh (or as fresh as the material is), thank you for all the hard work!
"That said."
Stop trying to sound pretentious.
@largemarge1603 What should I have said instead? "Although", "However", "Even so"? What a weird thing for you to take offense at. You doing all right there largemarge? You need a hug today?
@@largemarge1603 Wow you're silly
lol bro channels like this dont give a fuck. they out making as much $ as possible with as little effort as possible. pretty pathetic you think braindead content like this is serious in any way
Weird Science is in every video for... reasons
02:55 this actually made me angry
yeah, they need to stop loaning expensive historical pieces to film set and just learn how to make prop replicas.
its just a piece of wood bruh.. who cares if its old
you're old and no one cares about your wood
Qhen someone uses something like this in a scene, the actors need to be told how valuable a piece is and to not break the thing.
It shouldn't, because it's BS. This story gets trotted out every couple of years, and the price gets hiked every time. In reality, it was a mass-produced ready-made model from a mail order company, cost about $200.
@@dominicbuckley8309 ua-cam.com/video/UXLgz3wH2n8/v-deo.html
Didn’t even get past the first clip without having to comment. Watched the Black Panther clip a few times looking at different things and when that one goat turns and looks towards the camera and answers him with a bleat I lost it😂
The story about the ending to The Graduate is just a straight up lie. It was not a blooper and they were never supposed to just laugh. It was intentionally shot that way. Hell, most of these aren't even bloopers at all. Just improvisations.
Also, showing the most risqué and irrelevant scene of each movie before switching to the actual "blooper" of said movie is pretty cheap and weird.
ET wasn't a puppet. That was a little person actor wearing a suit. I remember readnig about how everyone on set initially freaked out because they thought he might have been injured, but he climbed out of the costume, with a big smile on his face, apparently unhurt.
Mr and Ms Smith definitely is Angelina's peak. Amazing! no wonder Pit fall in love.
LOL k
I love how Chadwick Boseman didn’t even break character
Still R.I.P. to him. 😕 Waaayyy too young. He was great as Jackie R., too.
@ Yes I agree with you. He was great as Jackie R.
I love Thor hanging his hammer on the rack it was definitely a reference to the comics
4:15 The CHARACTER'S name is Louis Creed. The actor in the ROLE of Louis Creed is Dale Midkiff.
6:56 The impromptu dinner as the shawarma joint was filmed months later in pick-ups. This is significant because Chris Evans had grown a moustache for the role he was in at the time and couldn't shave it off just for that one scene. That's why his hand covers his face below his nose.
Chris Evans had a full beard for Snowpiercer.
It's C. Thomas Howell to be respectful to the actor in The Outsiders.
jimmy kissing her...he truly knew his character
The funny thing about Thor hanging his hammer in the coat rack is how he actually stares at it to make sure that it is straight
According to Rosemary Clooney in the movie "White Christmas", Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye's "Sisters" performance was not originally in the script. They were clowning around on the set, and director Michael Curtiz thought it was so funny that he decided to film it. In the scene, Crosby's laughs are genuine and unscripted, as he was unable to hold a straight face due to Kaye's comedic dancing. Clooney said the filmmakers had a better take where Crosby didn't laugh, but when they ran them both, people liked the laughing version better.
Another great one from Jim Carrey's How the Grinch Stole Christmas, while preparing for the whovillation Carrey was meant to pull a clothe off a table and have everything on the table fall off. Surprisingly when Carrey pulled the clothe off none of the items on the table fell over, keeping in character Carrey walked back to the table and knocked everything off of it.
One of the more better parts of this is where the movies, tv shows actually use the bloopers
ET being knocked over made me LOL 😂
great collection! Thanks.
For the graduate it was also the end of the journey for the actors. The actors were realizing that filming was over and we see in them a bit of fear of not knowing what will happen tomorrow.
The actor was not Louis Creed, that was the character's name. The actor who played Creed was Dale Midkiff.
The et one is bs unless 7 year old drew barrymore just improvised “I think you killed him”
You're probably right, but that sounds like something a kid would say.
Or they dubbed it after the fact.
I'm willing to believe it. Not only do I have 2 girls who say the most hilarious things, but I think Barrymore's subsequent film career amply proves her acting chops. That kind of talent is exactly why she was in the film in the first place at such a young age.
@ I mean I agree it’s definitely possible just cuz she’s a child doesn’t mean she couldnt improvise it just seems unlikely to me but Im gonna disagree with you on her subsequent film career being purely based off talent. Unfortunately there’s more sinister stuff at play there, if you know anything about her background then you’ll see where I’m coming from.
6-year old, and why not?
