The Filming of Roar | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror

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  • Опубліковано 17 лип 2024
  • "On the 30th of October, 1981, a film that had been eleven years in the making was finally released..."
    As always, THANK YOU to all my Patreon patrons: you make this channel possible.
    / fascinatinghorror
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    CHAPTERS:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:46 - The Beginnings of Roar
    04:44 - The Filming or Roar
    06:46 - Release and Reception
    MUSIC:
    ► "Glass Pond" by Public Memory
    ► "The Plan's Working" by Cooper Cannell
    SOURCES:
    ► "Noel Marshall’s 'Roar': Humans Were Harmed in the Making of This Film" by Richard Brody, published by The New Yorker, April 2020. Link: www.newyorker.com/culture/the...
    ► "‘Roar’: Cast and Crew Risked Life and Limb in the Most Dangerous Movie Ever Made, 1981" by Bart Bealmear, published by Dangerous Minds, April 2015. Link: dangerousminds.net/comments/r...
    ► "The Cats of Shambala" by Tippi Hedren and Theodore Taylor, published by Tiger Island Press, 1992. Link: www.google.co.uk/books/editio...
    ► The Roar the Movie Website, published by John Marshall, 2010. Link: www.roarthemovie.com/
    ​​​​​​​#Documentary​​​​ #History​​​​​​​​​ #TrueStories​

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @JamieLeece
    @JamieLeece Рік тому +1460

    Actually watching Roar is such a strange experience. It's supposed to be a comedy, but it's so tense to actually watch. Seeing those people surrounded by all those big cats. The entire time you're just wondering when someone is going to get mauled. It's so surreal.

    • @gazgf
      @gazgf Рік тому +36

      Not seen it but got to now!

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit Рік тому +8

      I would have begun the film shooting with actual shooting, promptly solving any potential safety issues. I'm more of a dog person anyway.

    • @aheenobarbushenocied9880
      @aheenobarbushenocied9880 Рік тому +130

      ​@@SofaKingShit Okay, tough guy.

    • @viceroybolt3518
      @viceroybolt3518 Рік тому +27

      It must be strange knowing, in your heart, the answer was usually "shortly after the film cuts"

    • @dontblockthebox
      @dontblockthebox Рік тому +5

      @@SofaKingShit haha I like your humor dude

  • @Spearca
    @Spearca Рік тому +1778

    "No animals were harmed in the making of this film. 70 cast and crew members were."

  • @sammiechuu
    @sammiechuu Рік тому +2333

    They could've saved themselves a whole lot of trouble if they made a documentary instead - which they could have filmed FROM AFAR in the cats' actual habitat.

    • @hellomark1
      @hellomark1 Рік тому +145

      I liked one quote I read "It's like watching a live-action remake of Lion King while Mufasa holds a switchblade to your throat"

    • @kitiyana
      @kitiyana Рік тому +123

      A far more ethical approach too. How disingenuous to attempt to frame an exploitative venture using wild animals in a captive situation as an environmental awareness production.

    • @ThatSoddingGamer
      @ThatSoddingGamer Рік тому +49

      @@kitiyana I don't doubt that they meant well (even if they were also hoping to personally benefit from the venture). They probably just thought that taking a more direct approach to saving them was preferable, or at least worth doing for the long term benefit. This was made some 50 years ago, the standard thought process has changed over time. Basically, the argument between zoos and wildlife preserves.

    • @Thirtyfivepercentferal
      @Thirtyfivepercentferal Рік тому +20

      pft. That's not how the 70s/80s were, man.

    • @kirtknierim3687
      @kirtknierim3687 Рік тому +8

      ​@@kitiyana well put😂. The irony is so bad. Lol😊

  • @clarsach29
    @clarsach29 Рік тому +1583

    I never knew this about Tippi Hedren....I always associate her with Hitchcock films more than anything. Nothing short of a MIRACLE that no-one was killed during this 11 year debacle.

    • @janeeyre1990
      @janeeyre1990 Рік тому +79

      Tippi Hedren spoke out publicly about the way they Hitchcock abused her as an actress on set (e.g., psychologically torturing her, putting her in physical danger).
      She never said anything similar about her husband.
      That is not uncommon, though. The more far removed you are from someone, the easier it is to admit (to yourself and others) that you were a victim of their abuse.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому +68

      Hitchcock told her that if she didn't go to bed with him, he'd destroy her career. She wouldn't, and he did. Sh'e has talked about this.

    • @yippee8570
      @yippee8570 Рік тому

      ​@@LJB103 wtaf?! I guess Weinstein wasn't the first. Ar$ehole

    • @hospitalcakewalk
      @hospitalcakewalk Рік тому

      After seeing her severe abuse to the animals the things she said about Hitchcock just don't make sense...
      But she also abused her daughter and let her date a pedo so??

    • @haileybalmer9722
      @haileybalmer9722 Рік тому +66

      Tippi Hedren is honestly an amazing person, and I wish people knew more about her. In addition to founding the animal sanctuary, she sunk a lot of her own money into getting nail salons for Vietnamese immigrants in the 70's and training women to work in them and manage them. She wanted refugees from the war to have a job that paid well that they could run on their own and become independently wealthy. To this day, the majority of nail salons in LA are Vietnamese owned.

  • @debbieannsmith8962
    @debbieannsmith8962 Рік тому +655

    I'd have to agree that it's almost unbelievable that no one died during the filming of that movie. Absolutely bizarre. 😨😨😨😰

    • @junkiedropouts3186
      @junkiedropouts3186 Рік тому +13

      Definitely, this was a surprisingly very mild horror compared to what I was expecting at the outset. (Lions getting into an overcrowded movie theatre with locked fire escapes.)

    • @CanadianGirlRevenge
      @CanadianGirlRevenge Рік тому +9

      Lions died

    • @sandman75sandman97
      @sandman75sandman97 Рік тому +1

      To bad they dident. Animal abuse.

    • @kino_61
      @kino_61 Рік тому +5

      The crew probably fed the dead to the lions to keep it secret 😂

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Рік тому

      3 lions were killed. Everything checks out for me. Humans are the most dangerous animal on earth. hands down.

  • @saracarman3925
    @saracarman3925 Рік тому +81

    The ideas of "we want to promote the conservation of these animals" and "we need animals to film this movie, so we're going to raise over 100 of them like pets" seem so immediately contrary, I can't believe no one involved put a stop to this film at any point over the course of years.

