Fun fact about the Kevin Nash scene. The knife was *supposed* to be a rubber plunger blade so when he stabbed him, it would just go into the handle. But not only was it a real knife...it was *DULL* , which means it takes more force to pierce flesh and technically hurts more because you're tearing with pressure instead of a clean cut. That means Thomas Jane was strong enough to force a dull prop knife through a man's chest, and Kevin Nash was tough enough to ignore it and finish the scene. Also Kevin actually threw Jane through that wall.
Thomas Janes Punisher is one of my Favorite movies, and now knowing that the literal best fight sequence in the movie (and one of my favorite of all time) had this happen during it just makes it that much more badass
People wondering how Kevin Nash didn't flinch after being stabbed: about 5 years earlier, Hulk Hogan gave Nash "the fingerpoke of doom" in the exact same spot on his upper left chest. It clearly did so much damage to Nash, he no longer has any functioning nerves in the area.
The Zoolander one sounds like you’re crediting Stiller for the brilliance. Duchovny was the one who made it brilliant by just rolling with it in character. Credit to all of them really for not busting up because that moment is absolute gold. 😂
I never did acting, but I did marching band, and we were taught to keep going and act as if our mistakes were intentional. It helped us a lot, even just as high schoolers. I can only imagine how much more doing such things helped professional actors. This is proof of how awesome their improv is
"The show must go on", as they say. Unless you're me one marching band competition playing a solo on vibraphone during the very end of the ballad and as the music ritardandos and the melody builds, I flubbed the very last note and still had to pretend like everything was fine >.< I think I heard a collective groan from the entire band behind me that night...
Another funny thing about the Stormtrooper head bump in A New Hope was that they added a "call forward" to it in Attack of the Clones. After the Obi-Wan/Jango Fett fight, Jango nearly smacked his head on his spaceship's lowering door in the same manner, making it pretty much canon that the Stormtrooper was an aging Clonetrooper
Ok the dude getting actually stabbed and not reacting and just going on for the whole scene is incredibly impressive. Same with the actor in Blade Runner who put her elbow through a car window.
@@johnanderson9765 - Waldo is Wally in the UK. Waldo isn't a common name here. Wally is short for Walter, a much more common name. The name is different in different countries.
@@johnanderson9765 No, his shirt is worn by Wally. The character originally came from Britain and is called Wally, while in the US he's called Waldo. On top of that, WhatCulture is based in the UK hence why they said Wally.
I feel cheated it was #1, it didn't add to the scene. But I guess the acting was too good, so they left it in... or they just didn't notice the bloop, like most people. If I had to pick, it would probably be nash getting stabbed and continuing on landing in my top spot. This list is lame.
Also, now it's all about lore of Star Wars, where identically clone soldiers was replaced by just people from all the galaxy, but stations was created for clones
Nobody liked John Travolta at the time. I do not know that many that have had hope for him since Hairspray, but I stopped at Swordfish b/c of Battlefield Earth.
It was the best of all the punisher movies imo. Excellent acting by the villains and they actually succeeded in making frank castle care about something other than his revenge early on instead of at the end
@@Hollywood041 Really? Hootin' and hollerin' cavemen flying Harrier jets did NOTHING for you? I saw it day 1 in the theater and the sheer ridiculousness of it all had me laughing the whole time! It was watching the special features on the DVD that I learned that it wasn't supposed to be hilarious and that it was actually a passion project of Travolta's. I immediately felt bad for him, but he made at least one person happy that he made it. :)
My favorite is Leo DiCaprio playing Calvin candy. When he smashed his hand on the table, breaking the glass, it really cut his hand and didn’t break character. Made that scene so great.
@@perceivedvelocity9914 Huh, his family was brutally murdered. He went on a murderous tirade to avenge them. It was a good origin, it never went on to say what he did afterwards.
@@simonhowell4486 He continued brutally fighting criminals wherever he found them, not just those who were directly responsible for his family's death.
Also in The Punisher after that fight scene, Rebecca put stitches into Tom's chest for real. He stayed in character and finished the scene. Props to him and Kevin both.
During a community theatre play I was in during my teenage years, I got accidentally clocked by one of my co-stars - a dude about four inches taller and at least 10 years older than I was. Normally, we'd use a stage slap; that night, we both misjudged distances and he knocked me off my feet. Grabbing me by the collar, he hauled me offstage as we both continued our characters' argument. "Oh my God," he whispered as soon as we were out of sight. "I'm sorry. Are you okay?" I'm fine," I told him. "Keep going." Our poor co-stars were left on stage as the two of us acted out a fight WAY beyond the level we were supposed to be having. When we'd ascertained that I wasn't bleeding or anything, he hauled me back out on stage by the scruff of the neck, shoved me away, and we picked up the scene where things were supposed to have left off.
Not as violent but I was in a play with a (sighted) woman playing a blind character. The scene involved her impressing three men by pouring us all tea. Right as she was pouring it, the porcelain teapot, bizarrely, broke, leaving her holding the handle on one hand and the rest of the pot in the other, with "tea" gushing out where the handle was. That left her trying to figure out how to NOT react like she could see the situation, and the rest of us screening to (badly) improvise cleaning up. Poor woman was shaking visibly offstage. Pretty sure it's the only thing anyone remembers from that show now.
@@ejgoldlust I mean, if the teapot broke as you were pouring it- even a blind person would feel that the teapot broke, wouldve heard the crash of it against the surface it fell to Blind people still have other senses, that, are generally enhanced to replace their sight.
In high school we did West Side Story. There is an opening fight scene where two guys threw one opponent to the ground. They got a little overzealous one night and threw him off the stage into the orchestra pit and onto the drummer.
@@ejgoldlust I've had the bottom or side of a glass suddenly give away where a near invisible hairline crack had grown over time from being used and washed. I'd imagine it would especially be more common as props used for dramatic effect take more punishment.
I watched Guardians of the Galaxy pretty recently, and I thought him dropping the orb was completely intentional. He really did a great job covering it up and it definitely added a good bit of comedy to the scene
@@TheBigCheeseTPProbably not. If you look at how he was holding it probably so that the orb could be better captured by the camera, it isn’t the most natural way to hold a ball, looks awkward, and isn’t the way you’d usually hold a ball snugly in your hand. Him trying to hold it in this awkward way in his fingertips and presenting to the camera is probably why he dropped it. Does definitely fit well with the character though
And it's really lucky that they were acting with a relatively small knife. If it was like a 90s horror movie, that kind of mistake could have been devastating.
Viggo Mortensen absolutely obliterating two toes during the scene in which he kicks the Uruk-kai helmet is my personal favorite. He also didn't tell anyone else he'd broken his toes until _after_ they were done shooting for the day.
