View Full Version : Film Anectodes and Other Movie-related Stories
gwynplaine
03-05-2012, 08:11 PM
_ It's no secret that Bette Davis and Joan Crawford hated each other. During the filming of "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane", in the scene where Davis' character has to drag Crawford's on the floor, Crawford intentionally loaded herself with extra weight and Davis threw her back after repeated takes.
_ Speaking of loaded, on the set of "Spider Baby", Lon Chaney Jr., a notorious drinker, was sucking on oranges all the time. People were happy that he quit drinking for the film and that he was so serious about getting his daily intake of Vitamin C. Turns out the oranges were full of vodka:woot:
_ During the filming of Fitzcarraldo, Members of the Indian Tribe Herzog was shooting with came to ask him if he wanted them to kill Klaus Kinski for him, since he was such a nuisance on the set. Herzog politely declined the offer.
_ Heath Ledger locked himself up in a hotel room for a month, prior to shooting TDK, so he could perfect the Joker laugh, speech and mannerisms.
Some of these stories are probably true, others pure fiction, who knows and who cares? They are now part of Movie Lore.
If you care to share a story you know about films in general, welcome to this thread and thank you, because I personally love Film Anecdotes.
_ Speaking of loaded, on the set of "Spider Baby", Lon Chaney Jr., a notorious drinker, was sucking on oranges all the time. People were happy that he quit drinking for the film and that he was so serious about getting his daily intake of Vitamin C. Turns out the oranges were full of vodka:woot:
:funny:
gwynplaine
03-06-2012, 10:42 AM
Today "The Holy Grail" comes out on Blu:awesome: so here we go with a little Monty Python anecdote.
One day the Gang received a letter from an appalled woman who had just discovered that one of them was gay. She lashed out at them for having a homosexual in their midst.
The Monty Python answered back with a letter thanking her and telling her that they had found the culprit and that they had killed him :funny:
gwynplaine
03-06-2012, 07:01 PM
According to Malcolm McDowell, Stanley Kubrick originally planned to cast Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones in A Clockwork Orange, but was persuaded to change his mind when McDowell revealed that he could belch on command. He recalled. "I used it a few times in the film and in subsequent films. When you have a talent like that, you get it out whenever you can. It should be on my CV."
gwynplaine
03-07-2012, 08:13 PM
After "Star Wars" was released, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg celebrated by going on vacation in Hawaii together. During a conversation on the beach, Spielberg mentioned that he had always dreamed of directing a James Bond movie. That's when Lucas allegedly pitched him the story for "Raiders of the Lost Ark". And the rest is history as they say.
gwynplaine
03-21-2012, 08:30 PM
OK, one last one for the road:
_ Marlon Brando, concerned about his uncontrollable, escalating weight put a lock on his fridge.
Some times later, Jack Nicholson, his Mulholland Drive neighbor, gets up in the middle of the night and walks in on Brando raiding his fridge and pigging out on his food:woot:
C. Lee
03-21-2012, 08:43 PM
I met William Smith at a western convention several years ago. He told me that when he made the movie Deadly Trackers, Rod Taylor and Richard Harris hated each other so much, that they were constantly getting into fistfights and delaying the movie. When his part in the film was over, the director hired him to stay on the set until it finished shooting to keep them apart. He stayed on another 5 or 6 weeks just to stop them from fighting.
gwynplaine
03-21-2012, 08:51 PM
I met William Smith at a western convention several years ago. He told me that when he made the movie Deadly Trackers, Rod Taylor and Richard Harris hated each other so much, that they were constantly getting into fistfights and delaying the movie. When his part in the film was over, the director hired him to stay on the set until it finished shooting to keep them apart. He stayed on another 5 or 6 weeks just to stop them from fighting.
Great anecdote:up:
Even better as I've always been a fan of William Smith, since discovering him on "Rich Man, Poor Man" when I was a kid (Cool that you met him in person). I'm also a huge fan of Richard Harris.
