Support me on Patreon! $3 for Behind the Scenes, 1-day Early Access and Sneak Peaks to upcoming Videos! www.patreon.com/everydaytheorist Disturbing Accident playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PLfDneh8TQKnZIvGyL0XNSkZEr50e9-iX2.html&si=DfM5dA_taq8P3CUF Roar 1981 Link: ua-cam.com/video/jqz7rPflvvE/v-deo.html
Hi just wondering why is the background of your channel background from Erased. (Are you planning to cover it someday or do you just like the manga) I figured that it has to hold some importance to you since you put it there. (Im just curious)
Most of those mentioned aren't accidents, but malpractice to the extreme. Those directors are abusers at best. Really highlights the importance of workplace safety and toxic work culture.
The fact that the actors for Roar even had a safe word And you can hear them saying it in some of the scenes they put in the movie means that the director did nothing to stop the attacks, he just kept rolling. That's crazy.
I once met Malcolm Mcdowell and I was cosplaying as Alex. He loved my cosplay. Pretty epic. However, we got into a small conversation and I made an offhand comment about Kubrick. I said: Kubrick didn't have the most ethical ways of filming. (I was thinking about Shelley Duvall at the time.) He didn't have much to say about that and that made me feel embarrassed. Thought he didn't feel the same or whatever. Then I found out about all the crap Kubrick put him through and felt better about my interaction. At least I didn't diss someone he full on respected or had a perfectly good experience with.
@@hackerjamsandjustweggamer not really a statement that can be trusted. A lot of people lie in interviews as to not damage their reputation, the reputation of the people they're talking about, or to generally not be confrontational.
The lion attacks aren't even the half of Roar's insane production problems. There was a flood on set that swept away and killed several of the lions as well as a lot of the set, and apparently a fire that almost burned the whole set and cameras down as well. Mother Nature herself was _begging_ the director to stop this madness.
Another Clockwork Orange anecdote, Stanley Kubrick, upon finding out that Malcolm McDowell has an intense irrational fear of reptiles- Kubrick introduced Alex's pet python Basil. In the novel by Anthony Burgess, Alex does not have a snake, Kubrick deliberately put it in the film just to fuck with him. McDowell had to handle the snake in three scenes and he was terrified
@@happyfrigginrainbowcookies with him being as much of a perfectionist as he was I’d say he was more just off the wall than anything I doubt he enjoyed all the shit he put Donofrio, Duvall and Mcdowall through
He created some pure masteriece movies though and that can not be denied and 99% of the actors who dealt with him still had fine careers and even went on to have fantastic ones due to being in his films only shelly duvall couldnt handle it.
0:21 A fun tidbit about this - MJ's hair caught on fire on the day that would be the exact midpoint of his life. He was born 8/29/1958, his hair burnt 1/27/1984, and he died 6/25/2009. There's 9281 days between both.
You should talk about the stuntwoman’s death on the set of “Vampire in Brooklyn”. Her crash pad was overinflated. She had family members on set to watch her when it happened.
@@elven_spaghetti4976 found this in a screenrant article: "One day, while filming a stunt involving a 42-foot backwards fall, Davis bounced off of the huge airbag that was meant to cushion her landing, subsequently slamming into the building and then into the ground. While not killed immediately, Davis sustained critical injuries, and passed away after spending two agonizing weeks clinging to life in the hospital."
I’m surprised that the crow incident wasn’t mentioned, similar to the rust shooting it’s more tragic, when actor Brandon lee (son of Bruce lee) was playing the main character, actor Michael massee pulled out a prop gun and fired at him but one of the blanks still had gunpowder and ended going threw his abdomen, Brandon later died at the hospital from his injury, he was only 28 years old, the crow released without the scene which was a good idea to change it to a knife throw. Edit: also the stuntmen that finished Brandon’s scenes he didn’t make after he died would later make the John wick franchise
More specifically it was a real gun loaded with improperly made dummy rounds, improvised from live cartridges that had the powder charges removed by the special effects crew, so in close-ups the revolver would show normal-looking ammunition. However, the crew neglected to remove the primers from the cartridges, and at some point before the fatal event, one of the rounds had been fired. Although there were no powder charges, the energy from the ignited primer was enough to separate the bullet from the casing and push it part-way into the gun barrel, where it got stuck-a dangerous condition known as a squib load. This pretty much was the same as being shot with a real bullet as it sadly showed
Probably the sole fact you’re surprised it isn’t mentioned, because it’s so commonly mentioned that anybody watching a video like this has a 90% probability of already knowing about it, if not THAT being the only one they know of.
Hearing about incidents occurring in A Clockwork Orange is news to me, but not particularly surprising news. Stanley Kubrick, as masterful a craftsman as he was, strikes me as somebody who REALLY doesn't care much for his cast's wellbeing. The Shining absolutely WRECKED Shelly Duvall from all the stress she was put under for the sake of "authenticity." Why he subjected her to torment when he could've just let an actress do her job and ACT, I don't know, but it seems we're past the point now where that's as easy to get away with, which is nice
Yeah the films could've been just as good without the torture and abuse. But any profession where a person has power over others and can control them will draw in people who want to abuse it. Teachers, nurses, doctors, directors, religious leaders, etc. A LOT of nurses are the same people who were bullies throughout highschool
Alfred Hitchcock once said, "actors should be treated like cattle." It says a lot about how he and other famous directors, especially so back then, view filmmaking and the people they work with. So glad auteurs are fading out of favor.
What the actual fuck is wrong with him? How about actors should be treated like fucking PEOPLE cause that's what they literally are! Dude's insane lmao
Actually, if you look into that quote and the context, you see what he meant: "Fundamentally, actors are a race apart. This group is divided into two sections: first, those who have talent and have never received any recognition for it, and, second, those who have received recognition without having any talent. Either way, they're cattle."
@@eins2001 the context doesn't really make it any better. Like he's still saying "both types of actors are basically animals that are to do as I say and go wherever I put them." It's dehumanizing.
@@eins2001 Oh I see now, he's an abusive asshole AND he's delirious, thanks for shining light on this so we can hate him more. I'm gonna just assume you agree with us and you're giving us more context to show us that we were wrong assuming he was just a little bit messed up and that in fact he is borderline psychotic. I bet psycho is a biography, also BTW the birds is the most trash film I may have ever seen given the supposed talent of the director.
There was an indie horror/thriller film called Incident In A Ghostland. Main actress Taylor Hicks was gruesomely injured by a falling glass door or something like that; she survived but needed exhaustive surgery. Now that's not a particularly well-known film like A Clockwork Orange but it's worth mentioning just because of the gory nature of the accident.
