Hollywood screenwriters toil over what each character in the story will say no matter if they're working on romantic comedies, dramas, and even kids' movies. The lines are then often debated and rewritten many times before, during, and after a movie is shot. But they are not the ones who decide what ends up in the final cut. Directors do. And if they like an improvised scene better than the scripted one, the writers just have to deal with it. It's part of the process. In fact, you'd probably be surprised to know that some really iconic moments in movie history have been authentic. Here are some of them.
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In Monty Python's Life Of Brian The Soldier's Reaction During The Famous Biggus Dickus Scene Is Completely Genuine. He Was An Extra Who Had Been Told Simply Not To Laugh And Had No Idea What Was About To Happen
In Die Hard (1988), When Filming Gruber’s Death Scene, Rickman Was Told He Would Be Dropped On The Count Of Three. The Director Counted To Two Before Dropping Him, Making His Reaction Genuine
In The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe (2005), When Lucy First Enters Narnia, Her Reaction Is Genuine. The Director Purposefully Never Showed His Actress The Set. He Also Did The Same With Edmund's Actor
For The Chestburster Scene In Alien (1979) The Effects Used To Achieve The Scene Were Deliberately Kept Secret From The Actors Who's Reactions Of Surprise And Shock Were Completely Genuine
And I see you adore the film as much as I do!
Load More Replies...The script read something like: "Alien enters the room." Little did they know it would be through John Hurt.
They knew the alien was going to come out but they didn't know exactly how.
True, I heard one of the actresses say she knew it'd be a little messy but not that it would hit her right in the face.
Load More Replies...She caught most of the blood. Her "Oh, God, oh God!" is not only real, she had an anxiety attic after.
Load More Replies...I know it's a great scene but please all you directors out there, trust your actor's skills and don't traumatize them.
Et Was Filmed In Chronological Order And None Of The Kids Had Seen The Puppet Before Filming, So Their First Impressions Were Totally Real
And Spielberg let ET act like it was real. At the end, Drew Barrymores tears as it seams ET was dieing, were real. She thought her friend was dieing.
In Rocky (1976), When He Runs Through The Italian Marketplace, The People's Amused Expressions As They Look On Is Genuine, As They Had No Idea Why A Man Was Running Back And Forth Being Followed By A Van. The Man Who Throws Him The Orange Was Completely Improvised
The Lineup Actors, 'The Usual Suspects' - Benicio Del Toro Kept Farting During Filming And The Actors' Laughter Made It Into The Final Cut
In The Fugitive [1993], Harrison Ford (Playing The Framed Dr. Kimble) Was Not Provided A Script For The Interrogation Scene. His Answers And Mounting Frustration With The Detectives Were Improvised In Order To Seem More Genuine
Julia Roberts, 'Pretty Woman' - Richard Gere Unexpectedly Snapped The Jewelry Box Shut, And Her Surprise Was Real
In The Dark Knight (2008), Joker Is Constantly Licking His Lips. This Is Actually Because Of The Prosthetic Scars That Heath Ledger Wore. They Kept Falling Off, So Heath Would Lick His Lips To Keep Them In Place. Gradually, It Became A Part Of The Joker’s Character
When Julia Stiles Read Her Poem At The End Of Ten Things I Hate About You (1999) It Was Done In One Take And She Wasn't Supposed To Start Crying
In Django Unchained, Leo Dicaprio Accidentally Cut His Hand Open But Kept Acting. Between Takes, They Cleaned It Up And Replaced The Real Blood With Fake Blood, Which He Smeared All Over Kerry Washington's Face
Leo said that the cast and crew gave him a standing ovation after the scene was finished, and he kept acting in the scene because "it was more interesting to watch Quentin's and Jamie's reaction off-camera than to look at my hand."
