coolest accident on Lord of the rings was a knife thrown at aragorn was real and it slipped coming right for him and the scene where he hits it with his sword was actually him saving his own life in a badass way
JustJoshingYa and the bit where he screams in rage in thinking the two Hobbits are dead -when in reality he just Broke his toe but stayed in character.
lasarith2 Come to think about it, Viggo Mortensen did so much to make Aragorn looked believable. And at first he didn't want to take the part. He decided to take it because his son wanted him to do it. What a life lol
Speaking of Dustin Hoffman, how can you forget "Hey, I'm walking here!" It was completely unscripted, off the cuff and resulted in one of the most quoted lines ever!
Yep! You can even hear his character's normally ill sounding voice become healthier after the incident. Hoffman had fallen out of character! But the blooper was so good, it was kept in the movie.
***** It's great, I'm so glad they kept it in. Also, in Zoolander when Ben Stiller says to David Duchovny "but why male models?" for the second time. That has me in stitches every time.
They didn't notice until after production, so they just added an audible "thunk". Years ago I didn't understand this; I knew the sound was in the scene, and didn't give it any thought since I just thought it was an audio artifact. I only figured this out relatively recently, and thought to myself "ah, so that's what that sound is!".
"Why are you wearing glasses?" "Uh, reading." "Reading? I didn't know you could read." EDIT: Tom forgot his line so he improvised and they couldn't bear to cut it so they left it there.
Also improvised in that movie the last lines in Dumbledore's office between Harry and Lucius Malfoy. The actor thought Lucius needed an exit line and improvised "Well... let's hope Mr. Potter will always be here to save the day." To which Daniel Radcliffe immediately replied with the awesome "don't worry, I will be"
Agreed. It's one of those little bits that make you think, "wow, someone is _really_ sweating the details on this", only to find that "someone" was, at best, Fate.
I got another one from that same movie. Remember when Aragorn kicked that orc head and then fell to his knees letting out a cry of anguish? That was actually Viggo breaking his foot.
Another comedy one 'The Birdcage' where Robin Williams slips over in the kitchen everyone stays in character and he mainly covers things up but it's possibly my fave bit in the whole film (Search for 'Birdcage- panic scene')
you forget in LOTR the Balrog wasn't supposed to fall. AS Gandalf says, "You shall not pass" the Balrog was supposed to say "Gandalf, dude, what the fuck?" Then puts his hands in his pockets, displays slopey shoulders, turns around and leaves. But since he instead fell, as he was saying "Gandahhhhhhh" along with Gandalf also falling, Jackson decided to keep it in the film. When you see the final cut, it really does work better this way.
How about in Fast and the Furious 6 when Dwayne Johnson(Hobbs) comes walking up and Tyrese Gibsons character (Roman) says "Hey Mia! You better hide your baby oil" and Hobbs replies with "You better hide your big ass forehead!" It was unscripted what they were going to say to each other and even Ludacris spitting out his Beer in shock. Gets me every time lol.
How else was the Bond scene supposed to play out? You say he was just supposed to swim up to the girl, but he would've had to stand up at some point. Otherwise he'd just be down on his belly in the shallow waves like some kind of beached whale.
i think she was meant to reach the shore line and he swims up towards her then obviously walk but he hit sand earlier than he was supposed to meaning he walked the whole way
My favourite one is in the Dark Knight when the Joker walks along the exploding Hospital and suddenly stops. It should has exploded but when it stopped, Heath made an amazing improvisation. The awesome thing about it is that they had just one chance to get the material.
Achilles Grimm it wasnt, the detonator didnt go off and Ledger improved his way out, because it was a real explosion that would cost a fortune to repeat sooo.... yeah
Achilles Grimm They wanted to use the real one for obvious reasons. The Hospital was suppose to collapse while Ledger was halfway to the bus but it didn't.
@@TheRealSkeletor this part came improvised because harry still had his glasses on "Crabbe, Goyle! Where have you been? Pigging out in the Great Hall all this time? Why are you wearing glasses..." original was "Crabbe, Goyle! Where have you been? Pigging out in the Great Hall all this time? And what are you doing down here Weasley"
he broke the glass by accident and cut his hand bad. He wasn't trying to do it, so its an accident, not "improve". He didn't go "i think ill break this glass and slice up my hand".
I thought that, when they mentioned Indiana Jones, that whey would refer to the scene where he takes out his gun and shoots the guy in the market who was waving his sword around. Harrison Ford had stomach problems and needed the bathroom so instead of fighting with the guy, he simply takes out his gun and shoots him.
there was The Dark Knight where the Joker blows up the hospital, the delay in the explosion was due to a detonator problem and Heath Ledger played with the scene giving it dark humour.