You should mention Midnight Rider a movie that was cancelled because of its accident. The crew were filming a dream sequence on real train tracks (I doubt they had actual permission to film) and thought that all the trains had passed for the day. Unexpectedly a train came. The crew tried their best to make it to safety and almost succeeded, but when the train hit the bed, it caused it among other props to go flying. One cameraman was hit by it and kills.
@@zeropoint11guzman48I know this is a month old but just incase you still wanna know Brandon Lee who was playing the main character had a scene where he was supposed to be shot. However due to a dummy round being stuck in the chamber on accident when the gun was shot the dummy round fired and killed Brandon Lee. I can’t explain well but there are videos on the accident if you want to know more.
6:53 “knowing that no one got injured when making of this film is a wild fact” I’m assuming you meant nobody got killed since you were just describing somebodies leg getting crushed by an elephant seconds earlier
Heidi von Beltz is one of the most horrifying accidents I've ever heard of. She got called by her fiancee at the last minute to do a stunt for Farrah Fawcett in Cannonball Run. Long story short, no one thought to put seatbelts in an Aston Martin and she was paralyzed in an accident. Her fiancee who contacted her to do the stunt, Bobby Bass, completely abandonded her after the accident and the money won in the ensuing lawsuit ended up evaporating overnight from lawyer and medical bills. Her father, before he unalived himself, asked if she wanted to go with him. She lived her last days being foreclosed on and passing at the age of 59. Things haven't changed and probably never will. So long as cutting corners and union busters continue to happen, pain and death isn't far behind.
It's horrific how many directions got away with mistreating actors on set and putting their lives at risk and then after they take all the credit for the sacrifices multiple other people took
The way he said that kubrik had the audacity to make malcolm mcdowel do the ludovico scene again is like hes never heard of kubrik. He tryed convincing mathew modine on the set of full metal jacket to stay on set when his wife was giving birth and he made shelly duvall do more then a hundred takes in one scene in the shining
Fun fact one time when I was taking out my contact, I scratched my eye cornea and I had to go to the ER so I can’t imagine what type of pain he also felt during the making of the clockwork Orange.
I know it shouldn't be, but watching Michael Jackson start his lil dance then immediately running off stage as his hair progressively has the fire spreading, and then disappearing into the smoke is absolutely hilarious.
It's really not funny when you realize that the Pepsi accident is eventually what lead to his death. He became addicted to painkillers to ease the excruciating pain he went through with that accident.
The first accidents on set that I’ve heard about was when the actress who played the Wicked Witch of the West got burned during the fire scene and also the original actor that was supposed to play the tin man got an allergic reaction so they had to get someone else to play the tin man and also of course fixed up the costume
Fun fact: In the first Friday the 13th movie, one of the characters (I've never seen the movie) gets fake blood in their eyes from murdering somebody. Since the budget was so low, they had to use film developing fluid or something like that because fake blood was too expensive, lol. Apparently, the guy who got the fake blood in his eyes said he couldn't see out of his right eye for 6 months.
*Felt it was approproate to mention the accident in Transformers: Dark Of The Moon where a cable has horrificly injured an extra's face, and in respect and donation for her recovery, Michael Bay reused old footage from a previous film. I think it sucks people called him lazy for that decision.*
I'm not sure if "sever" is the right term for Jackie's injury . You don't sever a hole in your head. If you severed your head it would be separated from your body.
i know nobody cares but i like paying attention to small things, its funny to me how the most replayed part of this entire video is specifically the point where the sponsored segment ends LOL
You did a fantastic job with this. I almost didn't even click on it because everybody knows about the John Landis incident, the Brandon Lee incident and the entire filming of The exorcist ect. You actually brought up incidents that most of which I hadn't heard of and I think you did a fantastic job breaking everything down as well.
Love your videos bro! I have to say though, I think the worst and most insane one set incident comes from the twilight zone movie. I remember years ago seeing the actual scene where him and those two young kids get horribly killed by a crashing helicopter. Vick morrow and a little boy get decapitated and a young girl gets crushed under the landing skid… absolutely horrifying
Oh make no mistake, Stanley Kubrick was a proper psychopath. There’s a reason a lot of actors in his films gave up acting, he drove them insane, tortured them, injured them, abused them and actively played on their fears. It’s why film buffs loved his films, he did get some amazing acting and reactions out of them but he was properly unorthodox about it. As a former student of film I appreciate how much effort went into his films but when you realise what it cost people, you do wonder of it was really worth it.
I don't think it was worth it. Most of the reason I didn't like The Shining is because I thought the female lead's acting was really off. After looking up that he bullied her on set and treated her like crap, it makes sense that she didn't perform as well as she could have. In short, Kubrick was a prick.
a lot of them also straigh up said they would never be in a stanley kubrick film ever again. most of the actors who stuck through it all end up saying that they done have any hard feelings or anything as they understand what they had to go through was for the resulting movie and they usually understood he was a bit of a renegade but he got results.
You didnt research the Roar segment. There was one incident that led to one actres being accidentally scratched by one of the lions and it was the one incident that pushed things a bit too far. Also, the father of the entire cast was the director, if I recall correctly
if you make a part 2, you definitely gotta include the twilight zone helicopter accident that killed the actor Vic Morrow and child actors Myca Dinh Le and Renee Shin-Yi Chen. there is also footage of this happening on youtube. Pretty crazy accident
I'm genuinely surprised that the Twilight Zone accident wasn't covered in this video. Lead actor Vic Morrow and two children were put into an insanely dangerous stunt scene where a helicopter was flying overhead while he carried them over a shallow lake. The director kept telling the pilot to get closer, leading to the helicopter spinning out of control and crashing on top of them. The helicopter blades decapitated Vic and one child, while the other was crushed. There's actual fucking footage of this online. People have posted a frame by frame progression of events where you just see it happening in the blink of an eye. It was chilling, and it forever changed my view on life.