Now, I really have to see this film:yay: Thanks for the story and the info,
C. Lee.
gwynplaine
03-23-2012, 06:47 PM
I don't know if it's still the case, but John Travolta and Gerard Depardieu used to be very good friends when they were younger. And as a favor, Depardieu ended up dubbing his pal for the French version of De Palma's "Blow Out."
Obi-Ron
04-09-2012, 07:58 PM
The coat worn by Professor Marvel (http://www.snopes.com/movies/films/ozcoat.asp) in The Wizard of Oz was bought from a secondhand store - and was, by coincidence, apparently owned originally by Oz author L Frank Baum :ikyn
gwynplaine
04-09-2012, 10:26 PM
The coat worn by Professor Marvel (http://www.snopes.com/movies/films/ozcoat.asp) in The Wizard of Oz was bought from a secondhand store - and was, by coincidence, apparently owned originally by Oz author L Frank Baum :ikyn
:awesome:
Pretty cool:up:
gwynplaine
04-09-2012, 10:43 PM
Stanley Kubrick's direction to Vincent D'Onofrio for his last scene in "Full Metal Jacket" was:
"I want it big, Vince... Lon Chaney big."
gwynplaine
04-11-2012, 07:43 PM
According to his then girl friend, Anjelica Huston, Jack Nicholson, a notorious fun loving gentleman, didn't do too much partying during the shooting of "The Shining", because he was exhausted and drained by the very demanding role of Jack Torrance and all the takes that Kubrick requested.
danoyse
04-11-2012, 08:42 PM
When Walt Disney met with Glynnis Johns about a role in Mary Poppins, she was disappointed that Walt wanted her to play the role of Mrs. Banks instead of Mary Poppins.
So Disney assured her that it was a great role, and that the Sherman Brothers had written this terrific song just for her character, so she agreed to consider it.
After she left, Walt called the Sherman Brothers and asked them to write a song for Mrs. Banks. :oldrazz:
The song they wrote was "Sister Suffragette", which turned out to be one of the funniest songs in the film:
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Also, Walt Disney's favorite song in Mary Poppins was "Feed the Birds", which he always asked the Sherman Brothers to play when they met in his office on Friday afternoons:
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When Richard Sherman played "Feed the Birds" at Disneyland to celebrate Walt Disney's 100th birthday, he blew a kiss towards Walt's statue, and a bird briefly landed on his piano as he was singing it.
gwynplaine
04-11-2012, 09:05 PM
When Walt Disney met with Glynnis Johns about a role in Mary Poppins, she was disappointed that Walt wanted her to play the role of Mrs. Banks instead of Mary Poppins.
So Disney assured her that it was a great role, and that the Sherman Brothers had written this terrific song just for her character, so she agreed to consider it.
After she left, Walt called the Sherman Brothers and asked them to write a song for Mrs. Banks. :oldrazz:
The song they wrote was "Sister Suffragette", which turned out to be one of the funniest songs in the film:
aznNQ_5Kz8A&feature=related
Also, Walt Disney's favorite song in Mary Poppins was "Feed the Birds", which he always asked the Sherman Brothers to play when they met in his office on Friday afternoons:
XHrRxQVUFN4
When Richard Sherman played "Feed the Birds" at Disneyland to celebrate Walt Disney's 100th birthday, he blew a kiss towards Walt's statue, and a bird briefly landed on his piano as he was singing it.
Cool story:up: Thanks, Danoyse.
TomServo
04-12-2012, 08:59 AM
Peter Jackson loved the movie Cabin Fever (Eli Roth '02) so much, he stopped production on LOTR several times to screen it for the crew for artistic inspiration, he also did free publicity quotes for the movie to help give it buzz.
gwynplaine
04-12-2012, 10:27 AM
Peter Jackson loved the movie Cabin Fever (Eli Roth '02) so much, he stopped production on LOTR several times to screen it for the crew for artistic inspiration, he also did free publicity quotes for the movie to help give it buzz.
Good one. I didn't know about it. Thanks, TomServo:up:
C. Lee
04-12-2012, 10:07 PM
Years ago I met a bit player from the John Wayne movie THE ALAMO. He showed me pics of him in costume with Wayne and some of the others, I recognized him from the movie, so I know he was at least really there. But I can't guarantee this is true.