    • @ogiejames9110
      @ogiejames9110 Рік тому +6

      Their intentions were very dubious from the beginning. Raising lion cubs in preparation for a movie shoot under the guise of "promoting wild life conservation". I'm sure they dumped their sense of reasoning at the abandoned farm house, where they initially spotted the Pride of Lions. lmfao

    • @Sputterbugz
      @Sputterbugz 8 місяців тому +5

      that seems to be how it goes. anyone who claims to love animals and then takes in wild animals as pets are delusional

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Рік тому +1221

    The problem is when people treat wild animals like pets when they simply aren't or ever will be

    • @harridan.
      @harridan. Рік тому +57

      Tippi Hedren figured that out, Shambala is strictly a rescue facility, and she worked tirelessly for years to get The Big Cat Safety Act passed; it passed this year. breeding by non licensed zoos is now illegal, roadside zoos, cub petting, buying and selling, etc is now illegal in the u.s, thanks to this woman, along with licensed and accredited zoo owner Carole Baskin

    • @tommyknockers5492
      @tommyknockers5492 Рік тому +17

      I mean pets were wild animals once apon a time..

    • @bobdole8830
      @bobdole8830 Рік тому +10

      You do know dogs and cats exist, right? RIGHT?!

    • @HemiChrysler
      @HemiChrysler Рік тому +4

      _nor_

    • @rileybobbert6527
      @rileybobbert6527 Рік тому +9

      ​@@HemiChrysler dont use nor in a youtube comment section because you come off as pretentious. the only thing worse would be trying to correct another's comment to try and make them use nor

  • @jaspersolt3978
    @jaspersolt3978 Рік тому +784

    Tippi Hedren was so abused on the set of Hitchcock's Birds, having live animals literally thrown at her by crew members for days and days. You have to assume her metric for "dangerous animals on set" became skewed as a result

    • @MegaMesozoic
      @MegaMesozoic Рік тому +44

      Always wondered how many birds were killed doing that film!

    • @scruffy-thejanitor
      @scruffy-thejanitor Рік тому +66

      ​@@MegaMesozoic It had to be so many. Watching that movie I ended up being more concerned about the birds.
      ... and birds don't even exist

    • @ianjames1179
      @ianjames1179 Рік тому +10

      Oh wow, was that her in the birds? That was a great movie.

    • @ianjames1179
      @ianjames1179 Рік тому +2

      The chicken farmer had one bummer of a day !

    • @elainewaller-rose9707
      @elainewaller-rose9707 Рік тому +69

      @@scruffy-thejanitor Actually the birds did exist. Initially Hitchcock was going to use animatronic birds or something like that, but he didn't think the scenes would look realistic enough, so he ended up going for real birds. I'm guessing that torturing Tippi Hedren, who wouldn't acquiesce to his controlling behavior and sexual advances, was also a motive.

  • @bruce1947
    @bruce1947 Рік тому +130

    This is probably the scariest comedy ever made. Found this years ago when it was featured on rlm, immediately watched it and jesus What a bizarre experience that was.

  • @mbryson2899
    @mbryson2899 Рік тому +86

    A friend of mine raised and trained big cats for circus performances. He always kept in mind that they were wild animals at heart. Even though he was very good with his cats he still got injured a few times, once pretty badly.
    He had an epiphany when he hit his 30s; he realized that every day he was playing russian roulette.
    He gave up that career in spite of it being quite lucrative and became an architect.

    • @GrislyAtoms12
      @GrislyAtoms12 Рік тому +12

      Your friend has a unique resume! Big cat trainer, then architect. At the interview, "So, do you have any experience?" "I'm glad you asked!..."

  • @curiousworld7912
    @curiousworld7912 Рік тому +162

    I've seen 'Roar', and read about its filming. It's not a particularly good movie, but it was done with love. The problem is, these folks seems to believe loving the animals would somehow protect them - that the lions, etc, - would 'get it'. I'm amazed no one was killed.

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Рік тому +4

      They have very strong feelings and do not do much thinking. If you tell them the truth, they get angry with you, even violent. If you want to take away the animals that they're sure who love them, they identify their bad feelings as coming from YOU, and will act accordingly.

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Рік тому

      Well, they're in the entertainment industry, which automatically means they're liberals. You know, the "all you need is love" crowd. A bunch of dumbasses.

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Рік тому +10

      I think the real problem is everyone thinks they are special. "Oh it wont hurt ME!" people do this with everything. Sky diving, rock climbing, racing... big cats...

    • @MasonMcLeodFilms
      @MasonMcLeodFilms Рік тому +8

      It's the same thing with the Grizzly Man, seemed to think that his very genuine love and passion for the animals made him different to other people. Wild animals are wild and ultimately unsentimental and will kill you if startled or hurt or hungry

    • @curiousworld7912
      @curiousworld7912 Рік тому +4

      @@MasonMcLeodFilms Yes - that's a good comparison. 'Grizzly Man' was about a man who genuinely loved (and believed he was loved by) wild animals. It was almost as if he saw animals as 'furry people' in their emotional co-understanding. This anthropomorphic belief is almost always a bad mistake, and one that can lead to injury or death - of both the man and the animal.

  • @Retro_Rework
    @Retro_Rework Рік тому +507

    My uncle used to live down the street from someone who kept caged animals including big cats in his backyard. Once when I was visiting (5 years old at the time), a cougar escaped. I asked my uncle if I could go outside and play. Opened the front door and the cougar was standing right there. My uncle picked up a broom he had laying there and hit it on the head and closed the door. Probably the most terrifying memory of my childhood.

    • @scruffy-thejanitor
      @scruffy-thejanitor Рік тому +134

      * BONK *

    • @alexw.7097
      @alexw.7097 Рік тому +62

      I'm kind of amazed a bonk was enough, you must have surprised him or something 😂

    • @Retro_Rework
      @Retro_Rework Рік тому +48

      @@alexw.7097 lol yeah I think everyone involved was surprised!

    • @naomiskilling1093
      @naomiskilling1093 Рік тому +54

      Your uncle had balls of steel apparently

    • @iamthebroker
      @iamthebroker Рік тому +28

      @@naomiskilling1093 what else was he going to do? Ask for Duke if Edinburgh rules and 10ounce gloves?

  • @PaiSAMSEN
    @PaiSAMSEN Рік тому +25

    "No animals were harmed in the making of this film. 70 casts and crew members were."
    Gotta admit, that's a good marketing slogan.

  • @sadie9728
    @sadie9728 Рік тому +129

    Watching the RLM guys watching this with Macaulay Culkin was hilarious. The fact that the filmmakers considered this a comedy is something else....the guys were covering their eyes at points.

    • @EpicMEF
      @EpicMEF Рік тому +3

      Sweet, I now have a good follow-up video to watch. RLM FTW 🤘

    • @Satellite_Of_Love
      @Satellite_Of_Love Рік тому +3

      It reminds me of the 1936 short "Catching Trouble", which was ruthlessly and imo righteously riffed on Mystery Science Theater 3000. It basically consists of a herpetologist named Ross Allen (who DID go on to develop a form of antivenom) capturing bear cubs (quite forcibly) to cart off to zoos. It's a short I don't rewatch because it infuriates me to see animals being treated that way (though Tom Servo's 'Catching Trouble' ditty in the opening credits did make me laugh).