1:55 Another funny part about that scene is the implications of the Whoville has a Nuclear Powered Aircraft carrier named after it.
It was a substitute director on the rinal scene of The Graduate. He was supposed to cut earlier, so the actors didn't know what tgey should fo.
So 0:50 the coat rack is worthy. “How about that”. 😂😂
Also unscripted, from _Dirty Dancing:_ Baby keeps laughing as Johnny brushes her underarm at the end of their dance practice. Jennifer Gray was genuinely laughing and Patrick Swayze was genuinely annoyed that she couldn't get the scene right.
The reason for Steve's pose in the Chwarma scene: It was reshoot and Evens managed to grow beard in the mean time so they needed to hide Cap's face.
So you mention The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers sword blooper, but not the blooper where Viggo Mortensen kicked the helmet and cried out because his toes broke on the take kept in the film, but he continued to act through it and only told someone after "cut" was yelled?
Yes, there's another unscripted bit where an orc throws a sword at Viggo and he has to bat it away with his own sword. Also made the final cut. (BTW, these details are in the DVD extras.)
shawarma is at the end of deadpool 3 too....
It's fun to see lewd scenes that have absolutely no relation to the bloopers.
3:02 destroying a one off antique is not good news, and quite sad
But it isn't true. Prop master has denied this and said there were two prop ships destroyed and no museum piece on set.
6:51 Actually, the assistant director was filming and forgot to yell cut. So the scene kept going longer than it was supposed to.
Santa is not used to drive stick.
GOLD , THANK YOU ;
The gunshot hole on the windshield that was in Mr and Mrs Smith was not added in post-production it was always there it was just out of frame . Not sure where you're getting your info . you should really do your homework
I think he meant they added the flash and sound of the gun firing.
The Shawarma scene is my favorite of all scenes in the MCU
I usually don't like these kind of videos in general because frankly I think most of them are made up for PR, at least the newer ones of most recent years, but one from "Raising cain" (starts at 1:22) seems genuine. I absolutely love the expressions on every ones faces. The last one with Jimmy Stewart seems legit too.
The woman in the bank kissed by Jimmy Stewart in It's a Wonderful Life was also Grandma Walton.
Goat interrupting GOAT
But why show it here? The narrator says it DIDN`T make it nto the final cut?!
@@AllanMogensen Shout out to Chadwick?
Eomer's sword begs the question, why was his sword upside down?
The end of the scabbard got stuck on the saddle, pulling it up as he mounted the horse.
7:16 this scene was actually reshot long after. Chris Evans was shooting another movie and had grown a mustache for the part. He rests his head on his fist in this scene to block it.
According to Ron Moore, it was a very expensive museum-quality model worth several hundred dollars that was being rented for the production. It was insured, according to Moore.
4:48 this is said to be take two, as the actress went to the floor too fast on the first take. On the second take, all of the crew stood naked on the other side of the camera, giving her just that tiny amount of WTF? before she went to the floor. That one is in the movie.
The coat rack is worth of Thor's hammer.
Dirty dancing was a warm up exercise in this clip huh. The director secretly began filming huh. Oh, he did multiple camera shots, movement, all in secret huh. Just making stuff up.
What's the background music?
Better question, why.
Patrick and Jennifer got busy… you can battle on that
Kelly LeBrock in the shower....I would never leave.
Simp
@@millypoo7713 i'm seeing this word everywhere and it's pathetic... most people clearly don't even know what the word is supposed to mean clearly 😂
@@millypoo7713You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means.
Your skin would get wrinkled after half-an-hour or so. Hers, too, come to think of it.
@@millypoo7713 Virgin
Still waiting for the cigarette lighter scene in platoon and when Henry Steps on Karen's hand in the bedroom in goodfellas.
You are killing me.
that "handshake" is better known as the Infamous, PIMPTAP......lol
Wow!
Improvised Scene ~ More STANDOUT.
Martin Sheen. Apocalypse Now. Punched a mirror in an early hotel scene, leading to a very bloody hand. This wasn't scripted but fits the movie perfectly.
That ET scene wasn't scripted but Drew Barrymore Says I think you killed him already , Either that was added later or at her young age shows how talented she is. 🤘🤘
3:00 You think things on loan that are valuable would be told to the cast, just as an added precautions. Kind of like the kirk Russel one of destroying a guitar on set.
What was Hot Lips saying?
Don’t forget Scrooged. When the Ghost of Christmas Present smashes Bill Murray in the face with the toaster, not only did she actually make contact with him but she broke his nose - and that’s the clip you see.
hope it was deliberate
Quite interesting facts I have to say!