He told me a story about how he and several others were setting up the bar fight scene, when Patrick Wayne (John's son) came in with a couple of girls. He said Patrick was showing off for them, and busted a bunch of the sugar glass bottles and breakaway chairs and tables.Then they left, leaving the mess. The guy telling the story they tried to hurriedly clean things up and were trying to get replacements for the props because the shoot was coming up....when John came in to check on the set. John was the producer and director as well as star of the movie...so when he saw the mess he started to blow his stack. He hollered several things....but basicly wanted to know what the hell happened. The guy said they weren't sure what to say to him....they weren't sure what he would do if told his son had done it....but they went ahead and told him that Patrick had done it showing off for some girls.
He said that John told them to stop what they were doing....and that he would be back. A little while later he showed up with Patrick by the scruff of the neck and threw him into the set. He said John told him to clean everything up and told everyone the cost of the replacements would come out of Patrick's salary.
gwynplaine
04-13-2012, 06:28 PM
Years ago I met a bit player from the John Wayne movie THE ALAMO. He showed me pics of him in costume with Wayne and some of the others, I recognized him from the movie, so I know he was at least really there. But I can't guarantee this is true.
He told me a story about how he and several others were setting up the bar fight scene, when Patrick Wayne (John's son) came in with a couple of girls. He said Patrick was showing off for them, and busted a bunch of the sugar glass bottles and breakaway chairs and tables.Then they left, leaving the mess. The guy telling the story they tried to hurriedly clean things up and were trying to get replacements for the props because the shoot was coming up....when John came in to check on the set. John was the producer and director as well as star of the movie...so when he saw the mess he started to blow his stack. He hollered several things....but basicly wanted to know what the hell happened. The guy said they weren't sure what to say to him....they weren't sure what he would do if told his son had done it....but they went ahead and told him that Patrick had done it showing off for some girls.
He said that John told them to stop what they were doing....and that he would be back. A little while later he showed up with Patrick by the scruff of the neck and threw him into the set. He said John told him to clean everything up and told everyone the cost of the replacements would come out of Patrick's salary.
Haha:woot: Great story:up:
gwynplaine
04-13-2012, 07:49 PM
In the original version of "Cape Fear", the scene where Robert Mitchum attacks Polly Bergen's character on the houseboat was almost completely improvised. Before the scene was filmed, J. Lee Thompson suddenly told a crew member: "Bring me a dish of eggs!" Mitchum rubbing the eggs on Bergen was not scripted and Bergen's reactions were real. She also suffered back injuries from being knocked around so much. She felt the impact of the "attack" for days.
gwynplaine
04-20-2012, 07:53 PM
E.T's screenplay was largely written while Steven Spielberg was on location shooting "Raiders of the Lost Ark", during filming breaks.
Spielberg dictated the story to screenwriter Melissa Mathison who was there with her then boyfriend and future husband Harrison Ford.
gwynplaine
04-22-2012, 08:52 PM
During the filming of The Shining, the set on stage 3 caught fire due to the large amount of lighting equipment being used, causing damage estimated at £1.25M.
On a side note, Jack Nicholson turns 75 today. Happy Birthday, Jack!
danoyse
04-23-2012, 06:55 PM
E.T's screenplay was largely written while Steven Spielberg was on location shooting "Raiders of the Lost Ark", during filming breaks.
Spielberg dictated the story to screenwriter Melissa Mathison who was there with her then boyfriend and future husband Harrison Ford.
And Harrison Ford filmed a cameo for ET in a scene where he played Elliot's school principal, although only the back of his head was seen. In the scene, he's lecturing Elliot about the incident with the frogs, but when his back is turned, Elliot's chair lifts off the ground because at home ET was levitating things as an experiment.
The scene was, of course, cut from the film. But Henry Thomas was a huge Star Wars fan, and he was so excited to work with Harrison Ford that he took that day's call sheet home to show off to his friends.