    • @3dguy839
      @3dguy839 2 місяці тому +1

      Lol
      RLM (with Culkin as guest) is when I first heard about this movie

    • @3dguy839
      @3dguy839 2 місяці тому +1

      I first heard about roar from RLM also

  • @rinoz47
    @rinoz47 Рік тому +23

    Roar is one of those few movies where the actors are showing real terror

  • @DardanellesBy108
    @DardanellesBy108 Рік тому +137

    I had heard about Melanie Griffith’s Mother and her love of big cats but had never heard of this movie. Seems like common sense was tossed out the window with that whole deal! Thanks for another interesting video.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому +11

      It seems often to be the case that people who own wild/vicious animals are willfully blind to the nature of those same animals. How many children get mauled by their family's dogs?

    • @DardanellesBy108
      @DardanellesBy108 Рік тому +11

      @@LJB103 True. A tragic example of this behavior was in a video I watched a couple months ago about a couple who had a couple pet lions in Russia back in the 70s. Apparently the story is famous but it was the first I had heard of it. The first lion attacked someone and was shot dead by the police. Then they got a second one! Lesson not learned. The second one ended up killing the son.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому +10

      @@DardanellesBy108 Also, what about Charla Nash who had her face and hands ripped off by her friend's chimp?

    • @DardanellesBy108
      @DardanellesBy108 Рік тому +4

      @@LJB103 OMG! That was horrible! Yep I remember that one.

    • @scruffy-thejanitor
      @scruffy-thejanitor Рік тому +7

      ​​@@LJB103Perfect example of ego over reason. They abused and drugged that poor chimp to keep it under control in a horrible environment. *Nash's friend knew she wasn't able to be a proper caretaker alone, but ignored all good advice on what was best for the chimp. It was no surprise what happened.

  • @JadeEyes1
    @JadeEyes1 Рік тому +30

    Tippi Headron also started a big cat sanctuary in the American southwest. In his autobiography, "If Chins Could Kill", Bruce Campbell talks about the difficulty of filming the horse scenes in Army of Darkness: the set was downwind from the sanctuary, and the sound of the lions roaring kept frightening the horses.

    • @seriouslywtf4790
      @seriouslywtf4790 Рік тому

      Yeah it’s near me and from what all of her ex volunteers say, it is a shit show.

    • @bonefetcherbrimley7740
      @bonefetcherbrimley7740 Рік тому +4

      If I was a horse i too would be frightened.

  • @pmberry
    @pmberry Рік тому +50

    Read about this a few months ago. Absolutely bizarre. "Although there had been numerous close calls, and many serious injuries, no member of the cast or crew had been killed during production." Makes it sound almost OK!

    • @junkiedropouts3186
      @junkiedropouts3186 Рік тому +4

      By Fascinating Horror standards it was a great success. Now if he'd said 'a plane carrying 183 Lions left the airport at 7.25am'....

  • @elliottprice6084
    @elliottprice6084 Рік тому +530

    A bizarre story with a huge sense of impending doom. RIP to the 3 cats that lost their lives

    • @BrettonFerguson
      @BrettonFerguson Рік тому +57

      Yes and they had a "No animals were harmed during the filming of this movie". Technically true since the cameras were underwater and not filming when the cats were shot, but it was a direct result of this movie 3 cats died.

    • @RayvenFeather
      @RayvenFeather Рік тому +27

      @@BrettonFerguson yea normally it’s “during the *making* of” but clearly they couldn’t say that anymore…

    • @cryingbananajo
      @cryingbananajo Рік тому +1

      I swear your comments make me sick. Like are you guys for real? Please be realistic.

    • @elliottprice6084
      @elliottprice6084 Рік тому +7

      @@cryingbananajo if you don't like my comments, just scroll past. I've not said anything nasty to you

    • @LevelEarthWD
      @LevelEarthWD Рік тому +9

      Thx for posting this. I know now I shouldn't watch this one. I gave a like anyway cuz I love this channel. Can't bear animal cruelty injury or death because of humans.

  • @terrylewis_
    @terrylewis_ Рік тому +241

    My Mom and Dad's first apartment was across the street from a home where they kept a Lion. So inappropriate and cruel. :( I didn't know this story, but I know of the family and it surprises me that after the torment of Hitchcock films, and being attacked by birds, Tippi didn't think this might be a bad decision. Being attacked by birds versus being attacked by lions/big cats, two completely different things.

    • @naomiskilling1093
      @naomiskilling1093 Рік тому +10

      She was actively terrified of birds so maybe she was like "oh well I got attacked by the animal I was actively afraid of and I lived so why not film with lions/tigers/etc?"

    • @terrylewis_
      @terrylewis_ Рік тому +2

      @@naomiskilling1093 Oh my! Honestly though, I am shocked no one died.

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Рік тому +2

      clearly the birds didnt attack her. flying nearby is not an attack. birds was basically a comedy. Its like getting killed by babies. Its not a thing.

    • @nomoretwitterhandles
      @nomoretwitterhandles Рік тому +1

      @@trumpisthemessiah7017 Your bait is not a good one. Try a little harder next time!

  • @metalshifter727
    @metalshifter727 Рік тому +102

    How about an episode covering the 1981 Dublin stardust nightclub fire, Currently a public enquiry going on after nearly 40 years. Thanks I enjoy your videos.

    • @JonosBtheMC
      @JonosBtheMC Рік тому +8

      Have we forgotten the suffering and pain
      The survivors and victims of the fire in Artane,
      The mothers and fathers forever to mourn
      The 48 children who never came home.
      - Christy Moore

    • @pewdiepiebro35
      @pewdiepiebro35 Рік тому +4

      qxir did a video covering it, being irish himself, its heartfelt and heartbreaking at the same time

  • @jackzimmer6553
    @jackzimmer6553 Рік тому +175

    Nobody can accuse these Hollywood actors of being especially bright. It was a good idea for a film but did they really need so many big cats???

    • @scruffy-thejanitor
      @scruffy-thejanitor Рік тому +37

      Ego and narcissism separates you from reality. Hence this insanity

    • @rogerrendzak8055
      @rogerrendzak8055 Рік тому +3

      Yeah, that's more than, friggin' strange.

    • @Hilpis
      @Hilpis Рік тому +5

      Truly bizarre. Normally you would get around not having pride of lions with clever camera angles, miniatures or animatronics using just 2-3 live ones. Or just using stock footage or filming some wild life in Africa.

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Рік тому

      still smarter than 99% of the south... they think film is what covers their teeth.