It was scripted. Heath acted the same way on many rehearsals. Myth about improvisation was born after his death. Nolan once said that faulty detonator at hospital is a foreshadowing for the scene, where neither ferry has blown the other up and the Joker says "can't rely on anyone these days".
@@jas_bataille there was actually real explosions. It's a mix between VFX and practical effects. They even show how they set everything up for it in their 'making of' special.
@@mazzarider6057 some people would rather say something about things like explosions in a movie totally being VFX instead of it being practical effects or even a combination of VFX and practical effects, rather than watch a "Making of" clip from whatever movies they were featured in
Don't forget Django unchained, when Leo DiCaprio accidentally shatters the glass on the table and cuts his hand, but stays in role and smears his blood on Marhilda's face!
The glass shattering and cutting his hand was real, but they added the part where he smears the blood on her face after the fact to take advantage of what happened, and by then the blood was fake. (I always bring this up when I see this scene discussed, because sometimes people think it was real & think DiCaprio is a terrible human being for smearing his real blood (biohazard!) on a completely unsuspecting actress.)
Not a movie blooper, but one of my favorite examples of this is in the SNL skit about the guy "living in a van down by the river," and Chris Farley falls on the coffee table and breaks it, and that wasn't supposed to happen. You can totally see the rest of the cast, particularly David Spade, reacting and being concerned because he could have been injured. Also, another Chris Pratt moment, one of my favorite lines in Parks and Rec: "Leslie, I typed your symptoms into the computer and it says you could have network connectivity problems."
Between that and DiCaprio in Django Unchained... it is literally Impossible to know when the actor is doing something scripted or just doing improv on something that happened by chance. In both cases I was caught up in the moment, and thought they were both scripted moments. To find out later they were both accidents that the actors acted on through... Seriously. Never was a super fan of either but for those two scenes, Oscars!
Apparently that part in Independence day where Captain Hiller (Will Smith) yells "And what the hell is that smell?" wasn't in the script, and he really could smell something; probably the carcass of some dead animal, brine shrimp according to one source.
Sadly missing - in It's a Wonderful Life (1946), a drunken Uncle Billy staggers off camera when suddenly it sounds as if he stumbles into some trash cans on the sidewalk. In fact, a crew member dropped a large tray of props right after he went off-screen. James Stewart began laughing, and Mitchell quickly improvised, "I'm alright, I'm okay!" Director Frank Capra decided to use this take in the final cut.
During the iconic drawing Ruth with his coal in “Titanic” Jack tells Ruth to get in the bed and quickly corrects himself to the couch. Director James Cameron likes it so much he had to keep it noting it looked like a great Freudian Slip/showed Jack’s nervousness.
Probably because Leonardo DiCaprio actually was kinda nervous doing that scene According to the actress that played Rose in the movie (Whose name escapes me at the moment) Leo went to her dressing room to speak with her about something, while, unbeknownst to Leonardo at the time, she was getting body makeup applied to her for that particular scene The makeup artists asked her if he should come in to speak with her, to which she'd said, "Well, he's going to see me naked anyway for this scene, so might as well" So Leo enters and he reacted with "Whoa" and averted his eyes
How can they leave out the iconic scene in Pretty Woman when Richard Gere snapped the jewelry box closed when Julia reached to touch the necklace, causing her to jump and do that huge laugh. Him snapping the lid closed wasnt in the script and her reaction was genuine. They liked her surprised laugh so much they kept it in. One of my fave scenes!
I thought we'd see the "but why male models" line from zoolander. Apparently Ben stiller forgot that he had already said the line, but they just went with it. Enjoyed this video a lot, so many of those accidents really were perfect.
An Elven Lullaby: during the 1990's at the Metropolitan Opera, the show was "Nabucco" & the leader of the chorus soldiers was Jay Bonny. He didn't see the low door & knocked off his wig & helmet. they all could hardly hold in their laughter!
I have to say Tom staying in character is the impressive one. If I were Tom in that situation I would have laughed and told some fart joke. But that is me and my silly humor.
I know it's not a blooper but *the* funniest fart scene ever is the baked bean scene in Blazing Saddles. TBH, it's one of the funniest films ever (Mel Brooks is a bloody genius). Similarly, not quite a blooper but done out of the cast and crew down with some sort of stomach bug, along with the unrecorded reels of film running out, was behind another classic scene. The "sword" fight in Raiders. I heard that the gun idea was Ford's, a) it was pragmatic and b) it was *_so_* Indy! There had been a well-prepared fight scene but he knew it would be wrong considering the context of time/story. He was right! Good vid, gets a thumbs up from me. Cheers!