When I hear of these things, my mind keeps wondering back to Jackie Chan (earlier days). If you ever seen behind the scenes stuff and things, you'll know what I talk about.
In the fight with Lurtz in Fellowship, the knife he deflects was actually real. It was supposed to swapped out but wasn't. Viggo was actually very good with a sword and actually deflected the dagger
I just realized that the Star Wars head bump even has a follow-up! At 9:16 it's clearly the same shot when the stormtroopers return and the tall guy wants to go through the doorway, realizes he would have to crouch and then decides to stop and stand guard! I actually love this part even more!
Leonardo Di Caprio really cut his hands during a dinner scene in Django unchained, and he remained bleeding in his character. That was one of the best scene in cinema history tbh
I was commenting JUST to say this. It’s hard to mistake Miami for San Fran, plus that’d be a crap long drive for the senator’s family to make from New England if it was cross-country!
I bet 10 bucks that the Stormtrooper head bonk wasnt fixed not because the acting was good, but because nobody working in the film noticed, and after it gain popularity they just embrace the botch.
And if you notice immediately after the bump the front trooper covers the entire field of vision and that segment of film ends. That wasn't a scene, that was a B-roll filler shot. Might be an unpopular thing to say, but there was no acting involved in this. Walk forward in costume, as long as the one in front doesn't fall over. Would have had to be a major gaffe for them to even bother doing it again.
Sky high pain tolerance, backed up by resisting bumps in the ring over a long career, I'd guess. That, and the intial shock blunting the sensation, at least temporarily. Betcha it hurt plenty, once shooting was done and the adrenaline wore off.
Why didn’t Leo’s performance in Django make this list? He actually cut his hand on glass and wiped his own blood on Kerry Washington’s face. Her reaction was authentically disgusted and Leo’s on screen reaction to him cutting his hand is brilliantly in character.
I just posted this one too. It was brilliant improvised acting by Leo. I did scroll through the comments wondering if anybody else thought that one would be on here.
One of my favorite types of these mistakes is the scene in the Dawn of the Dead remake where Ving is getting a wound sown up. Sarah Polly actually pushed the needle all the way through the prosthetic and literally sowed it to his arm.
it wasn't Sarah Polly. it was a registered nurse who looked like her from the back. the director keep saying to go deeper and the nurse did so and Ving didn't say anything until the scene was over
@@toomanyaccounts Damn, on one of the audio commentary tracks where I learned of that they just kept saying "she" so I assumed. Thanks for the heads up!
I heard a rumor that the Stormtrooper that bumped his head was actually David Prowse, the actor who played Darth Vader who was just filling in as an extra Trooper because they had already finished shooting all of Vader's scenes. The reason given for hitting his head was Mr. Prowse's height was not accounted for with the prop door; he was unusually tall for a Stormtrooper, apparently. This was just a rumor though, and good spirited fun aside, Prowse has likely never owned this gaff so as not to diminish his role as Vader; something he is very proud of.
@@kiillabytez I was asked by the person who told me this to make sure I clarified that it was a rumor before spreading it around. All I can say is that it was an original cast member, and I met them at a comic con here in California. It was not just some lowly extra either, it is definitely someone that would know the identity of the Stormtrooper.
In Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, there's scene in which Gandalf (Ian McKellen) is visiting Bilbo (Ian Holm). Since a wizard is much taller than a hobbit, at one point Gandalf accidentally bumps his head on Bilbo's ceiling. McKellen continued acting, and that was the take that was used in the finished product.
🤣 I love that! Also in The Two Towers when Aragorn kicks the prop helmet and screams in rage it was actually Viggo Mortensen shouting in pain because he broke his toe.
Most recently I heard and read about in Fellowship. When Aragon is battling the one Uruk-kai leader. After withdrawing the knife from his leg, he threw it back at Aragon and he deflects it with his sword. Only... it really happened. The Uruk-kai was meant to toss a fake and Viggo was to deflect it anyway but again the props forgot to switch out and thus Viggo deflected a real knife with his sword. They say it was props to him learning how to sword fight.
Nice video! I would have added the callback to the Stormtrooper as well. In Attack of the Clones when Jango is boarding his ship, he also hits his head on the retracting doorway. George Lucas stated that he added that effect digitally after the performance because Jango is "the father of all Stormtroopers" and wanted that thread of continuity with the similar helmet and poor visibility issues from their genetic template. (Of course, in A New Hope, all the clones are phased out and replaced with TK designated human soldiers, but the callback still works!)
5:17 If the script said that the bad guy needs to be stabbed in the throat then Kevin Nash would've died. How can someone possibly not be able to tell the difference between a prop knife and a real one? I feel as if this was done on purpose. If an actor/actress gets hurt, the scene should end because their health is more important than a stupid movie.
Movie sets use both real and fake versions of the props they need to get the right shots they need. The real knife was likely meant for close up shots, because no matter how good the rubber knife is, it'll look fake if they keep it in frame long enough.
All it took was a piece of glass to have fallen 90 degrees and him slamming his head back again for him to lose his eyes or more. He got lucky with the mirror scene.
S Miami Brach to be exact. Not sure where he came up with San Francisco but it was definitely Miami. Guess he never watched the films he was commenting on.
In A Hard Day's Night, there's a goof very similar to the Star Wars one. During "If I Fell", George leans on an amp and it kinda falls off the stand, but he carries on. On the most recent release, they added a sound effect for it.
@@kiillabytez I know what you meant to say, but actually three movies does equal a trilogy. What you meant to say, was the only trilogy in the whole series that was worth much.😉Agreed!
Gentlemen prefer blondes is one of my favorite movies of all time, I didn’t know that detail about the pool scene though! I love Jane she was such a professional, love Marilyn too ❤
Fun fact: in Terminator 2, Arnold was supposed to rip off fake skin from his arm, but the prop director forgot to put it on before the scene. So, Kevin Nash stood in for Arnold, and Arnold ripped off Nash’s skin instead.
3:25 You forgot to mention its the reason why Kurt Angle won the olympic gold medal with a broken freaking neck. His trainer that he commemorated his win to was the brother of tatum's character. That's why he did what he did and has FEW regrets about it. All 3 main actors in that movie were amazing. Tatum was channeling his inner 'Taxi Driver'
In the Three Stooges Short Dizzy Detectives, there's a scene where Moe is standing on a table measuring a wall while Curly and Larry are using a power saw to cut a piece of wood on the same table. They saw through the table and Moe turns around and the table splits and he falls. When he falls he hits a side of the table that sticking up. He gets up, finishes the scene, then immediately collapses having fractured his ribs. In another short called Punch Drunks, Larry is running all over town trying to find something that can play Pop Goes The Weasel, which drives Curly into a rage. He happens upon a truck with a guy sitting on the back with a speaker playing the song. Larry jumps in the truck, guns the motor, and the guy in the back falls off the truck. When the extra fell off the truck, he broke his arm. Another Stooge one, in the short Three Little Pigskins(which co-stars a young Lucille Ball), the Stooges are playing football, rather badly. During a play, they stop and pose for photographers taking pictures. The entire defense(comprised of real football players) tackles the whole gang photographers and all. 3 stunt doubles filled in for the Stooges in the scene and after the tackles, 2 of the stunt doubles and the photographers received broken limbs for their troubles.