Kurt Russell also killed a prop on loan. Guitar hundreds of years old!
145 years old
Dog said when you gotta go, you gotta go
Dale Midkiff. Louis Creed was the character's name.
Jimmy Stewart really was an amazing person.
Flew 20 combat missions and was awarded TWO Distinguished Flying Crosses and the Croix de Guerre
@@larrydrozd2740
He bombed farmers and families in cities.
Just another war criminal.
No, no, your face does! 😁😂😃😀
That mop falling over was CGI. Pause the video, and use the period key on your keyboard to step frame by frame. It is being either pushed, or CGI. The area around the mop when it bounces also shifts around with the mop. Also her pants closest to the mop look weird when it lands. Compression artifacts? Perhaps. But the rest of her looks fine. The way it lands very unrealistically is also a big tell. I don't know where you get your factoids but it discredits the entire rest of the video.
In the 1990s? I had a bit of a crush on her :) she was a good actress :)
3:03 Always wondered why they would put real things like that on set. A cheap nock off would cost like 300 dollars and be just as good.
I'd love to like the video, I'd do, but don't want youtube recommending me ALL of your stuff. sorry!
On b s g commander adama breaks the model ship, in later episodes he can be seen carefully gluing it back together again
. This became a running.joke.and he actually broke (a model.ship) it three separate times during the other seasons!
Battlestar Galactica? The what, new series? Movie? LOL
Probably the TV movie
Didnt Jessica Beal destroy a $100,000+ camera a few times in multiple shots with the bow?
3:10 that was pretty expensive blooper
Adama was upset about Starbucks death, not Apollo’s.
Incorrect. They're referencing the scene where Starbuck admitted to killing Apollo's older brother.
@@JPerry-jw9ikWrong! The scene where he destroyed the boat that he showed when they made the statement was from the episode Malestorm where Starbuck died.
Scene Budget: $50,000
Loaned Historic Model Ship: $200,000
**SMASH**
PA: 😭
Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey could not stand each other while filming Dirty Dancing
Largely true because of how Swayze had behaved during the filming of Red Dawn. FWIW, Grey did appreciate how well they worked together and how Dirty Dancing became so popular because of their onscreen chemistry.
Nope. Half of these were not bloopers that "accidently" made it into the movie
Oh you were there?
I bet Brad Pitt regrets ever doing Mr and Mrs Smith.
I bet he doesn't.
@@rickdesper I would - she made his life hell and turned all the kids against him. What do you think he got out of it ?
6:22 It was NOT a Slurpy. It was an Icee! It is written on the cup in the scene that you showed! Get it straight!
It's the same damn thing, just sold in different places
@@Dranazere Kwik-E-Mart calls them Squishies: ua-cam.com/video/XIZ1tA4b33I/v-deo.html
@@Dranazere no it is not. An Icee is a frozen Carbonated beverage. A Slurpy is not. Not the same.
@@Elderos5 "Slurpee is the brand name for carbonated slushies sold by 7-Eleven" they're made by the same company ICEE, the only difference is that 7-Eleven has made a deal to call them slurpee
@@Dranazere that is not entirely true. Slupee is what 7-Eleven replaced the ICEE machines with when ICEE pulled thier machines out of 7-Eleven in the 70's. ICEE did not, then, own or maintain the Slupee machines.
The mop just happen to fall over and the bucket went out in sympathy 🤔
Maybe she wasn't told but ...
7:20 beautiful
Is that clickbait Matthew Broderick in the shower?
These aren't bloopers these are improvs....
Where was Kelly LeBrock
Curse you! I'd decided never to watch Peter Jackson's 'Lord of The Rings' films again! (They distract from my enjoyment of the book, my all-time favourite novel.) The rest is great, though 🙂
Well. Just to be the comic book nerd. Thor's hammer was supposed to be so heavy that nobody else could pick it up. So the coat rack should've fallen right off the wall.
The fact that others could not lift it had nothing to do with weight. It was about whether the individual was "worthy". The Hulk could not lift it, (in The Avengers) not because it was too heavy, but because he was not worthy. Vision could wield it in Age of Ultron and Cap in Endgame because they were worthy. Not because they are stronger than Hulk (in the MCU, that's certainly not true for Cap.)
2:29 😅😮😮😮😮
The wiki says the BSG ship that Adama broke was only worth hundreds dollars not a several hundred thousand dollar museum piece on loan.
"According to Ron Moore, it was a very expensive museum-quality model worth several hundred dollars that was being rented for the production. It was insured, according to Moore" - Production notes.
Sounds about right.
There seems to be misunderstanding. In the title it says "movie", yet there is footage from marvel, which is not cinema.