the thing about the first roar clips you showed just proves how lucky they were, bc you're wrong, they're not mauling them- that is genuine big cat play behavior, i've seen it a lot. meaning the injuries to the cast and crew could have been so much worse and more common had they not been so lucky. that said even play behavior from these things can be deadly, they don't exactly understand how much more fragile we are than them when attempting to play
1:40 this is actually inaccurate. The branch didn’t break on the first attempt. The footage of this scene we see in the film is the first shot. The director of the film was ready to move on with production after filming the scene once, but Jackie Chan insisted on reshooting it as a backup. On the second shoot is when the branch broke and Jackie Chan fell 5 metres to the ground
The story about A Clockwork Orange isn't quite correct, only partially. You said "they forced him to do the scene again." That's not true. The 1st time they did the scene, Malcolm McDowell did go temporarily blind for a day or 2 and his cornea was scratched. Something important related to this story that you may not know is the director, Stanley Kubrick, was notorious for doing a shiteton of takes. In The Shining, there's a scene where Jack Nicholson is in crazy mode and slowly moving towards Shelley Duvall while she's backing up a flight of stairs, trying to keep her distance. She's also swinging a baseball bat at him repeatedly, trying to keep him from getting any closer and she actually hits him when close to the top and he falls down the stairs while she runs away. That scene is maybe 1 minute or 2 and typically on average a director would do between 2-20 takes of a scene, maybe 20-30 at the extreme end, depending on whether or not the scene is done how the director wants it and as long as no technical mishaps happen and no actor forgets a line or gives a less than great performance, then the director, after getting a take or 2 they like, they'll usually do one more take for safety and then move onto another scene. For that stairs scene in The Shining, Stanley Kubrick made them do *127 friggin takes!!!* Shelley Duvall doesn't have to do much acting in that scene when she cries because she was actually exhausted and scared irl. Anyway, after just the 1st take or 2 of the Ludovico technique scene in A Clockwork Orange, Malcolm McDowell got his cornea scratched and they stopped filming that scene. The temporary blindness lasted about 1 or 2 days but it halted production. Due to his eye injury, Malcolm pleaded with Stanley Kubrick to move that scene to the end of the shooting schedule, that way if his cornea was scratched again, he wouldn't have to hold up production to heal and Kubrick agreed that was the smart choice. So, that was actually the last scene they shot. Malcolm McDowell wasn't "forced" to shoot the scene again, it was _his request_ to move the scene and Kubrick agreed. Malcolm McDowell also went into the scene pretty much knowing he'd likely get some sort of eye injury after shooting that scene, which of course, inevitably happened again. It wasn't a surprise that they sprung on McDowell, it was moved for practical reasons. *An additional fun fact:* During the Ludovico technique scene in A Clockwork Orange where Malcolm McDowell has the eye clamps on, there's one of the white lab coated scientists conducting the experiment of the Ludovico technique. The guy is sitting next to Malcolm McDowell, continously applying eye drops to his eyes so they don't dry out. That person isn't an actor, he's actually a real life doctor, optometrist specifically, making sure that Malcolm McDowell doesn't suffer any permanent issues and is making sure he's getting enough eye drops to keep his eyes from getting too dry.
Heres one literally no one has talked about: Olivia Jackson. Olivia Jackson was a stunt performer who lost her arm, and almost her life, during the filming of a resident evil film. That womans career was ended by a poorly planned stunt
scenarios like these are why I don’t wanna become an entertainer, no matter how much I wanna be one. imagine dying at that very moment, and the people present don’t believe it. danish actor and comedian dirch passer passed away in such a way. he was preparing for a stage performance but suffered a stroke backstage, and needed medical attention. an announcer ran up on stage telling folks about the situation. the crowd laughs, thinking that it’s part of the show. absolutely macabre and heartbreaking
Great Video as always! Surprised that the Eiger Sanction wasn't mentioned though. A 1975 Clint Eastwood film that almost didn't come to theaters due to the death that occurred while filming on the actual Eiger mountain. From what I could find, Eastwood wanted to wrap up after the death but other climbers helping the film urged him to finish in honor of the loss. Can't confirm that part but it's what I could find with quick google searches.
Man, not only can you see her body fall on the outside of the glass, but you can actually see her crash into the pillar in the shot just before it. It's crazy that she managed to live from that, and I'm certainly glad she's still with us, but dang, that should've never happened. None of these should've ever happened.
Hey, YET; I think you should cover "Tyler's Last Words" in a future "Disturbing Media"/"Midnight Frights" volume... much like "Magician Cuts Wife in Half", it is a fake video that gives eerily REAL vibes, but was debunked by ScareTheater. Hope you cover it in a future volume. Also, I am in Pakistan on vacation right now, and I made sure to watch the entirety of a few ads through on the 3-hour-long Disney iceberg video, for you to earn some money due to how UA-cam treats you... much love from Pakistan...!!!
My Two Cents: Kubrick was an absolute psychopath when it came to his films. Actors were essentially puppets to move around. He was perfectly fine with the “ wooden “ performance of Ryan O’Neal, but terrorized Shelley Duvall so throughly she never recovered. And I’m sure the guys from Full Metal Jacket have stories to tell.
You'd think when it comes to hanging sceans they'd have like a safe action so the actor could tell people they're not okay. Like tapping on the leg or something
Another crazy accident was captured on the Twilight Zone movie set, during one scene involving a real helicopter something went wrong resulting in it crashing and 3 people losing their lives including a child actor
TW animal death. Also with Roar, not really accident related but there were also floods and some people had to be rescued. 15 of the lions and tigers escaped because of this, the head lion was killed and had to be replaced. Because of all of this, there was a $3 million damage costs and production was halted for a whole year. A complete disaster movie!
Jackie Chan after breaking 18636.36 bones in his body, nearly losing his ability to move and narrowly avoiding the possibility of a coma or death after every stunt: guys i think i broke my finger.
I genuinely recommend learning how to correctly fall, I was so accident prone that I almost subconsciously learnt how to fall safely, mostly it’s just how roll when you fall, I rarely get hurt because of how I can fall, but from higher falls (specifically stairs, I have fallen down way to many stairs, and I do not recommend it) and I’m able to get *less* hurt, still hurt a lot, but just *less* I’ve broken bones multiple times, but I’ve been able to prevent like severe brain injuries, cause head injuries are way worse than any broken bone. Anyways I do recommend learning how to fall safely from no matter the height, it’s also kinda fun
The cats and other animals appearing in Roar would mostly end up in the Shambala Perserve started by Tippi Hedren who was in the movie as she was married to Noel Marshall at the time. The bull elephant in the movie responsible for fracturing Hendren's ankle and breaking his trainer's shoulder was named Tembo and he passed away in 2005 at 48. Marshall and Hendren divorced in 1981. He never made another movie athough he some how had money to support Shambala, a place he would never visit as he couldn't stand to be around the animals that he had loved.
There are two disturbing scenes I saw in Filipino film and TV Series. One was the actor and now Senator Robin Padilla got his arm caught in an explosion, leaving his arm burnt, and scars were there. Another was about Valerie Concepcion, when she was accidentally run over by a car in a set of her TV series, hitting her back and hips, and took the rest of the scene in a hospital where she was treated.