I’m only halfway through this list and it’s incredible, but a couple of things: 1. The drag club in the birdcage is in Miami Florida, not San Francisco 2. How is the man who actually got stabbed, but continued to act only at number 5?! 😱😱😱🤣🤣🤣
Most of these I'd agree are movie mistakes that ultimately improved the film but I have to say, Tatum vs. the mirror is a bit of an odd one out. I can certainly agree that it adds a certain intensity to the scene and the character, but it's less a mistake and more an improvisation by Tatum.
That is why I would have preferred the use of Martin Sheen in Apocalypse Now. Accident during improvisation led to even more fevered, drugged-out improv.
There are probably no telling how many other happy accidents occurred in films that have gone unnoticed but it just makes us appreciate these films that much more.
I worked on Foxcatcher here in Pittsburgh. When Steve Carell's regular stand-in had to leave, I was hired as the backup. I also photo-doubled for him. Steve was an absolutely great guy, as was Channing Tatum and Mark Ruffalo. I met Chan when I was an extra at the beginning of filming as a farm hand. I was at crafty (snack area) and he walks in (they were filming the scene where Steve's character buys a tank). I said, "What brings you to the extras crafty?" He said, "It's closer to set than what they have set up for the actors. He said call me Chan, what's your name?" I also had to set up the scene where he comes over after a match and hugs Steve Carell. So after I hugged Chan, the women on set asked if they could hug me. I said you don't want to hug me, you just want hug the Chan that's on me. 😁 03:37 I set this scene up when he shoots David Schultz. I became good friends with his wife Nancy and son Alexander while filming.
Regardless of theme or content, one of the best things about a Jules' video is Jules caring for everybody. Virtual hugs to you, dear dude, for virtually hugging all of us.
Both Stiller's and Nash's scenes made me speechless. The first one is a classic of mine, while getting stabbed, smiling darkly and carrying on, now that's just brilliant.
In a Three Stooges film short, Moe was standing on a table while Curly sawed through it, when Moe turned around, the table collapsed out from under him and he fell down right on it. He broke several ribs, but he stayed in character and finished out the scene before passing out.
I watched it on Netflix a couple of weeks ago, and that scene came up and I watched the knife coming out and thought, "wow, that looks super realistic, that prop guy did an amazing job, you usually see the blade CGI or pop out of the handle." Nope, apparently the prop guy was an idiot and the actor was just an absolute machine.
With the Birdcage, there's a lot of adlibbing going on. Turns out, Robin and Nathan had super good chemistry and comedic timing with each other, so a lot of the original lines were left out because the two of them were having fun bantering with each other in character.
Oh okay so Thoma Jane's look of fear was real. Pulling out the knife and realizing that it was real would be terrifying. Also Kevin Nash is a beast to take a knife like that.
I think managing to stay in non-reaction robot-zone with an elbow chipped in several places is the most impressive one to me. She couldn’t give show ANY change in expression, and an injury like that hurts like the dickens. Not downplaying the guy who got stabbed, but he was kind of used to a certain level of pain, and while the stabbing is definitely a more serious injury I think the elbow would be more painful. But I don’t know!
a stab by a knife is not as painful as people think. there are people who got stabbed in the back and were going around with the knife sticking out thinking they pulled a muscle
@@jpteknoman a friend accidentally stabbed me in the shoulder with a small knife many many years ago, it didn't really hurt that much until I noticed it. I just pulled it out and actually stitched myself up with just needle and thread afterwards after sterilizing the wound with iodine.
A bit sad that you mentioned Tatum's scene with the mirror and neglected to mention Martin Sheen punching a mirror in Apocalypse Now and smearing the blood all over his body. All captured and used because Francis Ford Coppola decided to keep filming and letting Sheen do whatever he wanted to do.
Wasn't there a moment in the movie Se7en, where Brad Pitt broke his wrist during the chase scene trying to apprehend John Doe? From what I recall, Pitt briefly slipped and twisted his hand so badly that he needed to put a cast over it. But instead of delaying the film production, Pitt decided to continue with the movie, of which they decided to add the fact that Brad Pitt's character did break his wrist during that chase, and kept the cast until the end of the movie.
It was more likely the director's decision and not Pitt's.They have a schedule to keep while filming, that's why Jackie Chan keeps filming even when he injures himself on botched stunts.
@@Dilligff That's not true at all. It was developed by accident by Eastman-Kodak. They were attempting to make clear plastic gun sights for use during WWII, and created cyanoacrylate totally by accident. It was then forgotten about for a decade, until the scientist who created it "rediscovered" it while creating heat-resistant canopies for jet fighter planes. It was used during Nam for medical purposes, but that's not where it came from.
@@TheUluxian Post deleted as I stand corrected. Though its initial use for the sights failed. Info on the canopy part was harder to come across, but yes, it did see practical use before Vietnam and I apologize. I will endeavor to become a better Jeopardy! champion before making further posts.
I just saw star trek beyond for the first time this past weekend, and I thought that the last fight scene was a bit intense. CQC with Idris Elba in a small box was a bad idea. So that wasn’t makeup that Chris had on in the final scenes.
Granted this was a stage play so you can't exactly cut out a misstep but anyway. We had a break away bench for a physical gag later in the show. When I was done sitting on it I had to turn a wood block to prep it so there was only 1 nail holding it together. Well the nail was getting loose so before the final performance it was put in a new hole. The person who was supposed to fall sat down and ..... nothing. So they gave it a bit of a hop and sat down harder .... nothing. One more try and CRACK the wood on the top of the bench broke and dumped the actor on their back but because they were supposed to fall the scene just kept going. A fun send off for out break away bench.
The head bumping stormtrooper is called Wanten, and he is also the character who asks for Kenobi and Luke's IDs on Tatooine. The head bumping was caused by the lingering effect of the mind trick. He survived the war because he tried to kill C3P0 and R2 on the Death Star, but the stormtroopers were told not to kill the rebels, and he is stopped by an officer offscreen. He joins the First Order and dies during the battle on Starkiller base, apparently because a team of Resistance child soldiers crashed their shuttle into him.
You missed the scene in True Lies when Jamie Leigh Curtis slipped and fell during her striptease dance but got up and finished the scene. James Cameron kept it in because it looked like something her character would do.