Melissa Mathison also had a cameo as a school nurse in ET, but her scene was also cut.
danoyse
04-23-2012, 06:57 PM
During the filming of The Shining, the set on stage 3 caught fire due to the large amount of lighting equipment being used, causing damage estimated at £1.25M.
On a side note, Jack Nicholson turns 75 today. Happy Birthday, Jack!
Also, the little boy who played Danny Torrance was never told that he was starring in a horror movie. Stanley Kubrick was afraid of scaring him.
danoyse
04-23-2012, 07:07 PM
In The Omen, the evil smile that little Damien smiles at the camera in the final scene wasn't intended. Originally, Robert Thorne succeeded in killing Damien, but after a screening someone suggested that "the devil win" at the end, so the ending was re-shot with Damien attending the funeral of his parents, then glaring at the camera.
Originally, the final shot was to be of Damien giving an evil look (not a smile) at the camera. But little Harvey Stephens, who played Damien and was about 6 years old at the time, got the giggles when they were shooting the scene and they couldn't get him to stop smiling. In fact, his smile reportedly got bigger because Richard Donner kept telling him "Harvey, don't smile...don't you smile!" which only made him giggle more.
In the end, the smile stayed. And it's still creepy.
gwynplaine
04-23-2012, 07:31 PM
And Harrison Ford filmed a cameo for ET in a scene where he played Elliot's school principal, although only the back of his head was seen. In the scene, he's lecturing Elliot about the incident with the frogs, but when his back is turned, Elliot's chair lifts off the ground because at home ET was levitating things as an experiment.
The scene was, of course, cut from the film. But Henry Thomas was a huge Star Wars fan, and he was so excited to work with Harrison Ford that he took that day's call sheet home to show off to his friends.
Melissa Mathison also had a cameo as a school nurse in ET, but her scene was also cut.
Awesome:awesome: I didn't know that.
Also, the little boy who played Danny Torrance was never told that he was starring in a horror movie. Stanley Kubrick was afraid of scaring him.
Cool:up: On a related note, the little boy, Danny Loyd, is said to have been found by Leon Vitali, who played the part of Lord Bullingdon in "Barry Lyndon" and went on to become Stanley Kubrick's personal assistant.
In The Omen, the evil smile that little Damien smiles at the camera in the final scene wasn't intended. Originally, Robert Thorne succeeded in killing Damien, but after a screening someone suggested that "the devil win" at the end, so the ending was re-shot with Damien attending the funeral of his parents, then glaring at the camera.
Originally, the final shot was to be of Damien giving an evil look (not a smile) at the camera. But little Harvey Stephens, who played Damien and was about 6 years old at the time, got the giggles when they were shooting the scene and they couldn't get him to stop smiling. In fact, his smile reportedly got bigger because Richard Donner kept telling him "Harvey, don't smile...don't you smile!" which only made him giggle more.
In the end, the smile stayed. And it's still creepy.
Wow, great story. I didn't know it either and I love this movie and the creepy ending as well of course. Thanks, Danoyse.
danoyse
04-23-2012, 08:20 PM
Aileen Quinn, who played the lead role in the film version of Annie, had previously appeared in the Broadway production of Annie as an orphan understudy - but never played Annie on stage.
Jack Wild, who played the Artful Dodger in the film version of Oliver!, had appeared in the London stage production of Oliver! as one of Fagin's boys - but was told he was too short to play the Artful Dodger on stage.
He got an Oscar nomination for playing that role in the film. Although he had to wear lifts in his shoes, since, even at 15, he was still shorter than 9-year-old Mark Lester, who played Oliver.
Also, the reason that Oliver sings like a girl in that movie is because his singing was dubbed by the music supervisor's daughter. Mark Lester couldn't sing.
Secret Fawful
04-23-2012, 10:15 PM
The Harrison Ford cameo is on the Laserdisc edition of ET I believe.
gwynplaine
04-24-2012, 07:46 PM
Aileen Quinn, who played the lead role in the film version of Annie, had previously appeared in the Broadway production of Annie as an orphan understudy - but never played Annie on stage.