Also, the part of Raiders where Indiana shoots the swordsman in Cairo was not originally part of the script. They were supposed to have an epic battle. But Harrison Ford was so tired that day, that he just whipped out his gun and pretended to shoot the guy, and he went along with it. The result was cinematic gold.
Prat will always be held in my mind as one of the funniest people to play in 3 of my favorite movies. Guardians of the Galaxy, Jurassic World, and the upcoming Guardians of the Galaxy volume two.
So magneficently cool how Chris Pratt drops that Infinity Stone and picks it up looking like "Woops! Well, never mind." If he had said "Aww, damn" and laughing while looking around at the crew, it would have been useless. It's almost like he feels instantly that "Hey, couldn't this actually work as part of the comedy that this already is?"
One of the more memorable lines in movie history was from Rain Man also. Charlie: "Raymond! Raymond! Am I using you? Am I using you?" Raymond: "Yes." Charlie: "SHUT UP! He is answering a question from a half an hour ago!"
I'm a little torn on this one. I agree that their definition of "MacGuffin" is only partially correct. It is true that they are often crucial to the plot development, but the truth of a MacGuffin, according to Hitchcock, is that a MacGuffin is really nothing at all. MacGuffins don't need explaining. You don't have to know WHY the heroes are searching for or fighting over the MacGuffin, simply that they are. Often, MacGuffins are forgotten about as the story progresses as the story isn't about the MacGuffin at all. It's the disposable nature of the object that makes a MacGuffin a MacGuffin, not that the object is important. While the Inifinity Stones are hardly disposable, the fact that we know very little about them is why many consider them to be a good MacGuffin, keeping in mind that the Holy Grail is also considered a MacGuffin for Arthur and his knights. As for the Infinity Stones, ultimately, we don't know how or what they actually do, but we do know they're important to the bad guys. And that means the good guys want to keep the bad guys from getting them, and at the end of the day, that's good enough for most of the audience. Explaining them away and giving them too much focus in the plot diminishes their power as a MacGuffin, and ultimately why I wouldn't consider them a MacGuffin in Guardians specifically. But in most of the other Marvel Cinematic films, they're pretty MacGuffiny. They're there and it's what the MCU is driving towards, but in the greater MCU scheme, we've almost forgotten they're there. The nonchalance of Vision wearing one around on his face is evidence of that fact.
I had no clue about Chris Pratt's dropping the infinity stone, being an accident. Or the flag ripping in LOTR. Both looked intentional and fit perfectly. The moment Anne Hathaway fell, I thought it was a blooper. I always wondered. It looked too natural. You can try to make that happen, but it looked way too natural and perfect to be planned. I'm SO GLAD THEY KEPT THAT!! IT WAS GOLDEN!!! I love that everyone kept laughing in the Usual Suspects. And I love even more that they kept it. And of course the Dustin Hoffman & Tom Cruise moment, was pure gold. I love when people stay in character, even when they mess up. Just keep going with it. It could make it in the movie and make it that much better.
THIS IS NOT AN VIDEO ABOUT IMPROVISATIONS !!! ITS ABOUT BLOOPERS THAT MADE THE CUT!! A BLOOPER!! SOMETHING ACCIDENTAL THAT WASN'T SUPPOSED TO HAPPEN BUT IT DID AND IT WAS GREAT!
Ok stop, he didn't do that to Kerri Washington. If you even thought about it for a second, you'd realize how unbelievable that statement would be. Yes, he did cut his hand in the prior scene and he kept going with the scene through the pain and bleeding; that part is true. But after that scene, he was cleaned up and treated. Blood is a biohazard and there is no way in hell that an actor in his right mind would (or be allowed to) wipe his actual blood on another person.
I love that Hitchcock's McGuffin plot device is mentioned here, but what isn't mentioned that McGuffins ultimately don't matter. They are important to the characters' motivation and keep the plot rolling along, but a true McGuffin doesn't mean diddly squat at the end (ie- the microfilm in Hitchcock's "North By Northwest" is a true McGuffin, because it is lost down the side of Mount Rushmore and neither goodies or baddies end up with it, but who cares?) So, while the briefcase in "Pulp Fiction" qualifies (as does the watch that belonged to Bruce Willis' dad), the stones in "Guardians of the Galaxy" don't, seeing as Quill uses one to destroy Ronan. An object that determines the outcome of a plot cannot be a McGuffin. I guess one way to spot a McGuffin is to ask yourself: if you told someone the fate of the plot device (ie microfilm in "North By Northwest" or infinity stones in "Guardians of the Galaxy"), would you be spoiling the plot? In the former, no. THAT'S a McGuffin. In the latter, yes. No McGuffin here. Incidentally, the term comes from a story about two men on a train in Scotland. One asks the other "what's in that large case". The second man replies "A McGuffin". When asked what exactly IS a McGuffin, the second man says it is used to hunt lions in Scotland. "But there are no lions in Scotland" says the first man, to which the second man replies "Well then, there's no McGuffin".