Leonardo DiCaprio slicking his hand open while crushing a skull carried on even if his hand I pouring blood.. that is just epic acting! 👍👍👍 Django Unchained
That Jane Russell one is crazy, what a champ! Someone with great fame like that would often tell someone else with no fame "Do you know who i am?! I'll make sure you're fired and blacklisted from all of Hollywood!" for a mistake like that, especially in those days.
Kevin Nash is insane. The fact he smiled when getting stabbed, like an "oh hell yes, that's a real knife" is insane. That is some serious acting, and serious pain tolerance.
Fun fact about the Kevin Nash scene. The knife was *supposed* to be a rubber plunger blade so when he stabbed him, it would just go into the handle. But not only was it a real knife...it was *DULL* , which means it takes more force to pierce flesh and technically hurts more because you're tearing with pressure instead of a clean cut. That means Thomas Jane was strong enough to force a dull prop knife through a man's chest, and Kevin Nash was tough enough to ignore it and finish the scene. Also Kevin actually threw Jane through that wall.
You stab me I can throw you threw a wall and we'll be even
@@WesleyB-Rook oh yeah? you just know that?
That was a 2 inch knife that was actually sharp. Also he did coke before that scene to get pumped up that's why he acted like nothing happened
@@WesleyB-Rook is there perhaps a link or reference you can give us? Just in case, the skeptics are coming.
Thomas Janes Punisher is one of my Favorite movies, and now knowing that the literal best fight sequence in the movie (and one of my favorite of all time) had this happen during it just makes it that much more badass
People wondering how Kevin Nash didn't flinch after being stabbed: about 5 years earlier, Hulk Hogan gave Nash "the fingerpoke of doom" in the exact same spot on his upper left chest. It clearly did so much damage to Nash, he no longer has any functioning nerves in the area.
Lmfao!!! That's awesome!!!
FACT
Lol. Highly unlikely
There's no way Nash would still be alive if Hogan gave him "the fingerpoke of doom". It is legend.
LMFAO!
The Zoolander one sounds like you’re crediting Stiller for the brilliance. Duchovny was the one who made it brilliant by just rolling with it in character. Credit to all of them really for not busting up because that moment is absolute gold. 😂
I was hoping someone else would point that out! The creator of this video dropped the ball pointing Duchovny's part in this brilliant scene!
He's like, I just told you...
Totally agree. His response is what really made that scene.
"Are you serious? I just told you that a moment ago...."
Too bad they didn’t actually let us hear the dialogue here. 🙄
It would be if they had played enough of the clip for us to know what was going on.
I never did acting, but I did marching band, and we were taught to keep going and act as if our mistakes were intentional. It helped us a lot, even just as high schoolers. I can only imagine how much more doing such things helped professional actors. This is proof of how awesome their improv is
Omg octoling pfp cool :0
"The show must go on", as they say. Unless you're me one marching band competition playing a solo on vibraphone during the very end of the ballad and as the music ritardandos and the melody builds, I flubbed the very last note and still had to pretend like everything was fine >.< I think I heard a collective groan from the entire band behind me that night...
Band geeks unite!
@@DaymusikThat's the moment you tell them "it's jazz", even though it's Beethoven.
I never did marching bands, but that trick works as well for the tabletop roleplaying experience. It is a nice trick to put on your belt.
Another funny thing about the Stormtrooper head bump in A New Hope was that they added a "call forward" to it in Attack of the Clones. After the Obi-Wan/Jango Fett fight, Jango nearly smacked his head on his spaceship's lowering door in the same manner, making it pretty much canon that the Stormtrooper was an aging Clonetrooper
Yup! I said the same thing a few minutes ago, but he did hit his head, I remember a sound when he ducked down after the contact hahaha
Same thing happens in an episode of the clone wars animated series must be genetics
@@Analog-to-digital-cotinual poor rex
Ok the dude getting actually stabbed and not reacting and just going on for the whole scene is incredibly impressive. Same with the actor in Blade Runner who put her elbow through a car window.
That dude is Kevin Nash. One of the OG members of the NWO in wrestling
And his shirt is worn by a book character named Waldo, not Wally.
@@johnanderson9765 - Waldo is Wally in the UK. Waldo isn't a common name here. Wally is short for Walter, a much more common name. The name is different in different countries.
@@johnanderson9765 No, his shirt is worn by Wally. The character originally came from Britain and is called Wally, while in the US he's called Waldo. On top of that, WhatCulture is based in the UK hence why they said Wally.
@@WesleyB-Rook Thats what I thought... No way they don't react if that was real with that long a blade
I've never thought about it before, but head-bumping stormtrooper guy actually demonstrates that Luke is in fact the perfect height for a stormtrooper
How could they let a flaw in the exhaust system exist?
Bitch, they didn't even get the doors to open right!
Ha!
Reminds me of a joke that my friend told me.
If Artoo is short for Artoo Detoo and Anni is short for Anakin. What is Luke short for? A Stormtrooper. 😀
I feel cheated it was #1, it didn't add to the scene. But I guess the acting was too good, so they left it in... or they just didn't notice the bloop, like most people. If I had to pick, it would probably be nash getting stabbed and continuing on landing in my top spot. This list is lame.
Also, now it's all about lore of Star Wars, where identically clone soldiers was replaced by just people from all the galaxy, but stations was created for clones
Thomas Jane as the Punisher gets over looked by so many, and it’s sad. The movie was amazing for its time.
Nobody liked John Travolta at the time. I do not know that many that have had hope for him since Hairspray, but I stopped at Swordfish b/c of Battlefield Earth.
He's my fav for it
It was the best of all the punisher movies imo. Excellent acting by the villains and they actually succeeded in making frank castle care about something other than his revenge early on instead of at the end
@@Hollywood041 Really? Hootin' and hollerin' cavemen flying Harrier jets did NOTHING for you? I saw it day 1 in the theater and the sheer ridiculousness of it all had me laughing the whole time! It was watching the special features on the DVD that I learned that it wasn't supposed to be hilarious and that it was actually a passion project of Travolta's. I immediately felt bad for him, but he made at least one person happy that he made it. :)
War zone is the best punisher movie but Netflix has the best punisher actor
My favorite is Leo DiCaprio playing Calvin candy. When he smashed his hand on the table, breaking the glass, it really cut his hand and didn’t break character. Made that scene so great.
Yeah I think it was bad enough to require stitches.
@@dougsmith6262 you’re probably right
That's my favourite movie mistake too. I had no idea that he really cut his hand until I read up on it years later.
@@SequEsteredError was such a great scene. DiCaprio is a real pro.
@@FelixDrako I couldn't agree more
You have to give it up for Duchovny also, for not breaking character and just going with it perfectly by saying “You serious? I just told you”
That Punisher movie was really good and that one scene really elevated it. All of these flubs were awesome and really did make the movies better.
