ITT: Movie/TV Trivia

ITT: Movie/TV Trivia

>The "cafeteria catch" from the first Spider-Man movie was not an effect. Tobey Maguire actually caught all those lunch items on the tray. It look many takes.
>Jesus in Andrei Rublev was originally supposed to be played by Andrzej Zulawski
>The ending of The Neon Demon was quite different in the original screenplay (although also similar in many ways). Said ending was disliked by everyone working on the film since it didn't fit with the tone of what the film had become (Refn works chronologically and often changes his plans), and the production had spent too much money to shoot that ending anyway. Actress Abbey Lee then came up with the current ending, which she claimed was autobiographic. This claimed Refn to include the final shots of Abbey's character walking, unharmed and victorious.
>David Prowse revealed that Darth Vader was Luke Skywalker's father and that this would be told during a duel in an obscure interview for a local newspaper in the 70's. This is particularly strange considering Lucas himself had not come up with that plot point yet and mostly likely never heard of the interview. It's unknown whether Prowse told Lucas about this and Lucas stole the idea, and that him not crediting Prowse is the origin of their feud.

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>During principal photography of the Untitled Terrence Malick Project, the director reportedly demoted Ryan Gosling to cameraman and cast himself in the lead role for the unsimulated sex scene with Rooney Mara. The scene was not used in the final film.

>The "cafeteria catch" from the first Spider-Man movie was not an effect. Tobey Maguire actually caught all those lunch items on the tray. It look many takes.
Wtf I'm literally boycotting Marvel now

>Abbey Lee used to date a qt twink

qts

John Landis killed kids

>In the beginning of filming Eyes Wide Shut, Kubrick deliberately kept Nicole Kidman away from Tom Cruise while shooting her fantasy sequences to instill jealousy within Dr. Bill's character. Kidman would spend several days with a male model separated from Cruise.

So did Obama.

>The original Technicolor used a special camera that ran three strips of film, literally three spools of 35mm film parallel to each color.
>The image was split into 3 with a prism system, so that each strip of film could record one color. Also each strip had to be color filtered, which further reduced sensibility. That's why filming in Technicolor required much more light than standard black and white film.
>Only the Technicolor corporation owned cameras, and would merely rent them out to studios together with all the processing etc.

What would you call that color?

>Due to the size and noise of the Technicolor camera, it had to put in a soundproofing blimp, which made the whole thing about as large as a washing machine.

>On the photograph you can see the blimped technicolor camera on the left, on the set of Alfred Hitchcock's rope.

>This makes the amazing camera movements in that film only more impressive.

>While filming the stunt where he leaps from a wall onto a tree, the branch Jackie Chan grabbed a hold of broke and he hit his head on a rock, nearly killing him and leaving him with a permanent thimble-sized hole on the right side of his head. The fall also left him hard of hearing in one ear.

tealquoise

>In the early 1930's a long-running series of documentary shorts called "Traveltalks" started production. It filmed foreign lands and exotic location with music and narration.

>In 1935 this series started shooting on Technicolor, leaving a color film record of hundreds of places around the world in the 1930's and 40's, like some rare pre-war color images of Japan youtube.com/watch?v=uOe_PUTIjlc

I assume this is a big part of why he phased out doing his own stunts. if he gets hit in that fucking thing he's toast

Technicolor

Based

>Film production moved to the west coast not because of the weather, but because of east coast film projector patent bullshitting by Edison

Bill Murray turned down the role of Han Solo in the original Star Wars film. It would later go to a then-homeless Harrison Ford.

this was around 1985 i think, he didnt start slowing down till like 2010

TIL When Matt LeBlanc auditioned for the role of Joey in "Friends" he only had $11 dollars to his name. When the cast got their paychecks, the first thing that Courteney Cox bought was a car. Matt LeBlanc bought a hot meal.

>>Elle thought shooting the knife scene was "kinda fun" and she "enjoyed it"

Based

lel