Will Ferrell's Reactions During The Jack-In-The-Box Scene Were Genuine. The Director Surprised Him Every Time By Triggering The Toys With A Remote Control
Steve Carell, 'The 40-Year-Old Virgin' - He Really Got His Chest Waxed, And Those Screams Of Agony Are Genuine
The woman they hired wasn't actually a beautician, so she just winged it. Poor Steve 😂
Dustin Hoffman, 'Midnight Cowboy' - 'Hey, I'm Walkin' Here!' Was His Reaction To Real New York Traffic
"Now You See Me"
In the movie Now You See Me, Isla Fisher's character performs a magic trick that requires her to be in a tank underwater that she needs to escape from. In the scene, she struggles and starts to drown, unable to get out. While filming the scene, Isla was actually in the tank, and she wasn't pretending to drown — she was actually drowning. Her release chain got stuck on her costume, and she wasn't able to get out quickly. Everyone thought she was just acting really well, however, she was actually panicking, struggling to get out of the tank for nearly three minutes before she was rescued.
Viggo Mortensen, 'The Two Towers' - He Broke His Toe While Kicking A Helmet In Frustration, Eliciting A Real Scream Of Anguish
Cary Elwes Wasn’t Acting When He Got Hit In The Head In Princess Bride
In one scene in Princess Bride, Cary Elwes’ character Westley gets clonked on the head pretty hard by the six-fingered man, played by Christopher Guest.
But when it came time to film the scene, the stunt didn’t look realistic enough. So Elwes suggested that Guest knock him as hard as he could using a real metal sword.
"Because of the angle, we couldn't sell a fake blow well enough for the camera, so I told him to just hit me hard," Elwes wrote in his book, As You Wish.
"And that’s the last thing I remember. I woke up in the hospital."
Stallone Reportedly Told Lundgren To Really Go At Him For The First 15 Seconds. “Just Bomb Away,” He Asked. Well, Lundgren Did. The Resultant Chest Punch, Which You Can See In The Movie, Sent Stallone To The Hospital For Nine Days
To Prepare For Saving Private Ryan, All The Main Cast Members Were Sent To A Harsh 10-Day Boot Camp, Except For Matt Damon, Who Stayed In America. Matt's Character Was Resented By Everyone, And He Was Purposefully Excluded So That The On-Screen Hostility Would Be As Realistic As Possible
Camp may be the place for bonding, but this boot camp was really tough, and the fact that Matt was at home relaxing definitely created a divide. It was so horrible that after day four, everyone wanted to quit, but Tom Hanks encouraged them to stick it out. Matt said that when he eventually showed up on set there some resentment from the guys, and it translated onto the screen.
In The Princess Diaries (2001), The Scene Where Mia Trips And Falls In The Bleachers Wasn’t A Part Of The Script. Anne Hathaway Had Accidentally Slipped In A Puddle. Director Garry Marshall Liked It So Much That He Decided To Keep It In The Movie
To Recreate The Revolutionary Spirit, The Cast Of Les Miserables Were Told To Build A Barricade In 10 Minutes. The Cameras Were Rolling And What They Made Ended Up Being Used In The Final Film
The actors didn’t know where the cameras were placed and it looked like complete chaos, but the structure turned out to be quite realistic and just needed a bit of drilling to remain held together
In Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory (1971), When The Kids First See The Chocolate Room, Their Reactions Are Genuine. Director Mel Stuart Took Great Care To Ensure That None Of The Child Actors Saw The Gigantic Set As It Was Being Built
In Se7en [1996], Fincher Never Told John C. Mcginley That The Corpse Used For 'Sloth' Was Actually A Living Actor In Heavy Makeup. Mcginley's Character's Initial Shock When 'Sloth' Wakes In The Movie Was In Fact Mcginley's Genuine Surprise From The First Take
Everyone On Titanic Knew That The Water Was Gonna Be Cold, But They Weren't Prepared For Just How Freezing It Was. The Water Was So Icy That Kate Winslet Couldn't Stop Shaking During The Axe Scene
Due To A Miscommunication On The Set Of The Hateful Eight, Kurt Russell Accidentally Smashed A 140-Year-Old Antique Guitar Instead Of The Prop
In the scene, you can see Jennifer Jason Leigh break character and scream and look at the crew because she was in disbelief when the antique guitar – which was supposed to be swapped out with a prop in between takes – got smashed.