No doubt. Lol
IMO it was a good action movie but it was a bad Punisher movie. The studio didn't get the character at all.
@@perceivedvelocity9914
Huh, his family was brutally murdered. He went on a murderous tirade to avenge them. It was a good origin, it never went on to say what he did afterwards.
@@simonhowell4486 He continued brutally fighting criminals wherever he found them, not just those who were directly responsible for his family's death.
Best punisher movie so far
Also in The Punisher after that fight scene, Rebecca put stitches into Tom's chest for real. He stayed in character and finished the scene. Props to him and Kevin both.
Ouch, how can that not hurt?!
@@largol33t12 It did.
without checking for internal damages?
During a community theatre play I was in during my teenage years, I got accidentally clocked by one of my co-stars - a dude about four inches taller and at least 10 years older than I was. Normally, we'd use a stage slap; that night, we both misjudged distances and he knocked me off my feet. Grabbing me by the collar, he hauled me offstage as we both continued our characters' argument. "Oh my God," he whispered as soon as we were out of sight. "I'm sorry. Are you okay?" I'm fine," I told him. "Keep going." Our poor co-stars were left on stage as the two of us acted out a fight WAY beyond the level we were supposed to be having. When we'd ascertained that I wasn't bleeding or anything, he hauled me back out on stage by the scruff of the neck, shoved me away, and we picked up the scene where things were supposed to have left off.
it's a trap to just destroy the enterprise and it worked perfectly till kirk adapts and kills Krel
Not as violent but I was in a play with a (sighted) woman playing a blind character. The scene involved her impressing three men by pouring us all tea. Right as she was pouring it, the porcelain teapot, bizarrely, broke, leaving her holding the handle on one hand and the rest of the pot in the other, with "tea" gushing out where the handle was. That left her trying to figure out how to NOT react like she could see the situation, and the rest of us screening to (badly) improvise cleaning up. Poor woman was shaking visibly offstage. Pretty sure it's the only thing anyone remembers from that show now.
@@ejgoldlust I mean, if the teapot broke as you were pouring it- even a blind person would feel that the teapot broke, wouldve heard the crash of it against the surface it fell to
Blind people still have other senses, that, are generally enhanced to replace their sight.
In high school we did West Side Story.
There is an opening fight scene where two guys threw one opponent to the ground. They got a little overzealous one night and threw him off the stage into the orchestra pit and onto the drummer.
@@ejgoldlust I've had the bottom or side of a glass suddenly give away where a near invisible hairline crack had grown over time from being used and washed. I'd imagine it would especially be more common as props used for dramatic effect take more punishment.
I watched Guardians of the Galaxy pretty recently, and I thought him dropping the orb was completely intentional. He really did a great job covering it up and it definitely added a good bit of comedy to the scene
That shouldn't be here as like you said, that was COMPLETELY INTENTIONAL!
@@scottysmediaproductions oh for sure. He knew what he was doing
I thought the same! I was like "no way, right??"
@@TheBigCheeseTPProbably not. If you look at how he was holding it probably so that the orb could be better captured by the camera, it isn’t the most natural way to hold a ball, looks awkward, and isn’t the way you’d usually hold a ball snugly in your hand. Him trying to hold it in this awkward way in his fingertips and presenting to the camera is probably why he dropped it. Does definitely fit well with the character though
That slight pause and looking at each other you can tell that he was thinking “I hope Kevin is cool and doesn’t rip me in half” haha
And it's really lucky that they were acting with a relatively small knife. If it was like a 90s horror movie, that kind of mistake could have been devastating.
@@user-jb1ic3fb4d Definitely would've been long enough to do some serious damage or even kill if hitting somewhere else. So very lucky mistake.
Viggo Mortensen absolutely obliterating two toes during the scene in which he kicks the Uruk-kai helmet is my personal favorite. He also didn't tell anyone else he'd broken his toes until _after_ they were done shooting for the day.
When I hear of these things, my mind keeps wondering back to Jackie Chan (earlier days). If you ever seen behind the scenes stuff and things, you'll know what I talk about.
@@olavjensen1590 Or the person Jackie's a little wary of- Michelle Yeoh...
Or how in the Lurtz duel, the stunman for Lurtz threw a real knife at Viggo, who (thankfully) managed to deflect it first try.
dId YoU kNoW tHaT vIgGo MoRtEnSeN bRoKe HiS tOeS iN lOtR?
In the fight with Lurtz in Fellowship, the knife he deflects was actually real. It was supposed to swapped out but wasn't. Viggo was actually very good with a sword and actually deflected the dagger
The fact that Nash literally doesn’t even flinch and gives Jane a dumb grin is just unreal…
Birdcage was in South Miami Beach, not San Fran!
Came to say this. Thank you
Me too.
@@cellobabe Same here.
Hello my kindred
No kidding…
I just realized that the Star Wars head bump even has a follow-up! At 9:16 it's clearly the same shot when the stormtroopers return and the tall guy wants to go through the doorway, realizes he would have to crouch and then decides to stop and stand guard! I actually love this part even more!
Leonardo Di Caprio really cut his hands during a dinner scene in Django unchained, and he remained bleeding in his character. That was one of the best scene in cinema history tbh
Oh man it’s going to bug me if I don’t say something… The Birdcage is set in Miami, not San Francisco 😂
This! I thought I was misremembering.
THANK YOU! I was hoping someone else caught this
Thank you! It was driving me nuts!
I was commenting JUST to say this. It’s hard to mistake Miami for San Fran, plus that’d be a crap long drive for the senator’s family to make from New England if it was cross-country!
Yes! Chalk it up to just one more mistake, this time by the narrator.
I bet 10 bucks that the Stormtrooper head bonk wasnt fixed not because the acting was good, but because nobody working in the film noticed, and after it gain popularity they just embrace the botch.
And if you notice immediately after the bump the front trooper covers the entire field of vision and that segment of film ends.
That wasn't a scene, that was a B-roll filler shot. Might be an unpopular thing to say, but there was no acting involved in this. Walk forward in costume, as long as the one in front doesn't fall over. Would have had to be a major gaffe for them to even bother doing it again.
@@stevekirkpatrick1612 100% agree, just a nonsense thing to put on this video.
But you know someone would've called em out for not including it since it's literally one of the most famous mistakes on film
Kind of George Lucas says in in the commentary for the movie
@@ekasm8000 right? They definitely should have asked other people what their assumptions were first.
Like.. how the hell did Nash not even flinch when literally getting stabbed in the chest? That's insane
I was thinking the same thing
Because he's a bad muther hubbard!
Diesel power
Sky high pain tolerance, backed up by resisting bumps in the ring over a long career, I'd guess. That, and the intial shock blunting the sensation, at least temporarily. Betcha it hurt plenty, once shooting was done and the adrenaline wore off.