BabyFaceBren You are so right. That's what a McGuffin really is: a crucial part of the plot, but only for the characters in a film; but in the end inconsequential to its development. We the audience could not care less about it.
coolest accident on Lord of the rings was a knife thrown at aragorn was real and it slipped coming right for him and the scene where he hits it with his sword was actually him saving his own life in a badass way
JustJoshingYa and the bit where he screams in rage in thinking the two Hobbits are dead -when in reality he just Broke his toe but stayed in character.
lasarith2 Come to think about it, Viggo Mortensen did so much to make Aragorn looked believable. And at first he didn't want to take the part. He decided to take it because his son wanted him to do it. What a life lol
F Yeah. If you do something. You might aswell put all effort into it! xD
the dagger looks like it's moving pretty slow though when he hits it. Probably would have just bounced off his clothes if he hadn't blocked it.
it was also probably not sharpened, so it wouldn't have done any real damage besides a bruise.
On guardians of the galaxy. At the end of the take Chris asks. Do you want another take. The director smiles and says naw we're good
first reply in 3 years? pog
@@eggthefrog948 fam wtf😂 I forgot all this existed
@@eggthefrog948 and this comment 3 months
ago
Speaking of Dustin Hoffman, how can you forget "Hey, I'm walking here!" It was completely unscripted, off the cuff and resulted in one of the most quoted lines ever!
No way!
Stephen Wright Yes way! :P
Yep! You can even hear his character's normally ill sounding voice become healthier after the incident. Hoffman had fallen out of character! But the blooper was so good, it was kept in the movie.
***** It's great, I'm so glad they kept it in. Also, in Zoolander when Ben Stiller says to David Duchovny "but why male models?" for the second time. That has me in stitches every time.
what movie is that?
No one's going to mention the stormtrooper hitting his head on a low door in Star Wars?
No?
Kay.
Because while amusing, it doesn't add anything to the scene.
That wasn't purposely left in. Fans pointed that out later.
An Elven Lullaby any link???
They didn't notice until after production, so they just added an audible "thunk". Years ago I didn't understand this; I knew the sound was in the scene, and didn't give it any thought since I just thought it was an audio artifact. I only figured this out relatively recently, and thought to myself "ah, so that's what that sound is!".
Which movie?
Doctor Stranglove getting up out of the wheelchair when it wasnt in the script and then saves the scene by yelling "MEIN FUHRER!!! I CAN WALK!"
"Why are you wearing glasses?"
"Uh, reading."
"Reading? I didn't know you could read."
EDIT: Tom forgot his line so he improvised and they couldn't bear to cut it so they left it there.
Also improvised in that movie the last lines in Dumbledore's office between Harry and Lucius Malfoy. The actor thought Lucius needed an exit line and improvised "Well... let's hope Mr. Potter will always be here to save the day." To which Daniel Radcliffe immediately replied with the awesome "don't worry, I will be"
Lolyoufoundme those are improvised moments, not bloopers. Search best ad-libbed lines and you can find hundreds of videos on that
Yass.
That LOTR one gave me chills.
It was too perfect. Like gawwww!! It was perfect.
Agreed. It's one of those little bits that make you think, "wow, someone is _really_ sweating the details on this", only to find that "someone" was, at best, Fate.
super incredible scene! also the wind blowing eowyn's hair is magnificent.
I got another one from that same movie. Remember when Aragorn kicked that orc head and then fell to his knees letting out a cry of anguish? That was actually Viggo breaking his foot.
Vutava oh wow nice and sucks for him
"cinematic fart history" hahahaha
just about to comment that
Matthew Norzan I
Matthew Norzan Lol
Hahahaha, I thumbed it up and it hit 666. The devil made me do it.
Salt_Shakr same
John Cleese forgetting his character's name in the Holy Grail and saying Tim instead.
kek didn't know that one
Another comedy one 'The Birdcage' where Robin Williams slips over in the kitchen everyone stays in character and he mainly covers things up but it's possibly my fave bit in the whole film (Search for 'Birdcage- panic scene')
really? I love that movie lol gonna go search for it now
LOL I never noticed that before. They played it off like pros
oh, yes, that one is gold classic!
you forget in LOTR the Balrog wasn't supposed to fall. AS Gandalf says, "You shall not pass" the Balrog was supposed to say "Gandalf, dude, what the fuck?" Then puts his hands in his pockets, displays slopey shoulders, turns around and leaves. But since he instead fell, as he was saying "Gandahhhhhhh" along with Gandalf also falling, Jackson decided to keep it in the film. When you see the final cut, it really does work better this way.