    • @VideoDotGoogleDotCom
      @VideoDotGoogleDotCom Рік тому +6

      Also, if they were so concerned about wild life, why the hell would they keep 100+ wild animals basically as pets? They acquired lion pups just so they could make this film! They were animal abusers.

  • @Zimin_Anatoly2000
    @Zimin_Anatoly2000 Рік тому +183

    I watched this video and remembered another movie which also was a failure,not in cast but also in shooting process. The Conqueror....
    Immediately after the release of the film, critics marked it as one of the biggest failures in history. The press ridiculed frank miskast and funny dialogues. However, 20 years later, the film acquired a more sinister reputation. Seven years after the release of "The Conqueror" in 1963, director Dick Powell died of lymphatic cancer. In the same year, Pedro Armendaris, who played the main character's assistant in the film, committed suicide after learning that he had hip cancer. Hayward died in 1975 from brain cancer. Four years after that, John Wayne also died of cancer. Two of his sons, who were present on the set of "The Conqueror", were also found to have cancer. In total, by 1980, out of 220 people of the film crew, 91 fell ill with cancer, 46 of them subsequently died from this disease.

    • @uncommon_niagara1581
      @uncommon_niagara1581 Рік тому +43

      I'm certain the radioactive fallout had no detrimental effects on the cast and crew, because it was measured in 'sunshine units'.

    • @ericvosselmans5657
      @ericvosselmans5657 Рік тому +16

      Ah yes, "The conqueror". the epitomy of 'cultural appropriation'-

    • @bennyboogenheimer4553
      @bennyboogenheimer4553 Рік тому +82

      Yeah, because they shot the film down wind of the Trinity Nuke sight 40 miles, North of Las Vegas.
      Then for post production work they scooped up 21 tractor trailers full of red radioactive soil, and dumped it on the MGM back lot to use for retakes.
      And every Western TV show and movie, untill 1983 when the US Air Force was doing flyover nuke testing, and their meters hit the pegs. (when a Judge ordered it removed) Believe it or not John Wayne even mentioned it to Rod Howard, when they were filming The Shootist.

    • @Coyotek4
      @Coyotek4 Рік тому +2

      I thought FH did a video about this movie, but I can't find it. I may be mistaken.

    • @korbell1089
      @korbell1089 Рік тому +17

      @@bennyboogenheimer4553 Just a small correction, Trinity Site is located in New Mexico, it was all the other ground nuke testing they did at Nevada.

  • @danielled8665
    @danielled8665 Рік тому +99

    See, this is why sometimes its important to have practicality in mind rather than just a lot of "passion"

    • @harridan.
      @harridan. Рік тому

      Tippi Hedren saw the error of the project and worked tirelessly for years to get the Big Cat Safety Act passed, Biden signed it into law this year. it's now illegal to breed big cats without zoo accreditation, as well as owning them, cub petting is also illegal in the US among other things

    • @alistairmackintosh9412
      @alistairmackintosh9412 Рік тому +7

      Passion? More like delusion...

    • @danielled8665
      @danielled8665 Рік тому +6

      @@alistairmackintosh9412 bold of you to assume there is a difference.

    • @bradleymcwilliams6348
      @bradleymcwilliams6348 Рік тому +3

      Along those lines I was thinking this is good example of why it's not always best to "follow your dreams"...

    • @stevenstice6683
      @stevenstice6683 Рік тому +1

      ​@@alistairmackintosh9412The two are not mutually exclusive.

  • @leontrotsky7816
    @leontrotsky7816 Рік тому +13

    Honestly, this makes the filming of "Apocalypse Now" look like a stroll in the park.

  • @jenniferkay9789
    @jenniferkay9789 Рік тому +39

    I remember reading about this, in (of all publications) The National Enquirer. I believe Tippi And Melanie had a strained relationship, due to this. What mother allows her child to be attacked by an animal in her care, and doesn't just get rid of said animal? I could see if it was a poodle or Chihuahua, maybe cat, but lions?!? Hell no!

    • @nomoretwitterhandles
      @nomoretwitterhandles Рік тому

      Maybe a mother whose sense of reality was warped due to the constant abuse she faced herself, not only by her own husband, but by big names in the industry as well? Ever heard of Hitchcock?
      Be mad at the abusers who ruin people's lives, not at those affected, you great big piece of shit!!

    • @barbaraschneider7922
      @barbaraschneider7922 7 місяців тому +1

      I think the thing was some of the old Hollywood mom´s weren´t really good loving mothers in the first place.-Tippi just seemed to be one of them-others were for example Joan Crawford,Frances Fonda,Frances Bergen,Raquel Welsh and sure some others-their children never were their"everything" in the first place and were never loved by them unconditionally as they should have been-Astonishingly some of their daughters later became really great and lovingmothers(Candice Bergen) or at first decent but then good mothers (Jane,Fonda )and Melanie despite her problems ,drugs and alcohol was better than her mother too

  • @A_Ducky
    @A_Ducky Рік тому +401

    Melanie Griffith's mom qualifies as an abuser in my eyes since I learned about this movie. Who puts their child in a situation where a wild animal can disfigure or kill her? Excellent job Tippy!

    • @faenethlorhalien
      @faenethlorhalien Рік тому

      Basically, stupid people. Hard to consider her an abuser. Just a bad parent who should not be in care of children.

    • @janeeyre1990
      @janeeyre1990 Рік тому +28

      It's possible she is an abuse victim who went on to enable abuse.
      The results are the same (abuse), but the motives are different.
      [TW: child abuse]
      My mom was psychologically, verbally, and physically abused by her parents growing up (gaslighting, insults, and beatings, respectively).
      She married my father, who was psychologically abusive.
      My mom did not let him psychologically harm me because she wanted me to suffer.
      She enabled it because she didn't know any better. She only knew her abusive family that prevented her from making friends or going over to happy, functional households.
      Same thing for Liza Minnelli. Her childhood with her mother was chaotic.
      But Judy Garland became an object owned by Hollywood as a child. They started drugging her as a teen.
      In an interview, she said she went through an emotional journey of realizing her childhood was so abusive, but ultimately realizing it didn't matter. Her mom loved her and did the best that she could in a bad situation.
      I know that Hitchcock abused Tippi Hedren. We can see how her husband was abusive.
      If she loved her children and tried to protect them as much as possible in a bad situation, she might have been the only positive thing in their childhoods. Just like my mom is the best part of childhood for me.
      As a child who grew up with mild abuse, I recognize which parent was actively hateful toward me, and which one was ignorant but loved me.

    • @janeeyre1990
      @janeeyre1990 Рік тому +28

      TL;DR: It's almost impossible to break the cycle of abuse in families.
      Us children of abuse appreciate mothers who get us one step closer to breaking he cycle, even if they couldn't entirely protect us.