You know how deep you're gonna go when you start off with a famous actor cracking his skull open, fracturing his pelvis, and burning off all the skin on his hands.
that chair scene in clockwork orange was freaky just because of how real it was, and the drowning scene was messed up cause they did that whole echo thing when he smacked the tub with the baton it makes you feel like your head is in there.
The 30 ft drop one makes me so upset because she literally told him that it was dangerous and brought up real concerns just for him to act stupid and put lives at risk just for a good shot. So unprofessional.
Accidents happen, and this may be considered normal to some extent, however it can go wrong for multiple reasons. Film sets aren't always prone to accidents, which makes it even scarier. Just be mindful of the fact that you won't always be granted safety and/or security in these types of scenarios.
even tho I'm a person that doesn't really apprecciate wrecklessness and thinks stunt work should be extremely regulated, the jackie chan parts kinda make me appreciate the effort he puts on his movies and how someone with (at the time) a very big language barrier got to make a space for himself in such a big industry (although he should've had some precautions; you only have one body after all)
i just watched a clockwork orange recently in april for WB 100th anniversary it is a very wild intense movie but i had a feeling the eye clamps were real and can tell he was very uncomfortable and that drowning scene made me feel suffocated they really did malcolm wrong for this and i also learned he is afraid of snakes and they made him have a pet snake i can imagine the fear he had after all of this the director really sounds insane and sadistic
I'm not at all impressed by directors such as Kubrick torturing their actors, or method actors harassing other people in character in the name of "art". If you want to do extreme performance art yourself and push your own body/mind to the brink (e.g. Marina Abramović), that's fine, it's your life. But don't bring in people who haven't consented to that. Actors sign a contract saying they'll act. They don't agree to be drowned or blinded or psychologically pushed to the brink i.e Shelley Duval. There are hundreds of incredible films that have been made without any deliberate physical or mental harm being caused, these people have no excuse.
Man, the fact that some of these can happen at all really shows the level of corruption and uncaringness in Hollywood. "Anything for the shot" I guess.
Support me on Patreon! $3 for Behind the Scenes, 1-day Early Access and Sneak Peaks to upcoming Videos!
www.patreon.com/everydaytheorist
Disturbing Accident playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PLfDneh8TQKnZIvGyL0XNSkZEr50e9-iX2.html&si=DfM5dA_taq8P3CUF
Roar 1981 Link: ua-cam.com/video/jqz7rPflvvE/v-deo.html
That was 11 minutes off horror.
I shall ask in full respect.. I need to consume more of this…👹(asking 4 part 2)
Hi just wondering why is the background of your channel background from Erased. (Are you planning to cover it someday or do you just like the manga) I figured that it has to hold some importance to you since you put it there. (Im just curious)
Lol that you think Alec baldwin had an accident. Pointing and shooting a loaded gun in anger is murder.
I THOUGHT YOUR USERNAME YourEverydayTERRORIST.
Love how Jackie immediately gets up and starts fighting after the glass fall stunt
He's a madman
he’s built different
Guy’s an absolute gigachad, ngl.
Wild
Thats because hes like a literal videogame character
Most of those mentioned aren't accidents, but malpractice to the extreme. Those directors are abusers at best. Really highlights the importance of workplace safety and toxic work culture.
@@theghostnarwhal9187 Malpractice doesn't mean it was done on purpose, it just means they were being negligent or doing things improperly
If it wasn't an accident then it was on purpose, if was on purpose then it was by mistake.
@@PleaseTryAgainLater do you not understand the word Malpractice or Negligence?
Wouldn’t call this abuse.😂
@@desi4009 negligence is abuse
The fact that the actors for Roar even had a safe word And you can hear them saying it in some of the scenes they put in the movie means that the director did nothing to stop the attacks, he just kept rolling. That's crazy.
that sucks
Wait what was the safe word
@@christinelickert3936 “Don’t stop”
wow, man
@@2Siders seems like a really bad safeword
I once met Malcolm Mcdowell and I was cosplaying as Alex. He loved my cosplay. Pretty epic.
However, we got into a small conversation and I made an offhand comment about Kubrick. I said: Kubrick didn't have the most ethical ways of filming. (I was thinking about Shelley Duvall at the time.)
He didn't have much to say about that and that made me feel embarrassed. Thought he didn't feel the same or whatever.
Then I found out about all the crap Kubrick put him through and felt better about my interaction.
At least I didn't diss someone he full on respected or had a perfectly good experience with.
That was sweet of him. He most likely didn’t want to be a downer with a fan, and remembered the terrible things.
Kentucky in America
Actually he said in a couple interviews that despite everything he was still a pretty big fan of Kubrick and got along well with him
@@hackerjamsandjustweggamer not really a statement that can be trusted. A lot of people lie in interviews as to not damage their reputation, the reputation of the people they're talking about, or to generally not be confrontational.
I would have been gone off that set!
The lion attacks aren't even the half of Roar's insane production problems. There was a flood on set that swept away and killed several of the lions as well as a lot of the set, and apparently a fire that almost burned the whole set and cameras down as well. Mother Nature herself was _begging_ the director to stop this madness.
@@banipoltergeist cause you farted that one time.
@@banipoltergeist its just a part of life.
Another Clockwork Orange anecdote, Stanley Kubrick, upon finding out that Malcolm McDowell has an intense irrational fear of reptiles- Kubrick introduced Alex's pet python Basil. In the novel by Anthony Burgess, Alex does not have a snake, Kubrick deliberately put it in the film just to fuck with him. McDowell had to handle the snake in three scenes and he was terrified
Between how he treated Malcolm and Shelley Duvall, Stanley Kubrick was definitely a psychopath.
@@Air_Serpent nah more like he was just a prick
@@christopherjohn7442 I think he was more than that. Some sick kind of sadist is what he was.
@@happyfrigginrainbowcookies with him being as much of a perfectionist as he was I’d say he was more just off the wall than anything I doubt he enjoyed all the shit he put Donofrio, Duvall and Mcdowall through
He created some pure masteriece movies though and that can not be denied and 99% of the actors who dealt with him still had fine careers and even went on to have fantastic ones due to being in his films only shelly duvall couldnt handle it.
0:21 A fun tidbit about this - MJ's hair caught on fire on the day that would be the exact midpoint of his life. He was born 8/29/1958, his hair burnt 1/27/1984, and he died 6/25/2009. There's 9281 days between both.
op comment
that’s scary…
Mind. Blown.