The flag in LOTR is pretty insane.
yeah it's hard to believe. it stays so well in the shot
it seemed like nature itself was in on it! so amazing!
Still, I feel like Vigo Mortenson actually breaking his foot when he kicks a helmet and then screaming deserves to be here as well.
I was really surprised to hear that one.
I think that after the cut at 1:24, the flag might be just CGI. Maybe, maybe not.
How about in Fast and the Furious 6 when Dwayne Johnson(Hobbs) comes walking up and Tyrese Gibsons character (Roman) says "Hey Mia! You better hide your baby oil" and Hobbs replies with "You better hide your big ass forehead!"
It was unscripted what they were going to say to each other and even Ludacris spitting out his Beer in shock. Gets me every time lol.
it wasnt blooper, only improvised
@@UncleanerBullet well ludacris spitting his beer out was a blooper
How else was the Bond scene supposed to play out? You say he was just supposed to swim up to the girl, but he would've had to stand up at some point. Otherwise he'd just be down on his belly in the shallow waves like some kind of beached whale.
i think she was meant to reach the shore line and he swims up towards her then obviously walk but he hit sand earlier than he was supposed to meaning he walked the whole way
Yeah that one is total nonsense.
ikr he walks out the sea like everyone does
I reckon he should have swum up to shore and then just. Waddled up to her on his belly
script: (Bond floats over to shore, flops onto sand *sensually* then rolls over to girl)
Either way, Chris Pratt nonchalantly caught the infinity stone. That's probably why they left it in.
@Dreamback Music: But most of Pratt's "save" was out of frame and the audio makes it sound like the infinity stone hit the floor anyway.
My favourite one is in the Dark Knight when the Joker walks along the exploding Hospital and suddenly stops. It should has exploded but when it stopped, Heath made an amazing improvisation. The awesome thing about it is that they had just one chance to get the material.
That was scripted
nothing was scripted with ladger!
Achilles Grimm it wasnt, the detonator didnt go off and Ledger improved his way out, because it was a real explosion that would cost a fortune to repeat
sooo.... yeah
A. H. No it wasn't. The behind the scenes show is digitised mock ups imitating it.
Achilles Grimm They wanted to use the real one for obvious reasons. The Hospital was suppose to collapse while Ledger was halfway to the bus but it didn't.
In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, the guy that plays Draco said "I didn't know you could read" because he forgot his line
Tom Felton Plays Draco
What was the line supposed to be?
@@TheRealSkeletor this part came improvised because harry still had his glasses on "Crabbe, Goyle! Where have you been? Pigging out in the Great Hall all this time? Why are you wearing glasses..." original was "Crabbe, Goyle! Where have you been? Pigging out in the Great Hall all this time? And what are you doing down here Weasley"
Quality content guys, keep it up
Thanks for watching!
Movie Tunes get a life
Movie Tunes no fuck off
was that sarcastic?
medicinally is he dash star?
What about Johnny Depp. They basically just turn the camera on and he makes up his script.
Don't forget Kevin Hart
Omg ik
that is ad lib
Di caprio smashing the glass in django?
jay
yea that's a good one.
jay Cass that was improv not him breaking glass by accident
he broke the glass by accident and cut his hand bad. He wasn't trying to do it, so its an accident, not "improve". He didn't go "i think ill break this glass and slice up my hand".
james friel 😂😂 exactly
jaws?? "we're gonna need a bigger boat?" that's legendary improv!
I thought that, when they mentioned Indiana Jones, that whey would refer to the scene where he takes out his gun and shoots the guy in the market who was waving his sword around. Harrison Ford had stomach problems and needed the bathroom so instead of fighting with the guy, he simply takes out his gun and shoots him.
I think Ford told the director before hand that he wanted to just shoot the guy. It was more of an improvised moment than it was a blooper
Well, if it was not intended or as it should have been, I still count it as something not planned.
Not a blooper.
there was The Dark Knight where the Joker blows up the hospital, the delay in the explosion was due to a detonator problem and Heath Ledger played with the scene giving it dark humour.
It was scripted. Heath acted the same way on many rehearsals. Myth about improvisation was born after his death. Nolan once said that faulty detonator at hospital is a foreshadowing for the scene, where neither ferry has blown the other up and the Joker says "can't rely on anyone these days".
Bruh there is no real explosion it's all VFX are you for real?! Bruh...