    • @yippee8570
      @yippee8570 Рік тому +25

      I think society in general was often abusive or at best lax about children's safety in those days

    • @A_Ducky
      @A_Ducky Рік тому +25

      @apatheticnoncombatant7750
      There's no excuse for abuse, period. But of your own child(ren) especially! Not knowing better, what?

  • @DarknetDude
    @DarknetDude Рік тому +40

    How interesting that this film is going to be appreciated more today than during the days of its creation.

  • @oliviafromtwitch
    @oliviafromtwitch Рік тому +40

    Never heard of this film before but I am glad I now know about it.
    The whole production story reminds me of "Fritzcarraldo" by Herzog. I think that one was way worse than this.
    I also feel bad for all the people and animals involved. If the producers were Born today, CGI would have helped a lot in the making of the film.
    This is really a cautionary tale about how good intentions are not enough to make something well done.

    • @mario27171
      @mario27171 Рік тому +11

      Noel Marshall: I've got 150 untamed big cats.
      Werner Herzog: I've got Klaus Kinski.

    • @oliviafromtwitch
      @oliviafromtwitch Рік тому +1

      ​​@@mario27171 😂😂😂 I laughed so hard at this

    • @vespernight4236
      @vespernight4236 Рік тому +5

      Yeah this is definitely a film where Hollywood's current obsession with having effects be 90% cgi would benefit the movie.

    • @littlemau1360
      @littlemau1360 Рік тому +1

      My german teacher had us watch that movie in class recently and I was so baffled by the filming that I couldn't focus on the actual story

    • @maryanne7161
      @maryanne7161 Рік тому

      I dont like cgi. Its for kids.

  • @TigerRose246
    @TigerRose246 Рік тому +6

    I saw "Roar" when I bought it on a streaming service a few years ago. I'd read about it first, in Tippi Hendren's autobiography, so I at least had a head's-up about it. "Hard to watch" is an understatement. I cannot imagine an audience's reaction.

  • @TheADzioba
    @TheADzioba Рік тому +14

    Bought and watched the re-released version. The opening scene of the giraffe running alongside the motorcycle was pretty cool. Seeing the very large pride of lions running around the house was . . . interesting and surreal. Made me want to sing, "Oh give me a home where the lion cubs roam, and I'll show you a house full of sh1t."

  • @grimesdaughter9042
    @grimesdaughter9042 Рік тому +10

    "The initial estimate of 40 big cats was soon forgotten."
    So they reduced it to.....?
    "100 big cats including tigers, panthers, and cougars."
    Of course, why should they have reacted resonably 😑

  • @sharonsmith583
    @sharonsmith583 Рік тому +24

    Wow, what a disaster! I never even heard of this film and i bet a lot of other people never have either.

  • @folioio
    @folioio Рік тому +10

    In 1970 the impact of the big hit "Born Free" was still being felt, and lions and conservation were much in the air (anyone else old enough to remember "Frasier, the Sensuous Lion" in the early '70s? ). So if they'd finished this movie in a reasonable amount of time, it might have gone over pretty well. By 1981, nobody cared about lions (or, alas, Tippi Hedren) anymore. But it seems Hedren and Marshall were sincere in caring about the animals and tried to bring some good out of the whole misadventure.

  • @illyasvielemiya9059
    @illyasvielemiya9059 Рік тому +23

    There are a lot of things going wrong and yet this pair keeps going on. They injured a lot of their crew and families, they go through bad times and financial crises and yet they keep going on
    All said and done, it's amazing the two just keep going. i would probably stop when my daughter gets injured and swore off touching the big cat forever. They didn't.
    That is either an insanity or determination.

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 Рік тому +4

      I vote insanity 😡

    • @cloudsncats
      @cloudsncats Рік тому +6

      It’s idiocy and too much pride. And probably sunken cost fallacy - like “we’ve already put so much into it, it would be a waste to stop before it’s done”

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking Рік тому +2

      @@cloudsncats Yup - the Vietnam syndrome. "we can't stop now because..."

  • @happycommuter3523
    @happycommuter3523 Рік тому +6

    This might be one of the best FH videos ever. I'd never heard of this film, let alone been aware of the extraordinary circumstances surrounding its filming.

  • @melvinshine9841
    @melvinshine9841 Рік тому +5

    The movie was such a batshit crazy idea that only got more insane. How three cats were the only casualties of this debacle, which is still three too many, is shocking to me given the sheer number of animals on set.

  • @DixtunBabyAngel
    @DixtunBabyAngel Рік тому +94

    It's crazy to me they said they wanted to do a wildlife conservation message, but kept so many big cats in captivity and no doubt in inappropriate conditions. That's not conservation. But these people aren't smart, either.

    • @happiestaku6646
      @happiestaku6646 Рік тому +2

      From what you could see and what was mentioned in the video, it sounds like they looked after them well and had enough space for them all, especially if they had two elephants as well.
      Conservation sometimes means keeping endangered animals in captivity so that eventually, they can be reintroduced back into the wild so that they can survive.

    • @abstractaxolotl6961
      @abstractaxolotl6961 Рік тому +9

      @@happiestaku6646 Okay but that's absolutely not what they were doing. They were raising lion cubs as pets, meaning they would likely never be able to be reintroduced to the wild.

    • @happiestaku6646
      @happiestaku6646 Рік тому +1

      @abstractaxolotl6961 maybe at the start, but conservation was key to what they were trying to achieve.
      So they tried to do something good but for the wrong reasons.

  • @nate6045
    @nate6045 Рік тому +157

    "No animals were harmed in the making of this film"
    Yikes. That disclaimer printed on the poster wasn't entirely accurate, was it?

    • @YuBeace
      @YuBeace Рік тому +44

      No, you see, they weren't in the process of making the film when these animals were shot. :) /s

    • @nate6045
      @nate6045 Рік тому +13

      @@YuBeace Ah yes, I'm mistaken. They were just given an early retirement. 😂

    • @dancedecker
      @dancedecker Рік тому +22

      Well yes, it is inaccurate as humans are animals and it seems that about seventy of them were.

    • @planescaped
      @planescaped Рік тому +4

      The numerous scenes of big cats fighting each other was all pretend too!

    • @elainewaller-rose9707
      @elainewaller-rose9707 Рік тому +8

      I still think Tippi was so traumatized by the experience with Hitchcock and The Birds that she created what psychoanalysts call a reenactment, a similarly risky, and cruel situation she subjects herself to willingly. I don't know if this was Marshall's brainchild or Hedren's, but the effect was still the same.
      Still, that is no justification for subjecting your child, yourselves, and so many others to injuries and potential death. That's just abusive and straight up crazy.