🤓
@@veloction6130 Good reply my man, have a nice day
You should talk about the stuntwoman’s death on the set of “Vampire in Brooklyn”. Her crash pad was overinflated. She had family members on set to watch her when it happened.
How would an overinflated crash pad kill someone? Suffocation or something else??
@@elven_spaghetti4976 my thought is that maybe she bounced
@@elven_spaghetti4976 found this in a screenrant article: "One day, while filming a stunt involving a 42-foot backwards fall, Davis bounced off of the huge airbag that was meant to cushion her landing, subsequently slamming into the building and then into the ground. While not killed immediately, Davis sustained critical injuries, and passed away after spending two agonizing weeks clinging to life in the hospital."
@@elven_spaghetti4976it often implies that due to the fall the bag popped while taking little to no inertia practically as if it was never there
@@KateEmily2409 oh I was right
I’m surprised that the crow incident wasn’t mentioned, similar to the rust shooting it’s more tragic, when actor Brandon lee (son of Bruce lee) was playing the main character, actor Michael massee pulled out a prop gun and fired at him but one of the blanks still had gunpowder and ended going threw his abdomen, Brandon later died at the hospital from his injury, he was only 28 years old, the crow released without the scene which was a good idea to change it to a knife throw.
Edit: also the stuntmen that finished Brandon’s scenes he didn’t make after he died would later make the John wick franchise
Tinghau poo
theres gonna be a part 2, I think it will be covered in that video
More specifically it was a real gun loaded with improperly made dummy rounds, improvised from live cartridges that had the powder charges removed by the special effects crew, so in close-ups the revolver would show normal-looking ammunition. However, the crew neglected to remove the primers from the cartridges, and at some point before the fatal event, one of the rounds had been fired. Although there were no powder charges, the energy from the ignited primer was enough to separate the bullet from the casing and push it part-way into the gun barrel, where it got stuck-a dangerous condition known as a squib load. This pretty much was the same as being shot with a real bullet as it sadly showed
probably because most people know about this incident
Probably the sole fact you’re surprised it isn’t mentioned, because it’s so commonly mentioned that anybody watching a video like this has a 90% probability of already knowing about it, if not THAT being the only one they know of.
Hearing about incidents occurring in A Clockwork Orange is news to me, but not particularly surprising news. Stanley Kubrick, as masterful a craftsman as he was, strikes me as somebody who REALLY doesn't care much for his cast's wellbeing. The Shining absolutely WRECKED Shelly Duvall from all the stress she was put under for the sake of "authenticity." Why he subjected her to torment when he could've just let an actress do her job and ACT, I don't know, but it seems we're past the point now where that's as easy to get away with, which is nice
Yeah the films could've been just as good without the torture and abuse. But any profession where a person has power over others and can control them will draw in people who want to abuse it. Teachers, nurses, doctors, directors, religious leaders, etc. A LOT of nurses are the same people who were bullies throughout highschool
I really wonder what Sam Kubrick thinks about his grandfather's directing methods.
If I could have sued director I would,if not I put director to absolute HELL!
EXCELLENT WORK. YOUR EVERY DAY THEORIST DISTURBING ACCIDENTALLY CAUGHT ON CAMERA 📸
Alfred Hitchcock once said, "actors should be treated like cattle."
It says a lot about how he and other famous directors, especially so back then, view filmmaking and the people they work with. So glad auteurs are fading out of favor.
What the actual fuck is wrong with him? How about actors should be treated like fucking PEOPLE cause that's what they literally are! Dude's insane lmao
Actually, if you look into that quote and the context, you see what he meant:
"Fundamentally, actors are a race apart. This group is divided into two sections: first, those who have talent and have never received any recognition for it, and, second, those who have received recognition without having any talent. Either way, they're cattle."
@@eins2001 that still sounds really fucked up
@@eins2001 the context doesn't really make it any better. Like he's still saying "both types of actors are basically animals that are to do as I say and go wherever I put them." It's dehumanizing.
@@eins2001 Oh I see now, he's an abusive asshole AND he's delirious, thanks for shining light on this so we can hate him more. I'm gonna just assume you agree with us and you're giving us more context to show us that we were wrong assuming he was just a little bit messed up and that in fact he is borderline psychotic. I bet psycho is a biography, also BTW the birds is the most trash film I may have ever seen given the supposed talent of the director.
There was an indie horror/thriller film called Incident In A Ghostland. Main actress Taylor Hicks was gruesomely injured by a falling glass door or something like that; she survived but needed exhaustive surgery. Now that's not a particularly well-known film like A Clockwork Orange but it's worth mentioning just because of the gory nature of the accident.
Correction. It's Hickson. I confused Hickson with the American Idol winner (who's a dude) and now I feel hella bad about it.
You should mention Midnight Rider a movie that was cancelled because of its accident. The crew were filming a dream sequence on real train tracks (I doubt they had actual permission to film) and thought that all the trains had passed for the day. Unexpectedly a train came. The crew tried their best to make it to safety and almost succeeded, but when the train hit the bed, it caused it among other props to go flying. One cameraman was hit by it and kills.
He talked about it in another video.
Noah's ark sounds a lot more like a genuine murder attempt than an acting method. He just flat out wanted to actually kill people so he could film it.
During the 'drowning' scene, Mcdowell had a hidden breathing hose for him to use during the clip. It was one shot, yes, but he wasnt drowning.
Yeah I was thinking that as he said it. Weird that he didn't know about this when one Google search would tell him that McDowell wasn't drowning.
That breathing hose was in fact broken.
@squidwardjoeswanson5418I know the source
His source is that he made it the fuck up
@@insomnion3892what are you, a putin bot?
@@dyztroyax4628 i was wrong lol but tf are you talking about
Twilight zone helicopter crash is the worst one I can think of...
That and the crow are the worst i have heard of. Both could have been prevented too.
What happened in crow?
@@zeropoint11guzman48I know this is a month old but just incase you still wanna know Brandon Lee who was playing the main character had a scene where he was supposed to be shot. However due to a dummy round being stuck in the chamber on accident when the gun was shot the dummy round fired and killed Brandon Lee. I can’t explain well but there are videos on the accident if you want to know more.