@@WesleyB-Rook dont know why you replying to everyones comments without listing any reference to elevate your answer
Why didn’t Leo’s performance in Django make this list? He actually cut his hand on glass and wiped his own blood on Kerry Washington’s face. Her reaction was authentically disgusted and Leo’s on screen reaction to him cutting his hand is brilliantly in character.
I just posted this one too. It was brilliant improvised acting by Leo. I did scroll through the comments wondering if anybody else thought that one would be on here.
Because she was super pissed he rubbed a biohazard on her without her consent....
Not only do I get fun and interesting videos from Jules, but a loving inspirational boost at the end. I can't stress how much I like that.
One of my favorite types of these mistakes is the scene in the Dawn of the Dead remake where Ving is getting a wound sown up. Sarah Polly actually pushed the needle all the way through the prosthetic and literally sowed it to his arm.
Didn't that actually happen to Jane as well in the punisher when he was getting stitched up?
@@ericpurvis2262 Haven't heard that one yet! Will have to check it out.
it wasn't Sarah Polly. it was a registered nurse who looked like her from the back. the director keep saying to go deeper and the nurse did so and Ving didn't say anything until the scene was over
@@toomanyaccounts Damn, on one of the audio commentary tracks where I learned of that they just kept saying "she" so I assumed. Thanks for the heads up!
@@Hogscraper yeah, I think I heard that one on fx when they did the DVD on TV years ago
I heard a rumor that the Stormtrooper that bumped his head was actually David Prowse, the actor who played Darth Vader who was just filling in as an extra Trooper because they had already finished shooting all of Vader's scenes. The reason given for hitting his head was Mr. Prowse's height was not accounted for with the prop door; he was unusually tall for a Stormtrooper, apparently. This was just a rumor though, and good spirited fun aside, Prowse has likely never owned this gaff so as not to diminish his role as Vader; something he is very proud of.
Sounds like hogwash to me.
@@kiillabytez I was asked by the person who told me this to make sure I clarified that it was a rumor before spreading it around. All I can say is that it was an original cast member, and I met them at a comic con here in California. It was not just some lowly extra either, it is definitely someone that would know the identity of the Stormtrooper.
Prowse was a tall man so I could see that might happen. No way to know if it was him for sure as those involved have held their tongues.
I own a twenty percent stake in gaff on wall street
Not likely as Prowse was 6'6". That stormtrooper doesn't tower over the rest.
In Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, there's scene in which Gandalf (Ian McKellen) is visiting Bilbo (Ian Holm). Since a wizard is much taller than a hobbit, at one point Gandalf accidentally bumps his head on Bilbo's ceiling. McKellen continued acting, and that was the take that was used in the finished product.
I just figured that as intentional.
🤣 I love that! Also in The Two Towers when Aragorn kicks the prop helmet and screams in rage it was actually Viggo Mortensen shouting in pain because he broke his toe.
@@michaeljaymarshall And it just worked so well in character.
@@michaeljaymarshall Interesting, never heard that one before. 😂
Most recently I heard and read about in Fellowship. When Aragon is battling the one Uruk-kai leader. After withdrawing the knife from his leg, he threw it back at Aragon and he deflects it with his sword. Only... it really happened. The Uruk-kai was meant to toss a fake and Viggo was to deflect it anyway but again the props forgot to switch out and thus Viggo deflected a real knife with his sword. They say it was props to him learning how to sword fight.
Nice video! I would have added the callback to the Stormtrooper as well. In Attack of the Clones when Jango is boarding his ship, he also hits his head on the retracting doorway. George Lucas stated that he added that effect digitally after the performance because Jango is "the father of all Stormtroopers" and wanted that thread of continuity with the similar helmet and poor visibility issues from their genetic template. (Of course, in A New Hope, all the clones are phased out and replaced with TK designated human soldiers, but the callback still works!)
Weird, as in, by canon I believe Fett's helmet supposedly gives him like a 360 vision, like a bird?
5:17 If the script said that the bad guy needs to be stabbed in the throat then Kevin Nash would've died. How can someone possibly not be able to tell the difference between a prop knife and a real one? I feel as if this was done on purpose. If an actor/actress gets hurt, the scene should end because their health is more important than a stupid movie.
Movie sets use both real and fake versions of the props they need to get the right shots they need. The real knife was likely meant for close up shots, because no matter how good the rubber knife is, it'll look fake if they keep it in frame long enough.
All it took was a piece of glass to have fallen 90 degrees and him slamming his head back again for him to lose his eyes or more. He got lucky with the mirror scene.
yeah its not even a prop mirror, wasnt supposed to be broken, and you can see it falling all around dude got lucky he wasnt properly scarred or worse
That Whole Scene In The Punisher Was One Of The Most Brutal Scenes Ever,
And The Movie Was Fantastic!
Do You Always Unnecessarily And Inexplicably Capitalize Every Word?
Anyone gonna bring up that the drag club in The Birdcage is in South Beach Florida NOT San Francisco?
That's what I thought as soon as he said that lol.
Well it seems Jules made a mistake and they kept it in the video anyway as well
THANK YOU!!!!!
S Miami Brach to be exact. Not sure where he came up with San Francisco but it was definitely Miami. Guess he never watched the films he was commenting on.
@@rpatty1973 He probably said SF because of it's reputation as a large gay community. Real lazy.
Thank you, Jules! You rock! 🖤
In A Hard Day's Night, there's a goof very similar to the Star Wars one. During "If I Fell", George leans on an amp and it kinda falls off the stand, but he carries on. On the most recent release, they added a sound effect for it.
Geez, props to Nash taking that like a champ and a half.
Also I thought that Punisher movie was decent, I liked it.
I love the level of professionalism by these actors. To keep going after that big of a blunder is amazing.
Mark Hamill also called Carrie Fisher by her real name when he saw her while exiting his X-Wing in Episode 4. It was kept in the movie as well
Which one was episode 4 again?
@@kiillabytez A new Hope. The very first movie
@@jupamoers To me, it will always just be: Star Wars.
The next was Empire Strikes back.
The last one: Return of the Jedi.
End of trilogy.
@@kiillabytez I know what you meant to say, but actually three movies does equal a trilogy. What you meant to say, was the only trilogy in the whole series that was worth much.😉Agreed!
4:41 The club he owns is not in San Francisco. It's in South Beach, a neighborhood in Miami Beach, Florida.
"Aren't you a little short for a stormtrooper?" "Well yeah, I gotta be able to fit through the doorways"
Gentlemen prefer blondes is one of my favorite movies of all time, I didn’t know that detail about the pool scene though! I love Jane she was such a professional, love Marilyn too ❤
I love that movie, and as a kid asked my mom if that was intentional. 😂
OT looks so funny! After the male body is past the foreground all you see is legs sticking out of the water before they too disappear. 🤣
She was great. Kept singing with her clothes and hair soaked. What a pro.