  • @borleyboo5613
    @borleyboo5613 Рік тому +49

    What on Earth did they expect using wild creatures, especially big cats, trained or otherwise. And wild animals should not be ‘trained’ anyway for the gratification of bloody humans. It’s a pity two animals had to be shot when they escaped.
    Wild animals will always revert to their instinctive behaviour when stressed. And the predatory instinct in any feline, big or small is very strong.
    Very good video as always. Thank you.

    • @alexw.7097
      @alexw.7097 Рік тому +3

      It will never cease to amaze me how many people who say they're passionate about wildlife seem to not understand how wild animals work.
      And generally it's the animals who pay for their stupidity. 😢

  • @GA-1st
    @GA-1st Рік тому +11

    One of the weirdest movies and productions in the history of cinema. I'm surprised you didn't mention another "horror" angle, inasmuch as Noel Marshall had been executive producer of "The Exorcist" and the proceeds from that film partially funded production of "Roar." Come to think of it, an interesting video could be made of the troubled production of "The Exorcist" as well, including the strange occurrences that arose during production, and the numerous truly horrific coincidences related to cast members and crew. Both are prime examples of "fascinating horror"!

  • @NannupTiger
    @NannupTiger Рік тому +13

    A great episode. Elephants live for a long time, I wonder if any of those elephants are still alive? I wonder if they could recognise themselves if they were show old footage of themselves, on a big screen? I hope all of those rescued animals had a great life at the sanctuary, I believe it is still there?

  • @aceckrot
    @aceckrot Рік тому +10

    Very interesting documentary, unusual to have one without fatalities on a subject rarely covered. I had never heard of the movie "Roar", but am curiously fascinated and feel that I need to see it at least once.

  • @ethribin4188
    @ethribin4188 Рік тому +30

    "No animals were harmed innthe making of this movie.
    70 crew mrmbers were."
    Thats both hillarious and scary

    • @Kahtisemo
      @Kahtisemo Рік тому +1

      That suddenly reminded me of a trailer for the Crocodile Hunter movie (back in the late 90s I think?) where the narrator said something similar. I wonder if that was meant to be a parody of this 🤔

  • @Pattilapeep
    @Pattilapeep Рік тому +9

    What a fascinating story. I knew Tippi Hedrin was an animal advocate, but had never heard of this film or it's incredible backstory. Another great job by Fascinating Horror as usual. cheers Pat in New Jersey

    • @barbaraschneider7922
      @barbaraschneider7922 7 місяців тому

      She´s still alive and still has some big cats but the conditions are not that dangerous anymore

  • @GoldenBear_
    @GoldenBear_ Рік тому +6

    Thank you for profiling this. Kind of answers the question of what happened to Tippi's career. I hope that the current version of the wildlife sanctuary has qualified professionals involved , though why you would want exotic big cats in the hills surrounding Los Angeles is beyond me.

  • @sarahhannush1466
    @sarahhannush1466 Рік тому +2

    My cinematography teacher from college, Arledge "Ace" Armenaki worked on Roar. He'd tell us stories about the set.

  • @LynnetteShelley
    @LynnetteShelley Рік тому +8

    When I was little, my parents brought me to visit a couple who were friends of theirs. While I was there I heard what sounded like a lion roaring nearby. The sound was so loud and deep. I thought for years I must have imagined that but later mentioned it to my parents. It was real. Turns out someone in the neighborhood had a pet lion in their garage. whenever it roared you could hear it though the whole neighborhood. There's even a facebook group for people who remember that pet lion in their neighborhood. Poor lion though. Another story: When I was older, I was writing an article about this zoo that took in rescued exotic animals, and I was going behind the scenes with the zookeeper's son (who also worked there). They had a rescued lion that they took in as a cub when it was confiscated by police from a drug dealer. At that time the zoo was still being built so they raised the cub with their family and their dogs. That lion remembered the zookeeper's son and came running over making happy "chuffing" noises. They let me pet him (with a chain link fence inbetween us) - so I got to scritch his ears / mane where they poked through the chain link (I did not put my hand through). He acted just like a giant cat wanting scritches. That being saidthey are not pets, though this one was tamer than a completely wild lion. It was a cool experience though.

  • @AvyScottandFlower
    @AvyScottandFlower Рік тому +21

    Giant wild cats sounds suited for a horror movie
    But a comedy?

    • @harridan.
      @harridan. Рік тому +3

      you can rent a bungalo in the rescue sanctuary which Tippi Hedren created: you cannot mingle with the cats, but you can hear them roar all around you all night

    • @tranquilrabies
      @tranquilrabies Рік тому +3

      The plot doesn't even make any goddamn sense. The family visits the guy's nature preserve but whoopsie, he was out of town when they showed up. This is Home Alone 2 levels of travel-related stupidity.

    • @StAlphonsusHasAPosse
      @StAlphonsusHasAPosse Рік тому

      ​@@harridan. That would be cool

  • @newshodgepodge6329
    @newshodgepodge6329 Рік тому +3

    I've never heard of this film before. But I can't help admiring their dedication and devotion.

  • @davidrenton
    @davidrenton Рік тому +19

    4:31 and to think she was scared by a couple of Birds
    while not a success among Human's , Roar is the family Christmas favourite for Lions, Tigers, and Tabby Cats. They love the bit where the Lion bites the Human, how they laugh, how they roar.

  • @jandro8370
    @jandro8370 Рік тому +8

    So cool u did an episode on Roar. This movie was always very fascinating to me. An entire family of big cat lovers buys a house and trys to film a movie around a bunch of lions in a house. Its absolutely crazy. The teenage girl had her scalp ripped off almost. These people were crazy and then on top of all that blood and sacrifice, the movie was awful. I tried to watch it but its like watxhing a sideshow.

    • @maryanne7161
      @maryanne7161 Рік тому

      I dont think it was the teenage girl whose scalp got ripped off. It was the assistant director.

  • @adamcammack3534
    @adamcammack3534 Рік тому +9

    Jon da Bont the cinematographer who was scalped would later direct Speed in 1994 and Twister

  • @cmciff4054
    @cmciff4054 Рік тому +5

    This is such a crazy and incredible story. Had never heard of it before, shows what too much money and time can lead to.

  • @CaptainCraigKWMRZ
    @CaptainCraigKWMRZ Рік тому +2

    I saw this in college and thought it amazing. It came out about the same time as Flashdance and the Evil Dead and MTV. It was an avant guard time. I certainly don't expect children today to understand.

  • @annastark3786
    @annastark3786 Рік тому +5

    My mum took me to see the 'lovely lion movie' when I was a kid in Melbourne. Australia. 😮 I was 10 and remember it pretty well.

  • @sarahmoorcroft8826
    @sarahmoorcroft8826 Рік тому +5

    On a similar theme, I’d really love to see you cover the Zanesville Ohio incident, when the owner released all his dangerous animals

  • @SylverMage
    @SylverMage Рік тому +6

    You'd think any one of the injuries to the cast and crew might be enough to say "...Maybe this isn't a great idea". And then Mother Nature comes in and floods the whole damn place, and you STILL don't take that as a sign that maybe this isn't worth it?!