People believing explosions on film sets are real smh I'm done -.-
@@jas_bataille there was actually real explosions. It's a mix between VFX and practical effects. They even show how they set everything up for it in their 'making of' special.
@@drusha I thought he was supposed to get on the bus first before playing with the detonator.
@@mazzarider6057 some people would rather say something about things like explosions in a movie totally being VFX instead of it being practical effects or even a combination of VFX and practical effects, rather than watch a "Making of" clip from whatever movies they were featured in
How did you guys manage not to include the stormtrooper who banged his head?
I think the idea behind the list was that these bloopers were more impactful to the scenes/movies/characters
Hm, maybe.
it was in the remastered version that they highlighted that scene with additional sound effects :D
they have a different video with actual injuries and they show that shot at very beginning, but it such a minor background blooper unlike these
Because it wasn't noticed by Lucas, and wasn't intentionally left in.
"a classic moment in cinematic fart history"
"setting up a classic moment in cinematic fart history"
best. line. ever!
1:05 Also, the scene in wich Gandalf hits his head on the wooden beam inside Bilbo's house was not scripted too, he totally smashed his skull hahaha
Don't forget Django unchained, when Leo DiCaprio accidentally shatters the glass on the table and cuts his hand, but stays in role and smears his blood on Marhilda's face!
The glass shattering and cutting his hand was real, but they added the part where he smears the blood on her face after the fact to take advantage of what happened, and by then the blood was fake.
(I always bring this up when I see this scene discussed, because sometimes people think it was real & think DiCaprio is a terrible human being for smearing his real blood (biohazard!) on a completely unsuspecting actress.)
Smearing real blood on her face would be not just gross but almost a crime.
Not a movie blooper, but one of my favorite examples of this is in the SNL skit about the guy "living in a van down by the river," and Chris Farley falls on the coffee table and breaks it, and that wasn't supposed to happen. You can totally see the rest of the cast, particularly David Spade, reacting and being concerned because he could have been injured.
Also, another Chris Pratt moment, one of my favorite lines in Parks and Rec: "Leslie, I typed your symptoms into the computer and it says you could have network connectivity problems."
The flag shot in lotr is one of the most beautiful scenes of all time always thaugt it was scripted it's so powerful
Lol can't get enough of the 1st blooper. What's even more funny is he actually picked it up and went with it.
Forgot Heath Ledger and the explosion
x JayAyeWhy 7
Between that and DiCaprio in Django Unchained... it is literally Impossible to know when the actor is doing something scripted or just doing improv on something that happened by chance. In both cases I was caught up in the moment, and thought they were both scripted moments. To find out later they were both accidents that the actors acted on through... Seriously. Never was a super fan of either but for those two scenes, Oscars!
x JayAyeWhy that wasn't accidental. It was scripted. I watched a youtube video about it.
Nadia Gk - ahh the ever reliable source that is: youtube videos
That was improvised, not a blooper. Besides. It's as if there aren't 2000 other videos mentioning the same film. *eyeroll*
What made Chris Phrat dropping the infinity stone so funny is that he stayed in character
Apparently that part in Independence day where Captain Hiller (Will Smith) yells "And what the hell is that smell?" wasn't in the script, and he really could smell something; probably the carcass of some dead animal, brine shrimp according to one source.
Aurochs hunter I can totally see that!
Aurochs hunter YESSS one of my favorites!
It was the rotten smell of the salt flats, actually.
Nice collection guys. A lot of these I knew about, but the few I didn't... just makes it all that much better!
Man Dash you get around
Branfaol1 I was wondering if it was him! xD
HAHA that what she said ;)
"Dash Star!, it is you! it is you!"
-guess who
Yup! nice.
Dash Star
Let's not forget Mark Hamill saying "I can't see a thing in this helmet." while the camera was running.
You cannot tell me you missed Joker's hospital scene.
I expected that to be the highlight of this video!
Exactly
That scene couldn’t be cut as they had only one chance to do it
That scene wasn’t a blooper; everything was scripted
Ross Jaeger the blooper was that the button didn’t work initially
Sadly missing - in It's a Wonderful Life (1946), a drunken Uncle Billy staggers off camera when suddenly it sounds as if he stumbles into some trash cans on the sidewalk. In fact, a crew member dropped a large tray of props right after he went off-screen. James Stewart began laughing, and Mitchell quickly improvised, "I'm alright, I'm okay!" Director Frank Capra decided to use this take in the final cut.
The first one was pure gold. Just slides out of his hand lmao.