6:53 “knowing that no one got injured when making of this film is a wild fact”
I’m assuming you meant nobody got killed since you were just describing somebodies leg getting crushed by an elephant seconds earlier
With Stanley Kubrick, you really get familiar with the differences between method acting and filming physical and psychological torture
Heidi von Beltz is one of the most horrifying accidents I've ever heard of. She got called by her fiancee at the last minute to do a stunt for Farrah Fawcett in Cannonball Run. Long story short, no one thought to put seatbelts in an Aston Martin and she was paralyzed in an accident. Her fiancee who contacted her to do the stunt, Bobby Bass, completely abandonded her after the accident and the money won in the ensuing lawsuit ended up evaporating overnight from lawyer and medical bills. Her father, before he unalived himself, asked if she wanted to go with him. She lived her last days being foreclosed on and passing at the age of 59. Things haven't changed and probably never will. So long as cutting corners and union busters continue to happen, pain and death isn't far behind.
Man, I took a bit to read about her. She seemed like such an incredible person.
It's horrific how many directions got away with mistreating actors on set and putting their lives at risk and then after they take all the credit for the sacrifices multiple other people took
The way he said that kubrik had the audacity to make malcolm mcdowel do the ludovico scene again is like hes never heard of kubrik. He tryed convincing mathew modine on the set of full metal jacket to stay on set when his wife was giving birth and he made shelly duvall do more then a hundred takes in one scene in the shining
@@dontpickyourwounds he never implied that
@@dontpickyourwounds ok
Fun fact one time when I was taking out my contact, I scratched my eye cornea and I had to go to the ER so I can’t imagine what type of pain he also felt during the making of the clockwork Orange.
I scratched mine and didn’t even notice til I went to an optometrist
I’m surprised they don’t have a safe word to use when they are in a dangerous situations like this
Roar did but the crew kept filming anyway according to another comment
I know it shouldn't be, but watching Michael Jackson start his lil dance then immediately running off stage as his hair progressively has the fire spreading, and then disappearing into the smoke is absolutely hilarious.
It's really not funny when you realize that the Pepsi accident is eventually what lead to his death. He became addicted to painkillers to ease the excruciating pain he went through with that accident.
@@VDJVivacity Considering he is most likely a PDFile, yes it is very funny!
@@HuwhyteMan Ah yes, a PDFile, the kind of things teachers share with students on google classroom
@@HuwhyteMan he was a fucking PDF. File? We must find his body and see what kind of presentation is saved there
That’s kinda fucked up ngl
Man you could make a whole hour long or more vid of just Jackie Chans stunts and injuries. Actually I'd love to see that.
The first accidents on set that I’ve heard about was when the actress who played the Wicked Witch of the West got burned during the fire scene and also the original actor that was supposed to play the tin man got an allergic reaction so they had to get someone else to play the tin man and also of course fixed up the costume
Fun fact: In the first Friday the 13th movie, one of the characters (I've never seen the movie) gets fake blood in their eyes from murdering somebody. Since the budget was so low, they had to use film developing fluid or something like that because fake blood was too expensive, lol. Apparently, the guy who got the fake blood in his eyes said he couldn't see out of his right eye for 6 months.
*Felt it was approproate to mention the accident in Transformers: Dark Of The Moon where a cable has horrificly injured an extra's face, and in respect and donation for her recovery, Michael Bay reused old footage from a previous film. I think it sucks people called him lazy for that decision.*
let's not forget to pour one out for Gibby's stunt double on iCarly.
Realistically if you don’t get help even after asking for it, just yell a slur that way they know to help and they can’t keep it in the movie.
no don't ruin the shot
The armour of god was a wild one! Also my fav Jackie film. Glad you brought this one up cause it almost did kill him.
My question is who thought it would be a good idea to have dozens of lions on set? As if they wouldn't do anything dangerous.
I'm not sure if "sever" is the right term for Jackie's injury . You don't sever a hole in your head. If you severed your head it would be separated from your body.
You should DEFINITELY cover Jackie's stunt reel.
Most aren't accidents, they are abuse and the directors should be jailed; f Kubrick for that shit!
hell of a filmaker tho
i know nobody cares but i like paying attention to small things, its funny to me how the most replayed part of this entire video is specifically the point where the sponsored segment ends LOL
You did a fantastic job with this. I almost didn't even click on it because everybody knows about the John Landis incident, the Brandon Lee incident and the entire filming of The exorcist ect. You actually brought up incidents that most of which I hadn't heard of and I think you did a fantastic job breaking everything down as well.
Love your videos bro! I have to say though, I think the worst and most insane one set incident comes from the twilight zone movie. I remember years ago seeing the actual scene where him and those two young kids get horribly killed by a crashing helicopter. Vick morrow and a little boy get decapitated and a young girl gets crushed under the landing skid… absolutely horrifying
They were like “Michael J Fox isn’t that good”
Oh make no mistake, Stanley Kubrick was a proper psychopath. There’s a reason a lot of actors in his films gave up acting, he drove them insane, tortured them, injured them, abused them and actively played on their fears. It’s why film buffs loved his films, he did get some amazing acting and reactions out of them but he was properly unorthodox about it. As a former student of film I appreciate how much effort went into his films but when you realise what it cost people, you do wonder of it was really worth it.
I don't think it was worth it. Most of the reason I didn't like The Shining is because I thought the female lead's acting was really off. After looking up that he bullied her on set and treated her like crap, it makes sense that she didn't perform as well as she could have.
In short, Kubrick was a prick.
@@irarelyupload6930the stories about bullying on the set of Shining are exaggarated.
a lot of them also straigh up said they would never be in a stanley kubrick film ever again. most of the actors who stuck through it all end up saying that they done have any hard feelings or anything as they understand what they had to go through was for the resulting movie and they usually understood he was a bit of a renegade but he got results.
Fun fact: A film called ""NOPE" created by jordan peele had an actor that was in a horse riding incident and so they had to get rid of his trauma.
Was it the extra in Last Samurai that got kicked in the nuts?
Get rid of.
How robotic.
You didnt research the Roar segment. There was one incident that led to one actres being accidentally scratched by one of the lions and it was the one incident that pushed things a bit too far. Also, the father of the entire cast was the director, if I recall correctly
if you make a part 2, you definitely gotta include the twilight zone helicopter accident that killed the actor Vic Morrow and child actors Myca Dinh Le and Renee Shin-Yi Chen. there is also footage of this happening on youtube. Pretty crazy accident
Cheryl Wheeler (the stunt actress mentioned in the back to the future segment) unfortunately passed in a shooting in 2020.
It would be great if you could create or find an iceberg of movie set accidents.
I second this! There's a lot of other film accidents that come to mind. This list is certainly not exhaustive.
Or you could watch another video rather than just genericizing something with a sheep buzzword like iceberg.