The old guitar, which was made in 1870, was actually on loan from a museum. Dick Boak, the museum's director, changed their policy because of this mishap and said, "As a result of the incident, the company will no longer loan guitars to movies under any circumstances."
Why not just use the replica for the entire scene. The real one didn't even need to be there.
Michael J. Fox In ‘Back To The Future Part III’
In one scene, Marty gets strung up on the famous Hill Valley clock tower. In what was without a doubt something he later regretted, Fox said “Sure” to performing the stunt himself.
The plan was for him to use his hand to keep the noose from tightening around his neck and actually strangling him. In practice, he couldn’t get his hand into position and actually blacked out for a minute, until the crew realized what was happening and saved his life.
The Office
It was hard for the actors to say goodbye to Steve Carell. That's why in the scene Pam rushes in the airport to say goodbye to Michael the emotional performance by Jenna Fisher was not a performance at all
Matt Damon, 'Good Will Hunting' - The Fart Story Was Improvised, And Damon's Laughter Was A Real Reaction
In The Graduate (1967) Final Scene, The Director Got The Actors Expression For The Scene By Just Not Telling Them When He Was Going To Cut. There Was Nothing In The Script That Would Imply Their Facial Expressions Changing, He Just Had The Camera Running To Feel Their Energy Naturally Dissipate
In The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), When A Corpse Is Revealed Under The Dining Table, The Actors Were Genuinely Shocked. None Of Them Knew That The Body Was There – With One Exception, Tim Curry, Because He Was The One Who Had To Whip The Tablecloth Off
At The End Of Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006), When A Certain Character Returns From The Dead, The Cast Shows Genuine Surprise. The Character's Return Had Been Kept A Secret By The Writers- They Even Went Uncredited
The Moment Katniss Sees Peeta's Sunken Face On TV After He's Abducted By The Capital Is Dark What's Even More Heartbreaking Is That Katniss's Reaction Is Actually How Jennifer Lawrence Responded To Seeing The Video For The First Time. The Director Knew J Law Hadn't Seen Josh Hutcherson In A While And If She Was Shocked With The Video They'd Be Able To Capture Her Genuine Fear On Camera Talk About Intense Method Acting
Jason Segel Didn’t Know His Character’s Father Was Going To Die On “How I Met Your Mother”
The Shining
There seems to be a lot of "directors do something horrific to get a 'genuine' reaction". I mean, isn't the whole point of acting the ability to portray convincing reactions?
Some of this makes me really angry. It's a just f*cking movie! One of millions. Stop risking people's lives, sanity and health just so you get a decent scene and a cool story.
I am missing Full Metal Jacket. When Kubrik asked a real drill instructor for a tape Sergeant R. Lee Ermey returned a 15 minute tape shouting continuous insults without repeating himself a single time while being pelted at with tennis balls and oranges. Which earned him the role of Gunnery Sergent Hartman and convinced Kubrik to not write the dialogue for this character.
So basically passing the scriptwriting buck to the actor.
Load More Replies...I’d rather watch something imperfect than watch something perfect knowing real people got abused for it.
Ugh, it's like those shitty "It's just a prank bro!" videos used to excuse abusing someone, but with a much bigger production budget.
The film industry is so morally corrupt! I already knew it was bad but jeez..
Sorry, blanket statements based on cherry-picked incidents are not incontrovertible. You hear about these more than similar stories about "normal" people for two reasons: 1) they are famous; and 2) they are sensational -- both of which sell magazines and make people click on articles like this.
Load More Replies...When Radar announced on MASH Colonial Blake died in helicopter crash , the reaction was genuine. Because until the line was said no one knew what the closing line would be.
My favorite unscripted ad-lib was Rutger Hauer as Roy Batty in Blade Runner as he is dying - "All those moments ... will be lost in time ... like ... tears ... in rain."
"Ed Wood". Sarah Jessica Parker throws a frying pan at Johnny Depp, and hits him dead on target on his skullcap.