Jack Wild, who played the Artful Dodger in the film version of Oliver!, had appeared in the London stage production of Oliver! as one of Fagin's boys - but was told he was too short to play the Artful Dodger on stage.
He got an Oscar nomination for playing that role in the film. Although he had to wear lifts in his shoes, since, even at 15, he was still shorter than 9-year-old Mark Lester, who played Oliver.
Also, the reason that Oliver sings like a girl in that movie is because his singing was dubbed by the music supervisor's daughter. Mark Lester couldn't sing.
:up:
gwynplaine
04-24-2012, 08:44 PM
Spielberg's "Duel" was shot in 13 days:awesome:
And it was a TV Movie in the US, but the film was released theatrically in Europe.
danoyse
04-24-2012, 09:56 PM
When the internment camp was destroyed in Empire of the Sun, Christian Bale was supposed to jump up and down and yell as the fighter planes were bombing the camp.
Unfortunately, Bale (who was 13 at the time), got so caught up watching the set explode that he forgot to do any of it and just ran back and forth on the roof.
Since you can only blow up your set once, that was the only take they had to do it. :doh:
There's a clip of it on a behind-the-scenes documentary, and it was a great look at how incredibly patient Steven Spielberg is with child actors, when he was calmly asking Christian (who looked somewhere between furious with himself and close to tears) what had happened there.
I couldn't find that clip, but this was the final scene - the first few seconds was the part he screwed up. Spielberg fixed it by adding close ups and additional shots of him jumping up and down. It still ended up being one of the best scenes in the movie:
1ouJ_WyS9v8
C. Lee
04-24-2012, 10:07 PM
Speaking of EMPIRE OF THE SUN.....I remember watching Siskel and Ebert review it, and Ebert complained about how unrealistic the scene was, where Bale crosses the wire crawling through the mud and is almost stepped on by a Japanese guard who doesn't see him.....a couple of days later I see J.G Ballard (whose personal experiences were the basis of the movie) on some show talking about the movie. He said one of the best scenes for him was the fear and suspense played by Bale as he crawled through the mus and was almost stepped on by the guard...he said it really brought back the memories of that.
Sometimes critics need to just be quiet when they don't know what they are talking about.
danoyse
04-25-2012, 12:51 PM
Speaking of EMPIRE OF THE SUN.....I remember watching Siskel and Ebert review it, and Ebert complained about how unrealistic the scene was, where Bale crosses the wire crawling through the mud and is almost stepped on by a Japanese guard who doesn't see him.....a couple of days later I see J.G Ballard (whose personal experiences were the basis of the movie) on some show talking about the movie. He said one of the best scenes for him was the fear and suspense played by Bale as he crawled through the mus and was almost stepped on by the guard...he said it really brought back the memories of that.
Sometimes critics need to just be quiet when they don't know what they are talking about.
That's like critics who complained about the scene in Apollo 13 when Jim Lovell's wife lost her wedding ring down a shower drain on the morning of the launch as being too hokey...
...when she actually did lose her wedding ring down a shower drain on the morning of the Apollo 13 launch. (it was later recovered)
gwynplaine
04-25-2012, 06:18 PM
When the internment camp was destroyed in Empire of the Sun, Christian Bale was supposed to jump up and down and yell as the fighter planes were bombing the camp.
Unfortunately, Bale (who was 13 at the time), got so caught up watching the set explode that he forgot to do any of it and just ran back and forth on the roof.
Since you can only blow up your set once, that was the only take they had to do it. :doh:
There's a clip of it on a behind-the-scenes documentary, and it was a great look at how incredibly patient Steven Spielberg is with child actors, when he was calmly asking Christian (who looked somewhere between furious with himself and close to tears) what had happened there.