  • @mattheweburns
    @mattheweburns Рік тому +1

    I love that this is the first I’ve ever heard of it, please keep it up and don’t change your voice or music. This is something I look forward to every week :-)

  • @mntryjoseph1961
    @mntryjoseph1961 Рік тому +2

    I worked on set with Tippi Hedren in the made for television film, "Shadow of a Doubt," the '90's re-make of the Hitchcock classic. This film also starred Mark Harmon. I saw Tipi again three more times over the years, once at the 50th anniversary screening of the classic film, "The Birds." Both actors are very nice, easy to talk with.

  • @SeverityOne
    @SeverityOne Рік тому +20

    As someone who's had six domestic cats (felis catus) at one point, I can't even begin to imagine what it must be to have over a 100 of significantly bigger ones.

    • @MightyMezzo
      @MightyMezzo Рік тому +5

      Especially when you look in your fur baby’s eyes and realize that if your sizes were reversed, you would have a life expectancy of 30 seconds.

    • @wheelmanstan
      @wheelmanstan Рік тому +1

      yeah it's just mind blowing what they pulled off

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat Рік тому +10

    I've never been this early!
    GEEZ, they had tunnel vision when it came to this movie....obsessed and a bit delusional. 🤯

  • @SamanthaEatsCookies
    @SamanthaEatsCookies Рік тому +2

    I really enjoyed this exploration of Roar. I know there are some crazy movies out there with doomed casts, but this one is quite unique. Thank you for covering the topic.

  • @asmodahlia
    @asmodahlia Рік тому +2

    I'm loving these new exciting topics!

  • @MusicoftheDamned
    @MusicoftheDamned Рік тому +27

    06:34 I was expecting some animals would get killed even if no humans died during this film I'd never even heard of. That's a shame but utterly unsurprising like most of the avoidable tragedies you've coverer, including the worse _Twilight Zone_ movie accident I had already been aware of.

  • @maureen669
    @maureen669 Рік тому +4

    I remember when this was released and I knew Hedren was an animal activist as I was starting in about 1980. I felt she had good intentions. The Roar Foundation/Shambala Preserve Sanctuary is still running, taking in former circus and roadshow animals etc. & Hedren who's in her 90s happily lives in the compound, where her grandchildren are taught the same animal welfare values. There are about 60 cats. She was always considered Alfred Hitchcock's muse.

    • @nomoretwitterhandles
      @nomoretwitterhandles Рік тому

      Alfred Hitchcock abused her and pressured her to have sex with him, threatening her career if she didn't! :)
      So yeah, Tippi was his victim, not his "muse".

  • @StalinBrosef
    @StalinBrosef Рік тому

    This is one of the most "fuck around, find out" movie productions of all time. I can only imagine sheer hubris and the sunk cost fallacy were the only things keeping this from getting canned outright.

  • @cadillacdeville5828
    @cadillacdeville5828 Рік тому +7

    Such interesting content 😊

  • @margeebechyne8642
    @margeebechyne8642 Рік тому +3

    So bizarre! All those people getting hurt, including their own daughter, and they didn't give up the project! And really, where was the respect and compassion for those animals??

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 Рік тому

      Gone when money entered the scene.

    • @Heike--
      @Heike-- Рік тому

      People like this have very strong feelings, and can think of nothing else. They just want to feel good, and will commit horrible cruelties to do it. And if you tell them they're wrong, they see bad feelings coming from YOU, and will react with hostility, even violence. Common among the left side of the political spectrum.

  • @miguelortega-carrillo1375
    @miguelortega-carrillo1375 Рік тому

    Love your content my man. You and the Heckles. Keep it up, please.

  • @bobsmudger3979
    @bobsmudger3979 Рік тому

    A nice summary 👍 I watched a documentary about this a few years ago. Mental what went on!!

  • @jillyjill5755
    @jillyjill5755 Рік тому +64

    When will “people” learn to stop going into environments that’s not their own just because it looks interesting to you. They were not the smartest 😳

    • @ryanwill32
      @ryanwill32 Рік тому +3

      If you do, you need to make the appropriate preparation and treat the enviroment with the respect it deserves, otherwise your asking for things to go horribly wrong.

    • @Matt_G824
      @Matt_G824 Рік тому +8

      Why did you put people in quotes? Are you implying that they're not actually people? I don't get it...

    • @anguswilliam2141
      @anguswilliam2141 Рік тому +2

      What are you talking about? They lived in it for eleven years. Surrounded by these animals. Raising these animals. You go play with your things for eleven years and I'll tell you that you know nothing. See how actual that is.

    • @davebcf1231
      @davebcf1231 Рік тому +5

      We're just animals that live on the planet as well, so what exactly do you mean my "environments not their own?" Where is this human environment you speak of? Cities? Every city on Earth was wild, natural habitat before a city was built there. Aside from the ocean I don't see what line you're drawing between our environment and not our environment.

    • @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
      @KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking Рік тому

      _Oh the irony of the original comment._

  • @madmanmortonyt4890
    @madmanmortonyt4890 Рік тому +6

    I can proudly say my first exposure to this film involved Macaulay Culkin

  • @jenniferferguson4373
    @jenniferferguson4373 Рік тому +2

    I had never heard of this movie!! Wow, just wow. Thank you!!

  • @chriswatson6231
    @chriswatson6231 Рік тому +1

    Watched it in late 80s on vhs after finding it in the corner of a vid shop in Tasmania. Ive never forgotton it in all that time. Unique

  • @CatMom-uw9jl
    @CatMom-uw9jl Рік тому +8

    I wish they’d just filmed the lions who’d moved into the farmhouse (from a safe distance, of course). The mental image of these big cats just living in a house, looking out the windows and hanging out on the verandah, sounds really cool and funny at the same time.

  • @joewilson3393
    @joewilson3393 Рік тому +4

    This whole situation is just dripping with Sunk Cost Fallacy. Being unwilling to abandon a course of action because you are so invested in it even when it is clear there is no value/benefit in continuing.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Рік тому

      Usually it’s worse than that, as continuing doesn’t just not gain you anything, but rather causes you to lose even more.

  • @JazznRealHipHop
    @JazznRealHipHop Рік тому

    That pop-up ad in the middle of the video for White Claw was spot on, bravo! 😆

  • @sofalint2905
    @sofalint2905 Рік тому

    As always, thank you for the captions

  • @SUNNYSKYTX
    @SUNNYSKYTX Рік тому +6

    I cannot get over what a waste of money this whole crazy lion endeavor was - $17million dollars - unreal, if they had donated that money to animal shelters across the USA - it would have been much, much better spent. Crazy!