You forgot in LOTR when Aragorn kicked a helmet and broke his toe then screamed in pain due to the toe
During the iconic drawing Ruth with his coal in “Titanic” Jack tells Ruth to get in the bed and quickly corrects himself to the couch. Director James Cameron likes it so much he had to keep it noting it looked like a great Freudian Slip/showed Jack’s nervousness.
Probably because Leonardo DiCaprio actually was kinda nervous doing that scene
According to the actress that played Rose in the movie (Whose name escapes me at the moment)
Leo went to her dressing room to speak with her about something, while, unbeknownst to Leonardo at the time, she was getting body makeup applied to her for that particular scene
The makeup artists asked her if he should come in to speak with her, to which she'd said, "Well, he's going to see me naked anyway for this scene, so might as well"
So Leo enters and he reacted with "Whoa" and averted his eyes
@@karlsmith2570 Kate Winslet
@@depuntoapuntoenelmundo2408 thank you
It'd been a long while since I've watched that movie, so I kinda blanked out on her name
THANK YOU FOR STARTING OFF WITH WHAT WAS IN THE THUMBNAIL! It actually made me want to watch the rest
How can they leave out the iconic scene in Pretty Woman when Richard Gere snapped the jewelry box closed when Julia reached to touch the necklace, causing her to jump and do that huge laugh. Him snapping the lid closed wasnt in the script and her reaction was genuine. They liked her surprised laugh so much they kept it in. One of my fave scenes!
I thought we'd see the "but why male models" line from zoolander. Apparently Ben stiller forgot that he had already said the line, but they just went with it. Enjoyed this video a lot, so many of those accidents really were perfect.
Joseph McFadden no he forgot his next line so he just repeated his last line.
I heard the story differently in a few places, but things like this get misstold and exaggerated so I dunno.
The flag blowing away was absolutely PERFECT. When i saw the movie for the first time, I thought it was awesome.
Love him or hate him, Tom Cruise has some serious commitment to his work
Yes he is an excellent actor, however he is still a pretty boy and I dont expect he will win an Oscar. Same with Brad Pitt, he also is a pretty boy.
Omg the fly that crawls into the guy's mouth in Indiana Jones gets me every time!😂 I always point it out to friends and family
An Elven Lullaby: during the 1990's at the Metropolitan Opera, the show was "Nabucco" & the leader of the chorus soldiers was Jay Bonny. He didn't see the low door & knocked off his wig & helmet. they all could hardly hold in their laughter!
Those were great - that flag ripping as if on cue?? I never knew. And Pratt's goof was SO priceless!
Tom Cruise and especially Dustin Hoffman staying in character is just admirable. These two really turn into the roles they play.
Cinematic Fart History! 😆❤️🎬💨🤙
I have to say Tom staying in character is the impressive one. If I were Tom in that situation I would have laughed and told some fart joke. But that is me and my silly humor.
Pretty impressive when actors actually stay in character during slip-ups!
I love when the flag flies away. It's like the King is going home. Didn't know it wasn't scripted.
I know it's not a blooper but *the* funniest fart scene ever is the baked bean scene in Blazing Saddles. TBH, it's one of the funniest films ever (Mel Brooks is a bloody genius). Similarly, not quite a blooper but done out of the cast and crew down with some sort of stomach bug, along with the unrecorded reels of film running out, was behind another classic scene. The "sword" fight in Raiders. I heard that the gun idea was Ford's, a) it was pragmatic and b) it was *_so_* Indy! There had been a well-prepared fight scene but he knew it would be wrong considering the context of time/story. He was right! Good vid, gets a thumbs up from me. Cheers!
I'm surprised the "EY, I'M WALKIN' 'ERE!" Scene wasn't here.
"hey accidents happen, but if your in a MERVIE"
I don't know why but I couldnt stop laughing at this
My favorite is in the first Harry Potter when Draco says "I didnt know you can read" though its a LOT funnier in the german version
What makes it funnier.
That's a great moment. Also the second film btw, but funny none the less. That's improv comedy well above a 12/13 year old, super impressive stuff.
@@Aussie_Archmage i know right! felton was just around 13, and that was such a gold comedic moment especially after we know it was improved.
Also, the part of Raiders where Indiana shoots the swordsman in Cairo was not originally part of the script. They were supposed to have an epic battle. But Harrison Ford was so tired that day, that he just whipped out his gun and pretended to shoot the guy, and he went along with it. The result was cinematic gold.
The heat was getting everybody sick, so Ford couldn't do the stunt and shoots the guy instead.
it takes a lot more than an Oscar winning performance to endure other people's fart. Hats off to Tom.
Looper is the best youtuber on earth because they put in subtitles that are accurate.