I liked the one with Leonardo in Django Unchained when he accidentally punched a glass cup and just kept rolling.
Fun fact: in Terminator 2, Arnold was supposed to rip off fake skin from his arm, but the prop director forgot to put it on before the scene. So, Kevin Nash stood in for Arnold, and Arnold ripped off Nash’s skin instead.
Bruh 🤣
This definitely happened.
That’s insane .
🤣🤣🤣
You really had me going there for a moment
I feel that stormtrooper’s pain being 6’3 in a 5’9 world.
It's not that much of a difference, my p***s can quite literally cover that distance.
George C Scott in Dr. Strangelove, taking a tumble in the War Room and not missing a beat. The best by far.
3:25 You forgot to mention its the reason why Kurt Angle won the olympic gold medal with a broken freaking neck.
His trainer that he commemorated his win to was the brother of tatum's character. That's why he did what he did and has FEW regrets about it.
All 3 main actors in that movie were amazing.
Tatum was channeling his inner 'Taxi Driver'
Umm....The Birdcage was set in Miami, not San Francisco. I love that movie! Hank Azaria is hilarious as the butler!
Regarding zoolander: David Duchovnys comedic timing/rolling woth the gaffe was genius as well
In the Three Stooges Short Dizzy Detectives, there's a scene where Moe is standing on a table measuring a wall while Curly and Larry are using a power saw to cut a piece of wood on the same table. They saw through the table and Moe turns around and the table splits and he falls. When he falls he hits a side of the table that sticking up. He gets up, finishes the scene, then immediately collapses having fractured his ribs. In another short called Punch Drunks, Larry is running all over town trying to find something that can play Pop Goes The Weasel, which drives Curly into a rage. He happens upon a truck with a guy sitting on the back with a speaker playing the song. Larry jumps in the truck, guns the motor, and the guy in the back falls off the truck. When the extra fell off the truck, he broke his arm. Another Stooge one, in the short Three Little Pigskins(which co-stars a young Lucille Ball), the Stooges are playing football, rather badly. During a play, they stop and pose for photographers taking pictures. The entire defense(comprised of real football players) tackles the whole gang photographers and all. 3 stunt doubles filled in for the Stooges in the scene and after the tackles, 2 of the stunt doubles and the photographers received broken limbs for their troubles.
9:38 If by "the actor carried on so brilliantly" you mean "came to a dead stop in apparent confusion", then sure.
I feel like the moment where Nash got stabbed for real is the moment where he stopped acting and went “oh… it’s on for real. This is gonna be fun”
I’m only halfway through this list and it’s incredible, but a couple of things:
1. The drag club in the birdcage is in Miami Florida, not San Francisco
2. How is the man who actually got stabbed, but continued to act only at number 5?! 😱😱😱🤣🤣🤣
I came here to say the same thing about The Birdcage
And somehow Chris Pratt's probably fake orb drop makes it to 2nd. I really don't think that wasn't scripted, or at least that he didn't mean to do it.
Well it's not a top 10. It's 10 things in no particular order
its not a top 10...
I agree that it doesn't say "top 10", but at the same time, if it isn't, why start at 10 and work your way down to 1?
Most of these I'd agree are movie mistakes that ultimately improved the film but I have to say, Tatum vs. the mirror is a bit of an odd one out. I can certainly agree that it adds a certain intensity to the scene and the character, but it's less a mistake and more an improvisation by Tatum.
That is why I would have preferred the use of Martin Sheen in Apocalypse Now. Accident during improvisation led to even more fevered, drugged-out improv.
I love the advice you gave at the end. Thank you for it. Its honestly something that i was talking about today and its nice to hear it at the end.
There are probably no telling how many other happy accidents occurred in films that have gone unnoticed but it just makes us appreciate these films that much more.
I worked on Foxcatcher here in Pittsburgh. When Steve Carell's regular stand-in had to leave, I was hired as the backup. I also photo-doubled for him. Steve was an absolutely great guy, as was Channing Tatum and Mark Ruffalo. I met Chan when I was an extra at the beginning of filming as a farm hand. I was at crafty (snack area) and he walks in (they were filming the scene where Steve's character buys a tank). I said, "What brings you to the extras crafty?" He said, "It's closer to set than what they have set up for the actors. He said call me Chan, what's your name?" I also had to set up the scene where he comes over after a match and hugs Steve Carell. So after I hugged Chan, the women on set asked if they could hug me. I said you don't want to hug me, you just want hug the Chan that's on me. 😁
03:37 I set this scene up when he shoots David Schultz. I became good friends with his wife Nancy and son Alexander while filming.
Sure you did bud
Regardless of theme or content, one of the best things about a Jules' video is Jules caring for everybody. Virtual hugs to you, dear dude, for virtually hugging all of us.
Speaking of not beating yourself up over mistakes, The Birdcage is not in San Francisco, it's in South Beach Forida. Good video.
Thank you! I was looking for this!!
Both Stiller's and Nash's scenes made me speechless. The first one is a classic of mine, while getting stabbed, smiling darkly and carrying on, now that's just brilliant.
In a Three Stooges film short, Moe was standing on a table while Curly sawed through it, when Moe turned around, the table collapsed out from under him and he fell down right on it.
He broke several ribs, but he stayed in character and finished out the scene before passing out.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of scenes like that, when it comes to The Three Stooges shorts.
Kevin Nash is the personification of: "THANKS I NEEDED THAT"
I've seen Punisher SO MANY TIMES and never knew that Nash got stabbed. Maybe that's why Jane decided to take the wall hit for real.
I watched it on Netflix a couple of weeks ago, and that scene came up and I watched the knife coming out and thought, "wow, that looks super realistic, that prop guy did an amazing job, you usually see the blade CGI or pop out of the handle." Nope, apparently the prop guy was an idiot and the actor was just an absolute machine.
With the Birdcage, there's a lot of adlibbing going on. Turns out, Robin and Nathan had super good chemistry and comedic timing with each other, so a lot of the original lines were left out because the two of them were having fun bantering with each other in character.
Love this keep these titles coming!
Oh okay so Thoma Jane's look of fear was real. Pulling out the knife and realizing that it was real would be terrifying. Also Kevin Nash is a beast to take a knife like that.
I think managing to stay in non-reaction robot-zone with an elbow chipped in several places is the most impressive one to me. She couldn’t give show ANY change in expression, and an injury like that hurts like the dickens.
Not downplaying the guy who got stabbed, but he was kind of used to a certain level of pain, and while the stabbing is definitely a more serious injury I think the elbow would be more painful.
But I don’t know!