@@brysoncherry9884knew someone like you would reply lmao
I'm genuinely surprised that the Twilight Zone accident wasn't covered in this video. Lead actor Vic Morrow and two children were put into an insanely dangerous stunt scene where a helicopter was flying overhead while he carried them over a shallow lake.
The director kept telling the pilot to get closer, leading to the helicopter spinning out of control and crashing on top of them. The helicopter blades decapitated Vic and one child, while the other was crushed.
There's actual fucking footage of this online. People have posted a frame by frame progression of events where you just see it happening in the blink of an eye. It was chilling, and it forever changed my view on life.
the thing about the first roar clips you showed just proves how lucky they were, bc you're wrong, they're not mauling them- that is genuine big cat play behavior, i've seen it a lot. meaning the injuries to the cast and crew could have been so much worse and more common had they not been so lucky. that said even play behavior from these things can be deadly, they don't exactly understand how much more fragile we are than them when attempting to play
1:40 this is actually inaccurate. The branch didn’t break on the first attempt. The footage of this scene we see in the film is the first shot. The director of the film was ready to move on with production after filming the scene once, but Jackie Chan insisted on reshooting it as a backup. On the second shoot is when the branch broke and Jackie Chan fell 5 metres to the ground
10:30 he had an oxygen tank that was beneath the water when shooting this scene
The story about A Clockwork Orange isn't quite correct, only partially. You said "they forced him to do the scene again." That's not true. The 1st time they did the scene, Malcolm McDowell did go temporarily blind for a day or 2 and his cornea was scratched.
Something important related to this story that you may not know is the director, Stanley Kubrick, was notorious for doing a shiteton of takes. In The Shining, there's a scene where Jack Nicholson is in crazy mode and slowly moving towards Shelley Duvall while she's backing up a flight of stairs, trying to keep her distance. She's also swinging a baseball bat at him repeatedly, trying to keep him from getting any closer and she actually hits him when close to the top and he falls down the stairs while she runs away.
That scene is maybe 1 minute or 2 and typically on average a director would do between 2-20 takes of a scene, maybe 20-30 at the extreme end, depending on whether or not the scene is done how the director wants it and as long as no technical mishaps happen and no actor forgets a line or gives a less than great performance, then the director, after getting a take or 2 they like, they'll usually do one more take for safety and then move onto another scene.
For that stairs scene in The Shining, Stanley Kubrick made them do *127 friggin takes!!!* Shelley Duvall doesn't have to do much acting in that scene when she cries because she was actually exhausted and scared irl.
Anyway, after just the 1st take or 2 of the Ludovico technique scene in A Clockwork Orange, Malcolm McDowell got his cornea scratched and they stopped filming that scene. The temporary blindness lasted about 1 or 2 days but it halted production. Due to his eye injury, Malcolm pleaded with Stanley Kubrick to move that scene to the end of the shooting schedule, that way if his cornea was scratched again, he wouldn't have to hold up production to heal and Kubrick agreed that was the smart choice.
So, that was actually the last scene they shot. Malcolm McDowell wasn't "forced" to shoot the scene again, it was _his request_ to move the scene and Kubrick agreed. Malcolm McDowell also went into the scene pretty much knowing he'd likely get some sort of eye injury after shooting that scene, which of course, inevitably happened again. It wasn't a surprise that they sprung on McDowell, it was moved for practical reasons.
*An additional fun fact:*
During the Ludovico technique scene in A Clockwork Orange where Malcolm McDowell has the eye clamps on, there's one of the white lab coated scientists conducting the experiment of the Ludovico technique. The guy is sitting next to Malcolm McDowell, continously applying eye drops to his eyes so they don't dry out. That person isn't an actor, he's actually a real life doctor, optometrist specifically, making sure that Malcolm McDowell doesn't suffer any permanent issues and is making sure he's getting enough eye drops to keep his eyes from getting too dry.
Other Accidents that I think are worth mentioning:
- Twilight Zone: The Movie
- The Crow
- The Skywayman
twilight zone helicopter crash is probably the worst one yet
"Fell directly on his head" The next sentence explaining how he fell onto his lower body...
It's hilarious how you always say "let me know if you want to watch more of this". YES. ABSOLUTELY.
With a safe word of "Don't Stop!" You should have known it was a set up for failure at your expense! Directors love to bring out real pain and trauma.
Heres one literally no one has talked about: Olivia Jackson. Olivia Jackson was a stunt performer who lost her arm, and almost her life, during the filming of a resident evil film. That womans career was ended by a poorly planned stunt
"yknow, they don't wanna get eaten by these bloodthirsty animals, but i know im hungry, for HelloFresh!"
Noah’s ark wasn’t really an accident. The director purposefully put real people there for realism. It sounds almost like he wanted them dead.
2:43 lol, he “severed” a hole in his head. I had no idea that was possible.
scenarios like these are why I don’t wanna become an entertainer, no matter how much I wanna be one. imagine dying at that very moment, and the people present don’t believe it.
danish actor and comedian dirch passer passed away in such a way. he was preparing for a stage performance but suffered a stroke backstage, and needed medical attention. an announcer ran up on stage telling folks about the situation. the crowd laughs, thinking that it’s part of the show. absolutely macabre and heartbreaking
pls do a part two!! id love to see more clips from other films, your videos are so entertaining 🙌
I’m not surprised that a clockwork orange has accidents 🤦🏾♂️
Great Video as always! Surprised that the Eiger Sanction wasn't mentioned though. A 1975 Clint Eastwood film that almost didn't come to theaters due to the death that occurred while filming on the actual Eiger mountain. From what I could find, Eastwood wanted to wrap up after the death but other climbers helping the film urged him to finish in honor of the loss. Can't confirm that part but it's what I could find with quick google searches.
Man, not only can you see her body fall on the outside of the glass, but you can actually see her crash into the pillar in the shot just before it.
It's crazy that she managed to live from that, and I'm certainly glad she's still with us, but dang, that should've never happened.
None of these should've ever happened.
Hey, YET; I think you should cover "Tyler's Last Words" in a future "Disturbing Media"/"Midnight Frights" volume... much like "Magician Cuts Wife in Half", it is a fake video that gives eerily REAL vibes, but was debunked by ScareTheater. Hope you cover it in a future volume. Also, I am in Pakistan on vacation right now, and I made sure to watch the entirety of a few ads through on the 3-hour-long Disney iceberg video, for you to earn some money due to how UA-cam treats you... much love from Pakistan...!!!
Oh yeah, and today's my birthday too...!