In "The Mummy" Brendan Fraser was almost actually hanged. No one knew that he was actually being strangled by the noose (except him of course), and it left him with permanent shoulder damage.
In the 1983 movie "The Outsiders" the two rival groups, the Socs (pronounces Soshes, as in Socialites) and the Greasers were not allowed to have any contact off the set and during filming, the actors playing the Socs were given leather-bound scripts and were put up in luxury accommodations, while the "Greasers" were given battered paperback scripts and had to stay in the ground floor of the hotel, as director Francis Ford Coppola wanted to create tension between the two groups.The cast reads like a "Who's Who" of future stars: Tom Cruise, Patrick Swayze, Matt Dillon, Ralph Macchio, Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez, just to name a few.
Weird how you get better performances from actors by not allowing them to act.
It's called classic method acting. Back in the days, action stars would risk broken limbs or their lives on set; horror film stars would get themselves terrified for real; if you need to convey emotions of hate you try to get the actor to hate everyone and if you need to convey emotions of love you surprise them with jokes and humor. I see from the comments here that it's not a popular method today. But I tell you this.... look at the acting from movie which used that Stanislawskij methodacting; look at modern movies that don't use it at all, and notice the HUGE difference.
There seems to be a lot of "directors do something horrific to get a 'genuine' reaction". I mean, isn't the whole point of acting the ability to portray convincing reactions?
Some of this makes me really angry. It's a just f*cking movie! One of millions. Stop risking people's lives, sanity and health just so you get a decent scene and a cool story.
I am missing Full Metal Jacket. When Kubrik asked a real drill instructor for a tape Sergeant R. Lee Ermey returned a 15 minute tape shouting continuous insults without repeating himself a single time while being pelted at with tennis balls and oranges. Which earned him the role of Gunnery Sergent Hartman and convinced Kubrik to not write the dialogue for this character.
So basically passing the scriptwriting buck to the actor.
Load More Replies...I’d rather watch something imperfect than watch something perfect knowing real people got abused for it.
Ugh, it's like those shitty "It's just a prank bro!" videos used to excuse abusing someone, but with a much bigger production budget.
The film industry is so morally corrupt! I already knew it was bad but jeez..
Sorry, blanket statements based on cherry-picked incidents are not incontrovertible. You hear about these more than similar stories about "normal" people for two reasons: 1) they are famous; and 2) they are sensational -- both of which sell magazines and make people click on articles like this.
Load More Replies...When Radar announced on MASH Colonial Blake died in helicopter crash , the reaction was genuine. Because until the line was said no one knew what the closing line would be.
My favorite unscripted ad-lib was Rutger Hauer as Roy Batty in Blade Runner as he is dying - "All those moments ... will be lost in time ... like ... tears ... in rain."
"Ed Wood". Sarah Jessica Parker throws a frying pan at Johnny Depp, and hits him dead on target on his skullcap.
In "The Mummy" Brendan Fraser was almost actually hanged. No one knew that he was actually being strangled by the noose (except him of course), and it left him with permanent shoulder damage.
In the 1983 movie "The Outsiders" the two rival groups, the Socs (pronounces Soshes, as in Socialites) and the Greasers were not allowed to have any contact off the set and during filming, the actors playing the Socs were given leather-bound scripts and were put up in luxury accommodations, while the "Greasers" were given battered paperback scripts and had to stay in the ground floor of the hotel, as director Francis Ford Coppola wanted to create tension between the two groups.The cast reads like a "Who's Who" of future stars: Tom Cruise, Patrick Swayze, Matt Dillon, Ralph Macchio, Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez, just to name a few.
Weird how you get better performances from actors by not allowing them to act.
It's called classic method acting. Back in the days, action stars would risk broken limbs or their lives on set; horror film stars would get themselves terrified for real; if you need to convey emotions of hate you try to get the actor to hate everyone and if you need to convey emotions of love you surprise them with jokes and humor. I see from the comments here that it's not a popular method today. But I tell you this.... look at the acting from movie which used that Stanislawskij methodacting; look at modern movies that don't use it at all, and notice the HUGE difference.