I couldn't find that clip, but this was the final scene - the first few seconds was the part he screwed up. Spielberg fixed it by adding close ups and additional shots of him jumping up and down. It still ended up being one of the best scenes in the movie:
1ouJ_WyS9v8
Great story:up:
Speaking of EMPIRE OF THE SUN.....I remember watching Siskel and Ebert review it, and Ebert complained about how unrealistic the scene was, where Bale crosses the wire crawling through the mud and is almost stepped on by a Japanese guard who doesn't see him.....a couple of days later I see J.G Ballard (whose personal experiences were the basis of the movie) on some show talking about the movie. He said one of the best scenes for him was the fear and suspense played by Bale as he crawled through the mus and was almost stepped on by the guard...he said it really brought back the memories of that.
Sometimes critics need to just be quiet when they don't know what they are talking about.
Haha! Good one too.
I agree.
That's like critics who complained about the scene in Apollo 13 when Jim Lovell's wife lost her wedding ring down a shower drain on the morning of the launch as being too hokey...
...when she actually did lose her wedding ring down a shower drain on the morning of the Apollo 13 launch. (it was later recovered)
:woot:
danoyse
04-25-2012, 08:13 PM
In Arsenic and Old Lace, Mortimer Brewster's deranged brother Jonathan was the victim of a drunken plastic surgery that had everyone saying he now looked just like Boris Karloff.
Boris Karloff originated the role of Jonathan Brewster in the play. And that running joke was part of the play too, which always got a big laugh since he actually was Boris Karloff. :funny:
danoyse
04-25-2012, 08:43 PM
The Courthouse Square set that was used for Hill Valley in Back to the Future was also the set used for the town of Kingston Falls in Gremlins. The gremlin-infested movie theater that Billy and Kate blow up is the same one that Marty crashes the DeLorean into when he returns from 1955.
During the opening credits in Gremlins, a movie theater marquee displays the titles "A Boy's Life" and "Watch the Skies". Both were early working titles for ET. ("Watch the Skies" was also a possible title for a Close Encounters sequel.)
gwynplaine
04-25-2012, 08:53 PM
In Arsenic and Old Lace, Mortimer Brewster's deranged brother Jonathan was the victim of a drunken plastic surgery that had everyone saying he now looked just like Boris Karloff.
Boris Karloff originated the role of Jonathan Brewster in the play. And that running joke was part of the play too, which always got a big laugh since he actually was Boris Karloff. :funny:
:woot:
One of my favorite running jokes in the film:up:
gwynplaine
04-29-2012, 07:01 PM
Alfred Hitchcock was once stopped at the French border by a suspicious customs official. After being asked what his profession was, Hitchcock answered "producer." The official then demanded: "And what do you produce?"
-"Gooseflesh," Hitchcock replied.
danoyse
05-02-2012, 09:31 PM
Alfred Hitchcock was once stopped at the French border by a suspicious customs official. After being asked what his profession was, Hitchcock answered "producer." The official then demanded: "And what do you produce?"
-"Gooseflesh," Hitchcock replied.
Nice. :up:
I've read that when he originally showed Psycho to the censors, they told him that he had to edit the shower scene because they could see Janet Leigh naked in some of the shots (she wasn't when they filmed the shower scene).
Hitchcock brought it back to them without editing a thing, and suddenly the people who claimed to have seen nudity said it was fine, but people who didn't see anything the first time were now claiming they saw nude shots that needed to be edited out.
Not sure how entirely true that is, but I remember reading it somewhere.
gwynplaine
05-02-2012, 10:45 PM
Nice. :up:
I've read that when he originally showed Psycho to the censors, they told him that he had to edit the shower scene because they could see Janet Leigh naked in some of the shots (she wasn't when they filmed the shower scene).
Hitchcock brought it back to them without editing a thing, and suddenly the people who claimed to have seen nudity said it was fine, but people who didn't see anything the first time were now claiming they saw nude shots that needed to be edited out.
Not sure how entirely true that is, but I remember reading it somewhere.
Haha:woot: Cool:up:
gwynplaine
05-03-2012, 06:21 PM
At a party one evening, John Huston picked a fight with Errol Flynn.
Flynn quickly landed two punches and had Huston laid out flat on the ground before graciously helping his opponent up.
