What are some of the best unscripted scenes in film history?

What are some of the best unscripted scenes in film history?

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youtu.be/03sY9U0xrng
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youtube.com/watch?v=C31k-vBw__c
youtube.com/watch?v=oOUqVuNzkA8
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GOAT

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HEY I'M WALKIN HERE

it was good but it was kind of like an entirely different movie.

You saying this was unscripted?

"I love you."

"I know."

youtu.be/03sY9U0xrng

Haven't even seen the movies, but it still cracks me up.

I never knew the Joker really killed a black guy, Heath is worse than Rami

Yeah, man. Heat Legend not only managed to get a slam a pencil into a table without it snapping, but he also killed the extra he walked up to him.

Totally unscripted, but Nolan decided to keep it in anyway.

youtube.com/watch?v=XB7R0ZxNgC4

Great scene, but pic related (I think it's pic related) was a legit car crash. The guy who crashes into Hackman had no idea a movie was being filmed and was on his way to work, and a lot of this car chase was pretty legit and dangerous because they didn't get the permits to film it.

Yes. It really doesn't get better than that.

Impressive.

Wtf

>"Heath said he wanted to improvise and we naturally said yes. The guy really got into the role over the past few months so we figured he had something really special planned. Some of us had our families there. After cleaning up we had to make the decision whether or not we were going to soldier on with the production or call the police."

Pic related was improvised. Heath Ledger was BASED[/SPOILER]

>Mr Tarantino, are you sure I need to die?
>SHEDDEP BLECK

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That wasn't unscripted they stole it from Babylon 5
youtube.com/watch?v=C31k-vBw__c

Awful quality on the video. The Joker one was much better, the Babylon 5 didn't have a pencil or anyone dying

>screencapping your own post

>Everyone is clapping
>Guess i'll clap too

Very impressive improv skills.

>When did he argue which was better?

it was bretty gud tho

He didn't. He claimed it wasn't a ripoff and just added it was better

Whether or not it's better is irrelevant. Also no fucking clue why I put my last post in greentext.

I dont feel like finding a YT clip, but Django Unchained. The scene where Leo is demonstrating the skull of a nigger. He slammed his hand and broke it with glass, requiring stitches. But during the scene he just kept filming, and used his real blood to smear it over the black girls face. And once that scene was completed, everyone got up and clapped.

youtube.com/watch?v=oOUqVuNzkA8

>Originally, Paul Dano was not going to sing "Run Nigger Run" for this scene. The original scene featured all of the footage of the slaves at work that you see in the theatrical cut, but used an 1867 audio recording of the African-American folk song from "Slave Songs of the United States". After watching most of the working scenes shot, Paul Dano approached director Steve McQueen, saying "Wait, dude, just line all of the guys up real quick, I have an idea. Set up two cameras, one on me and one on them, waist up. Paul then asked the actors to clap while he sang. In the end, they ended up using Paul Dano's voice for the scene--they were even able to use all of the previously recorded shots because Dano made up lyrics on the spot to lengthen the song.

Paul Dano reportedly stayed in character during the filming of 12 Years a Slave.[10][11] This led to a number of awkward interactions with the predominantly black cast and the film's director, who is also black. According to lead actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, Dano took to calling the black actors "minstrel niggers" and would feign a stereotypical slave accent when conversing with director Steve McQueen, calling him "massa" and "boss nigger".[10][12]

God someone please tell me where the full version of this is.

>The actor, Ato Essandoh, was pronounced dead on the set by DiCaprio himself
I don't why that part in particular made me laugh.

wtf heath really slammed some black dude into a pencil?!

youtube.com/watch?v=W8zWs0V1eco

Apparently many extras died from various ailments due to attempts at depicting the brutality of slavery. They had to modify a trailer into a mobile mourge to store bodies while on location.

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Apparently, much of What's Eating Gilbert Grape is improvised.

In 1991 during the filming for 'Point Break' Keanu Reeves (whose role involved playing rookie FBI agent 'Johnny Utah') was surfing with co-stars when a small child was dragged under the waves and began to struggle to stay above surface. As his co-stars rushed to help, Reeves held out an arm infront of them, stopping them and was reported saying by Lori Petty (who played the character Tyler Endicott in the film) "The waves have claimed her, let her fight for her own life". The crew, dumbfounded, proceeded to watch her struggle until her body disappeared beneath the waves, lifeless. He was later spotted outside the child's house, making drowning gestures and thanking the family for their child's sacrifice to the great ocean.

When Jack Palance was afraid of horses in Shane so they had to drug the horse so it wouldn't take off running.

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that's the OPs joke. He wants us to post scenes that absolutely couldn't be unscripted, and it would be funny if they were.