@@roxentrail5388Happy birthday!!! 🎉
@@ravenforsyth8367 Thanks...!!!
My Two Cents: Kubrick was an absolute psychopath when it came to his films. Actors were essentially puppets to move around. He was perfectly fine with the “ wooden “
performance of Ryan O’Neal, but terrorized Shelley Duvall so throughly she never recovered. And I’m sure the guys from Full Metal Jacket have stories to tell.
You'd think when it comes to hanging sceans they'd have like a safe action so the actor could tell people they're not okay. Like tapping on the leg or something
Describes list of injuries, and then nobody got injured in this film?
Another crazy accident was captured on the Twilight Zone movie set, during one scene involving a real helicopter something went wrong resulting in it crashing and 3 people losing their lives including a child actor
Malcolm McDowell had his rib broken by the actor who stands on his chest during the Ludovico demonstration.
Great examples. I haven’t heard of most of them.
0:35 I feel so bad but the part where micheal Jackson’s hair caught on fire and he just kept dancing made me laugh so hard for no reason lmfao 😭💀✋🏻
TW animal death. Also with Roar, not really accident related but there were also floods and some people had to be rescued. 15 of the lions and tigers escaped because of this, the head lion was killed and had to be replaced. Because of all of this, there was a $3 million damage costs and production was halted for a whole year. A complete disaster movie!
Jackie Chan after breaking 18636.36 bones in his body, nearly losing his ability to move and narrowly avoiding the possibility of a coma or death after every stunt: guys i think i broke my finger.
I genuinely recommend learning how to correctly fall, I was so accident prone that I almost subconsciously learnt how to fall safely, mostly it’s just how roll when you fall, I rarely get hurt because of how I can fall, but from higher falls (specifically stairs, I have fallen down way to many stairs, and I do not recommend it) and I’m able to get *less* hurt, still hurt a lot, but just *less* I’ve broken bones multiple times, but I’ve been able to prevent like severe brain injuries, cause head injuries are way worse than any broken bone. Anyways I do recommend learning how to fall safely from no matter the height, it’s also kinda fun
The cats and other animals appearing in Roar would mostly end up in the Shambala Perserve started by Tippi Hedren who was in the movie as she was married to Noel Marshall at the time. The bull elephant in the movie responsible for fracturing Hendren's ankle and breaking his trainer's shoulder was named Tembo and he passed away in 2005 at 48. Marshall and Hendren divorced in 1981. He never made another movie athough he some how had money to support Shambala, a place he would never visit as he couldn't stand to be around the animals that he had loved.
In twilight zone the movie
1983
3 people actually died in a scene with a helicopter and explosions.
The story is heart breaking
Every other video like this has that accident and the crow one, I’m glad I didn’t see those 2 accidents on Here. Seen them way too many times.
There are two disturbing scenes I saw in Filipino film and TV Series.
One was the actor and now Senator Robin Padilla got his arm caught in an explosion, leaving his arm burnt, and scars were there.
Another was about Valerie Concepcion, when she was accidentally run over by a car in a set of her TV series, hitting her back and hips, and took the rest of the scene in a hospital where she was treated.
You know how deep you're gonna go when you start off with a famous actor cracking his skull open, fracturing his pelvis, and burning off all the skin on his hands.
i love clockwork orange its an amazing film , but malcolm did not deserve any treatment he received
A film with multiple brutual realistic rape scenes is an "amazing film" lol okay 😅
@@jasperzatch610 do you think the movie purposely adds rape as if it condones it
@@jasperzatch610 Yes it is one of the best films ever made, you just don't know how to distinguish reality from art
@@jasperzatch610 Tbf you're supposed to be disgusted by those things. The whole point of the movie is to show the world through a psychopath's view
@@jasperzatch610yes. Murder is shown in many films and people think thats okay, but when rape is shown they draw the line. Its bs.
that chair scene in clockwork orange was freaky just because of how real it was, and the drowning scene was messed up cause they did that whole echo thing when he smacked the tub with the baton it makes you feel like your head is in there.
It seems there is a pattern of film directors getting a power trip.
The 30 ft drop one makes me so upset because she literally told him that it was dangerous and brought up real concerns just for him to act stupid and put lives at risk just for a good shot. So unprofessional.
I like your Omega Mart beanie
as someone who has scratched my cornea before, that shit is agonizing! that shit hurts so fucking bad. i feel so bad for McDowell.
Accidents happen, and this may be considered normal to some extent, however it can go wrong for multiple reasons. Film sets aren't always prone to accidents, which makes it even scarier. Just be mindful of the fact that you won't always be granted safety and/or security in these types of scenarios.
even tho I'm a person that doesn't really apprecciate wrecklessness and thinks stunt work should be extremely regulated, the jackie chan parts kinda make me appreciate the effort he puts on his movies and how someone with (at the time) a very big language barrier got to make a space for himself in such a big industry (although he should've had some precautions; you only have one body after all)
Ngl bro you need to get to the point. It may cut the time but it’ll save a lot of redundancy.
Clockwork orange is by far the hardest movie for me to watch
Take a shot everytime he says "actually"
You can not “sever” a hole. Sever means, to cut off or cut apart
i just watched a clockwork orange recently in april for WB 100th anniversary it is a very wild intense movie but i had a feeling the eye clamps were real and can tell he was very uncomfortable and that drowning scene made me feel suffocated they really did malcolm wrong for this and i also learned he is afraid of snakes and they made him have a pet snake i can imagine the fear he had after all of this the director really sounds insane and sadistic
His hands must've been shredded 💀
Really Jackie, is that worth it? 🤨
your videos are always the best everything in your videos are amazing
Had to subscribe bro, it’s not just your content that’s great, it’s you as well, you have a very cool personality
Is that a Meow Wolf beanie?? 🤔 also great video!
The director of Roar: You need help? Eh, boohoo! The show must go on!
I'm not at all impressed by directors such as Kubrick torturing their actors, or method actors harassing other people in character in the name of "art". If you want to do extreme performance art yourself and push your own body/mind to the brink (e.g. Marina Abramović), that's fine, it's your life. But don't bring in people who haven't consented to that. Actors sign a contract saying they'll act. They don't agree to be drowned or blinded or psychologically pushed to the brink i.e Shelley Duval. There are hundreds of incredible films that have been made without any deliberate physical or mental harm being caused, these people have no excuse.
I'm surprised you didn't include the twilight zone movie accident
same
Man, the fact that some of these can happen at all really shows the level of corruption and uncaringness in Hollywood.
"Anything for the shot" I guess.