Darryl Hannah was such a babe & an American sweetheart ever since she was the mermaid in Splash in the 80s
also the scene cuts like 1 second after the stab, he didnt have to play it cool for very long haha
a stab by a knife is not as painful as people think. there are people who got stabbed in the back and were going around with the knife sticking out thinking they pulled a muscle
@@jpteknoman a friend accidentally stabbed me in the shoulder with a small knife many many years ago, it didn't really hurt that much until I noticed it. I just pulled it out and actually stitched myself up with just needle and thread afterwards after sterilizing the wound with iodine.
A bit sad that you mentioned Tatum's scene with the mirror and neglected to mention Martin Sheen punching a mirror in Apocalypse Now and smearing the blood all over his body. All captured and used because Francis Ford Coppola decided to keep filming and letting Sheen do whatever he wanted to do.
Wasn't there a moment in the movie Se7en, where Brad Pitt broke his wrist during the chase scene trying to apprehend John Doe? From what I recall, Pitt briefly slipped and twisted his hand so badly that he needed to put a cast over it. But instead of delaying the film production, Pitt decided to continue with the movie, of which they decided to add the fact that Brad Pitt's character did break his wrist during that chase, and kept the cast until the end of the movie.
It was more likely the director's decision and not Pitt's.They have a schedule to keep while filming, that's why Jackie Chan keeps filming even when he injures himself on botched stunts.
Your words of encouragement to lift people's spirits at the end is why you're the best host on here Mr Jules.
Keep being awesome sir 👏
Was not expecting the feel-good PSA at the end. Thank you.
Chris Pratt looks like he intended to drop the orb. It was one of the biggest eye roll moments after the thick as paint dance-off.
I thought it looked intentional also.
The stormtrooper just makes sense; they can shot a target to save their lives probably cause they can barley see out of those things
4:33 the birdcage took place in Miami Beach not San Francisco.
Beautiful message at the end… thank you bro
The stormtrooper head bang never gets old! 😂😂😂
4:42 "Owns a drag club in San Francisco." Did U even watch the movie, or read up on it?? It was Miami, Florida.
After the knife was taken out of Nash's chest he asked for super glue to seal the wound.
Super glue was used by medics in Nam & several other conflicts. It's a molecular bonding agent,
& an instant blood clotter.
He's got chuck norris dna
@@Dilligff That's not true at all.
It was developed by accident by Eastman-Kodak. They were attempting to make clear plastic gun sights for use during WWII, and created cyanoacrylate totally by accident. It was then forgotten about for a decade, until the scientist who created it "rediscovered" it while creating heat-resistant canopies for jet fighter planes.
It was used during Nam for medical purposes, but that's not where it came from.
@@TheUluxian Post deleted as I stand corrected. Though its initial use for the sights failed. Info on the canopy part was harder to come across, but yes, it did see practical use before Vietnam and I apologize. I will endeavor to become a better Jeopardy! champion before making further posts.
@@Dilligff mistakes happen, you owned up to it and thats what matters. More than i can say for most ppl on the internet
I'm pretty sure that drag club was in Miami, not San Francisco. Kind of an odd mistake, actually.
Not really. He probably said SF because of it's reputation as a large gay community. Just real lazy of him.
Kevin Nash: (**Gets stabbed**)
Kevin Nash: Tis a flesh wound.
Thank you! I love these clips
I just saw star trek beyond for the first time this past weekend, and I thought that the last fight scene was a bit intense. CQC with Idris Elba in a small box was a bad idea. So that wasn’t makeup that Chris had on in the final scenes.
I'm hoping Leonardo's Django Unchained monologue is in this list
No, that was already in the first one.
this video is a sequel, what you're looking for is in the original one.
Kevin Nash as The Russian was the highlight of that entire movie
The Punisher was a damn good movie that doesn’t get the credit it deserves, and that fight scene is GOLD.
Jules, you are my favorite host of these videos! Wish you were in more.
Bird Cage was in Miami not San Diego.
Granted this was a stage play so you can't exactly cut out a misstep but anyway. We had a break away bench for a physical gag later in the show. When I was done sitting on it I had to turn a wood block to prep it so there was only 1 nail holding it together. Well the nail was getting loose so before the final performance it was put in a new hole. The person who was supposed to fall sat down and ..... nothing. So they gave it a bit of a hop and sat down harder .... nothing. One more try and CRACK the wood on the top of the bench broke and dumped the actor on their back but because they were supposed to fall the scene just kept going. A fun send off for out break away bench.
i heard of those that watch plays only for the occasional messups lol
The head bumping stormtrooper is called Wanten, and he is also the character who asks for Kenobi and Luke's IDs on Tatooine. The head bumping was caused by the lingering effect of the mind trick. He survived the war because he tried to kill C3P0 and R2 on the Death Star, but the stormtroopers were told not to kill the rebels, and he is stopped by an officer offscreen. He joins the First Order and dies during the battle on Starkiller base, apparently because a team of Resistance child soldiers crashed their shuttle into him.
Nah, he never died. Those rumors of a “Starkiller Base” are all just legends.
The Birdcage is set in Miami, not San Francisco.
Great how the scenes are talked over, great channel !
You missed the scene in True Lies when Jamie Leigh Curtis slipped and fell during her striptease dance but got up and finished the scene. James Cameron kept it in because it looked like something her character would do.
I think that was in the original video. This is 10 additional scenes.
It 100% added to scene. Arnold looking concerned, then admiring her recovery. To me that’s when I thought. “She could do this”
Leonardo DiCaprio slicking his hand open while crushing a skull carried on even if his hand I pouring blood.. that is just epic acting! 👍👍👍 Django Unchained
He slicked his hand open?
Sliced (I have an Autocorrect problem)
@@NordicViking83 dont we all 😆
I had no idea Kevin Nash was actual stabbed in the Punisher
@@WesleyB-Rook Because he still got stabbed with a very real knife instead of a prop one. Doesn't matter how deep it goes, stabbing is stabbing.
That Jane Russell one is crazy, what a champ! Someone with great fame like that would often tell someone else with no fame "Do you know who i am?! I'll make sure you're fired and blacklisted from all of Hollywood!" for a mistake like that, especially in those days.
I would expect to include Leonardo DiCaprio's cut , at the table scene of Django!
Nice video!
8:26 versatile crisp rat? 😅
Love this video! The Birdcage takes place in Miami, not San Francisco, though. All good!
Just to let you know for the birdcage, it wasn’t a drag club in San Francisco. It was a drag club in Miami Florida.😊
Kevin Nash is insane. The fact he smiled when getting stabbed, like an "oh hell yes, that's a real knife" is insane. That is some serious acting, and serious pain tolerance.
I can't believe you d idn't inclued the "I'm walkin' here" scene from Midnight Cowboy. That's the best improvised scene over a mistake ever.