Revived by a splash of cold water and a shot of bourbon, Huston started throwing punches again, and promptly found himself back on the ground. Again Flynn helped him up, and again Huston was punching again, only to hit the floor once more.
At last Flynn emptied a bucket of water on Huston and waited for him to come around. Then he offered a word of advice: "John, you have no chance. I was a professional fighter. Please don't be a fool." Huston, however, remained undaunted. "When Errol said that to me," he later remarked, "I knew I had him!"
danoyse
06-18-2012, 09:16 PM
Since it's coming out on blu-ray tomorrow:
Newsies, the 1992 Disney musical film based on the 1899 newsboy strike in New York City, was not originally supposed to be a musical. But with the huge success Disney was having with animated musicals like The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast, Jeffrey Katzenberg decided Newsies would be a perfect project to turn into a live action musical.
Unfortunately, the film was about to start production, so they only had about 4 months to write the music and teach their main cast - most of whom had no musical training - how to sing and dance.
Sadly, the movie failed miserably at the box office. Composer Alan Menken won a Razzie for Newsies on the same night he won two Oscars for Beauty & the Beast. :funny:
But then Newsies became a cult hit on home video, popular enough that it eventually earned back its budget, and inspired tons of unauthorized stage productions in community theaters and schools. Alan Menken saw his own daughters perform in a stage production at their summer camp.
Disney Theatricals, who reported that Newsies had been one of their most requested properties for years, finally staged an official production at NJ's Papermill Playhouse. It was intended to be a 'pilot' production that would be licensed out afterwards, but the production was so popular that it wound up going to Broadway.
Its advance sale was 5 times more than what the film grossed at the box office, and has been playing to standing-room only crowds. Last week, it won two Tony Awards. :up:
Flop that it was, many of the kids starring the Broadway production have credited Newsies as being the movie that got them into performing. According to the liner notes of the cast recording, Jeremy Jordan, who plays the role Christian Bale played in the film (and has desperately tried to disassociate himself from since), has been wanting to play that role since he was nine years old. Jordan got his first Tony nomination for his performance.
So you never know where a movie that tanks might end up. :cwink:
gwynplaine
06-23-2012, 06:13 PM
^ :up:
_ While in America promoting "Lawrence of Arabia", Peter O’Toole befriended controversial stand-up comedian Lenny Bruce. One night O’Toole took Omar Sharif to see the comic perform and afterwards the boys hit the town. In the early hours they staggered back to Bruce’s home where the comedian shot up in front of his two guests.
The next thing they knew the living room was full of cops and they were being bundled into vans and taken to the local police station. The drug squad had had the place under surveillance for some time. Sharif called Sam Spiegel for help. The producer sent lawyers to bail the pair out but O’Toole was so taken with new friend Lenny that he refused to leave without him.
“Sam was going out of his mind,” Sharif recalled. “And finally we got Lenny Bruce released with us.”
(Read this in a fun book called "Hellraisers", an account of the crazy and very inebriated lives of O'Toole, but also Richard Burton, Richard Harris and Oliver Reed.)
gwynplaine
12-15-2012, 07:49 PM
According to Fritz Lang, Hitler's propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, a big fan of "Metropolis", called him to his offices and asked him to be the head of German film studio UFA. Lang subsequently said that it was during this meeting that he decided to leave for Paris and that he fled that very evening. Maybe not rigorously how it happened, but still a cool story.
Brain Damage
12-18-2012, 12:44 AM
This thread is superb. Keep em coming :up:
dgnightwing
12-19-2012, 01:43 PM
Francis Ford Coppola tried very hard to get the original king of gangster cinema, James Cagney, to come out retirement to play Heyman Roth in Godfather 2. Cagney loved the first film, and really enjoyed the script, but had no desire to come out retirement (despite desperate pleas from Coppola). It was during this time that Al Pacino suggested his former acting teacher, Lee Strasberg, and thus, one of the greatest villians in the history of film was created.
Robert Zemeckis filmed the first half of Cast Away, and then shut production down for a year to allow Tom Hanks to lose weight and grow his hair and beard. During that time period, Zemeckis filmed What Lies Beneath with the same crew to ensure that they would all be available to film the second half of Cast Away.