    • @StAlphonsusHasAPosse
      @StAlphonsusHasAPosse Рік тому +1

      Yep

    • @PointNemo9
      @PointNemo9 Рік тому

      17 million was a lot of money in those days

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Рік тому +1

      @@PointNemo9 If you take the middle year of production, 1975, and adjust for inflation from that (to get an average of 1970-81), 17 million is roughly 100 million today, just off the top of my head.
      They could've spent a quarter of what they did on a good movie. One has to wonder how much of the 17 million was spent on medical expenses, to say nothing of feeding over 100 animals the size of my F& car for a decade.

  • @duchessnoor
    @duchessnoor Рік тому +54

    Yeesh you got to analyse this shitshow! The filming process never ceases to amaze me by how risky and dangerous every decision made was.

  • @amagab2346
    @amagab2346 Рік тому

    Love your work and narration.

  • @liesl7617
    @liesl7617 Рік тому

    Brilliant, as always. And fab to hear about a film I've never heard of.

  • @MelissaJMassey
    @MelissaJMassey Рік тому +6

    They could have made this animation and saved a lot of angst

  • @medea27
    @medea27 11 місяців тому +4

    As a zoologist, this story horrifes & angers me in equal measure... I don't care how much of a bond you think you have with a large predator, these animals are capable of hurting you even if they don't intend to. They are stronger & faster than you'll ever be, and they have thousands of years of evolutionary instincts driving their behaviour. All it takes is for the cat to get startled or to play a little rough, and if the injury to a human is severe enough the animal will be put down, through no fault of it's own. This was the epitome of selfishness, even in the 1970's... if Hedren & Co were genuine about the conservation aspect they would have filmed in Africa to highlight the early conservation work happening there. Instead they raised cubs solely for the purpose of a single movie production, seemingly without any thought for the long-term welfare of those animals. The average lion needs at least 5kg (11 lbs) of meat _per day,_ weighs between 120-250kg (265-550 lbs), and lives up to 15-20 years in captivity... imagine the logistics & costs of housing just one lion for it's life. They had over 50 animals. And while they started a sanctuary later on, it's hard to give Hedren & Marshall any credit given their own selfish actions necessitated it's creation in the first place. This was hubris at it's most dangerous, and it's a miracle no-one was killed.

    • @somehaloguy9372
      @somehaloguy9372 6 місяців тому

      Several of them almost died yet none of the animals were put down for it

  • @AceFilmmaker
    @AceFilmmaker 11 місяців тому

    I worked on this film for many years. 2nd Camera Assistant and once in a while camera operator when there were multiple cameras. The DP was a very good Dutch cameraman and he was quite demanding. It was an experience of a lifetime. Nothing like being chased by TOGAR, the biggest baddest male Lion on the ranch.

  • @ScottDLR
    @ScottDLR Рік тому +2

    I had no idea this existed. Now I'm conflicted on whether or not I want to see it.
    Thanks for another thought provoking documentary.

  • @Satellite_Of_Love
    @Satellite_Of_Love Рік тому +17

    Just seeing an animal in the thumbnail for this video had me twitching. Ffs people, wild animals shouldn't be used for entertainment! It's so sad that we force wild animals into situations like these. People have no one to blame but themselves when things go wrong. I would rather suspend disbelief and see someone in a costume or see CGI versions of these creatures than hear about real ones being mishandled. It's bad enough when we do this to domesticated animals (people too, for that matter. No film is worth dying for.).

    • @alexw.7097
      @alexw.7097 Рік тому +2

      It will never cease to astound me how many people claim to be passionate about wildlife, but then don't seem to understand how wild animals work at all.
      And generally it's the animals that end up paying for their ignorance. 😢

    • @Satellite_Of_Love
      @Satellite_Of_Love Рік тому

      @@alexw.7097 Exactly!

    • @topace1038
      @topace1038 Рік тому +2

      This film is one of those cases where the intentions were good but how those intentions were carried out were not so.

  • @KAGdesignsDOTnet
    @KAGdesignsDOTnet Рік тому +3

    would've been as well just making a documentary about the original lions in the house

  • @uribobo
    @uribobo Рік тому +2

    I remember watchin this on a VHS as a kid in the 80s 😯

  • @gaminggladiator06
    @gaminggladiator06 Рік тому

    Imagine going through all this pain and torment for years, and everyone just hates it when it’s finally out.

  • @bryanreidsands6854
    @bryanreidsands6854 Рік тому +6

    Darwin Awards: Honorable Mention.

  • @RachelO1031
    @RachelO1031 Рік тому +5

    Wow, everyone except the creator couple knew a lost cause when they saw it! 🙄😒

  • @Utterlyrandomguy
    @Utterlyrandomguy Рік тому

    I’ve heard abit about this. Thanks for covering it!

  • @CIAVE
    @CIAVE Рік тому +1

    I'm a huge film buff, and find it amazing that this is the first time I've heard about this movie!

    • @GonzoShitcock
      @GonzoShitcock Рік тому +1

      Me too...and now that I'm watching this...I don't feel like I missed anything

  • @kennethkobylakiewicz3157
    @kennethkobylakiewicz3157 Рік тому +5

    I thought Tippi was brave for being attacked by a handful of wild birds.But this 😳

  • @keithdavison2960
    @keithdavison2960 Рік тому +3

    Didn’t know that they were Melanie Griffith parents and in looking this up to confirm I also found out that Dakota from the horrid 50 shades of bland is Melanie’s daughter

  • @shannoncarlson6960
    @shannoncarlson6960 Рік тому +1

    Great video! It's nice to see a movie being made where the animals weren't hurt. If people want to risk getting hurt, that's a choice, but keep the animals safe. As crazy as it is to work around wild animals, I appreciate the message. It's important to me too. I never heard of this movie and thanks to you I am going to go watch it!

    • @averycheesypotato
      @averycheesypotato Рік тому

      I’m not sure I believe that “no animals were hurt.”
      I mean, 3 got shot by law enforcement! Being shot is a bit harmful

  • @reneedennis2011
    @reneedennis2011 Рік тому

    I didn't know about this. Thank you for rhis video.

  • @djalland1
    @djalland1 Рік тому +6

    "No animals were harmed in the making of this film..." Well, apart from the four who were shot.

    • @KCzz15
      @KCzz15 Рік тому +2

      That didn't happen during the making of the film.

    • @KCzz15
      @KCzz15 Рік тому

      @@kizmiaz513
      Were they killed while being filmed?

    • @KCzz15
      @KCzz15 Рік тому

      @@kizmiaz513
      They weren't making the film every single second of every single day you smooth brain, a flash flood destroyed the set, they escaped and a few were put down by law enforcement. That's not "in the making of the film", unless you want to claim the flash flood was a scene for the film?