Not really sure about this (especially since Nolan has said Ledger was his only choice), but I remember hearing rumors that Christian Bale got really drunk after the Batman Begins premire and was telling everyone Sean Penn was going to play The Joker. A year later, rumors came out that Sean Penn had turned down the role before Ledger (this was a few weeks after Ledger was cast).
gwynplaine
12-19-2012, 06:59 PM
This thread is superb. Keep em coming :up:
Thank you, Dear Sir. Much appreciated:yay:
Francis Ford Coppola tried very hard to get the original king of gangster cinema, James Cagney, to come out retirement to play Heyman Roth in Godfather 2. Cagney loved the first film, and really enjoyed the script, but had no desire to come out retirement (despite desperate pleas from Coppola). It was during this time that Al Pacino suggested his former acting teacher, Lee Strasberg, and thus, one of the greatest villians in the history of film was created.
Robert Zemeckis filmed the first half of Cast Away, and then shut production down for a year to allow Tom Hanks to lose weight and grow his hair and beard. During that time period, Zemeckis filmed What Lies Beneath with the same crew to ensure that they would all be available to film the second half of Cast Away.
Not really sure about this (especially since Nolan has said Ledger was his only choice), but I remember hearing rumors that Christian Bale got really drunk after the Batman Begins premire and was telling everyone Sean Penn was going to play The Joker. A year later, rumors came out that Sean Penn had turned down the role before Ledger (this was a few weeks after Ledger was cast).
:up:
gwynplaine
12-23-2012, 07:50 PM
In 1936, Salvador Dali, a huge fan of the Marx Brothers work, met Harpo Marx in Paris. Some time later, Harpo was surprised to receive a Christmas gift from the famed Surrealist artist. It was a harp - with barbed wire strings.
The next year, Dali visited Harpo in California to suggest making a Daliesque Marx brothers film. Among the oddities featured in Dali's script? Flowers blooming from an armchair and Groucho Marx, as Buddha, answering a telephone with six arms. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Giraffes on Horseback Salad was never made:woot:
Blitzkrieg Bop
12-24-2012, 07:06 PM
Man, that would have been awesome.
gwynplaine
12-27-2012, 08:08 PM
^ Yes it would have.
_ Yul Brynner personally chose Steve McQueen to co-star with him in "The Magnificent Seven", it wasn’t long before the two were at odds with each other and by the time the movie was completed, neither one was speaking to the other off camera. Steve had wanted the part badly enough that he crashed a car to get some time off from his TV series Wanted Dead or Alive and while he was “recuperating” from the accident he was able to film The Magnificent Seven.
Sadly I can't find the interview, but actor Udo Kier(I've become a big fan of his over the years)said once that his dream role would have been to play Hans Beckert in Fritz Lang's M, if he was alive back then of course. Personally, I think he would have been great in that role.
gwynplaine
01-21-2013, 05:10 PM
Sadly I can't find the interview, but actor Udo Kier(I've become a big fan of his over the years)said once that his dream role would have been to play Hans Beckert in Fritz Lang's M, if he was alive back then of course. Personally, I think he would have been great in that role.
Pretty cool. I think he would have been great too.
gwynplaine
02-05-2013, 08:22 PM
Before going to the great Gene Wilder, Mel Brooks first offered the part of the Waco Kid in "Blazing Saddles" to John Wayne, who loved "The Producers."
The Duke liked the script but ultimately turned it down because he thought that his fans might be put off by it.
But he told Mel that he would be first in line to watch it:woot:
Before going to the great Gene Wilder, Mel Brooks first offered the part of the Waco Kid in "Blazing Saddles" to John Wayne, who loved "The Producers."
The Duke liked the script but ultimately turned it down because he thought that his fans might be put off by it.
But he told Mel that he would be first in line to watch it:woot:
That's a good one. The Duke, a fan of Mel Brooks. :up:
gwynplaine
02-05-2013, 08:29 PM
Yeah, I had no idea either lol.
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