What about when the rock is like “you better hide that bigass forehead”?
that makes the "how can you stand that?" even funnier.
justice League and guardians of galaxy are two awesome movies I'm waiting for
We are all praying for Justice League, but my faith in it ain´t large.
Alejandro Martín Wechsler I'm right there with ya, man. I really want it to be good, but I'll settle for competent at this point.
Kanu Jaswal justice league will suck. I'm calling it
Guardians of the Galaxy came out in 2014
Kanu Jaswal Justice League sucks dicks bro.
Okay, but the guy in Aliens who gets way too carried away with himself and started shouting "IT'S GAME OVER MAN, GAME OVER" is still comedy gold.
Is it me or haven't I already seen this list video already??
already, enough of already
You saw the list in your dreams long ago and then saw it again in the waking state.
I was having a bad day...I needed this. Thank you.
"Hey-I'm WALKING HERE!!!" (another Dustin Hoffman ad lib, from "Midnight Cowboy"-the taxi jumped the light and damn near ran over his foot)
its in gta.. i think it was 2 or was it 4? that game series borrows so many things from movies etc and it works its astonishing.
Aragorn hitting himself bad, breaking his toe and screaming was one too!
"WHAT THE HELL IS THAT SMELL" from the original Independence Day is one of my favorites tbh
Well done! I thoroughly enjoyed that.
The last two...wow....XD
We always struggle even making travel videos to decide which mistakes from filming to keep in, they can be so much fun!
star lord: *drops the freaking INFINITY STONE*
me: uh boi
This video made my day
*thank you*
Matt Dillon accidentally falling over in his chair in The Outsiders 😂😂😂
Cassy Asuega the outsiders movie sucks ass, the book is waaaaaay better
EdgyWeeb69 I find it the opposite because I can’t read for shit lol
That's what I came for XD
Why a french poster for the Rainman movie?
Michael Scigala: Why not? :D
MateDrinker33 'Cause {*inception sound*}
Prat will always be held in my mind as one of the funniest people to play in 3 of my favorite movies. Guardians of the Galaxy, Jurassic World, and the upcoming Guardians of the Galaxy volume two.
2:12 - Well at least her legs weren’t more spread out there. They would’ve had to delay filming for close to an hour.😅
So magneficently cool how Chris Pratt drops that Infinity Stone and picks it up looking like "Woops! Well, never mind." If he had said "Aww, damn" and laughing while looking around at the crew, it would have been useless. It's almost like he feels instantly that "Hey, couldn't this actually work as part of the comedy that this already is?"
One of the more memorable lines in movie history was from Rain Man also.
Charlie: "Raymond! Raymond! Am I using you? Am I using you?"
Raymond: "Yes."
Charlie: "SHUT UP! He is answering a question from a half an hour ago!"
@1:37 I laughed so hard because I read "The Princess Diarrheas"😂😂😂😂😂
im a simple man, i see chris pratt i click.
That was pretty good 😊👍🏼 Thanks for sharing 🙏🏼
COME ON!!!! The best LOTR blooper was Aragorn breaking his toe and letting out that scream!
I love learning about these
It's not a McGuffin if it actually does something in the movie (or book or whatever).
You are right, its Chekov's Gun then.
I'm a little torn on this one.
I agree that their definition of "MacGuffin" is only partially correct. It is true that they are often crucial to the plot development, but the truth of a MacGuffin, according to Hitchcock, is that a MacGuffin is really nothing at all. MacGuffins don't need explaining. You don't have to know WHY the heroes are searching for or fighting over the MacGuffin, simply that they are. Often, MacGuffins are forgotten about as the story progresses as the story isn't about the MacGuffin at all.
It's the disposable nature of the object that makes a MacGuffin a MacGuffin, not that the object is important. While the Inifinity Stones are hardly disposable, the fact that we know very little about them is why many consider them to be a good MacGuffin, keeping in mind that the Holy Grail is also considered a MacGuffin for Arthur and his knights.
As for the Infinity Stones, ultimately, we don't know how or what they actually do, but we do know they're important to the bad guys. And that means the good guys want to keep the bad guys from getting them, and at the end of the day, that's good enough for most of the audience. Explaining them away and giving them too much focus in the plot diminishes their power as a MacGuffin, and ultimately why I wouldn't consider them a MacGuffin in Guardians specifically. But in most of the other Marvel Cinematic films, they're pretty MacGuffiny. They're there and it's what the MCU is driving towards, but in the greater MCU scheme, we've almost forgotten they're there. The nonchalance of Vision wearing one around on his face is evidence of that fact.
The Fantastic Paul The greatest one of all was Ronin! What was in the case!!!???
brilliant in ronin. by the end the answer is, who cares??!? all we want to know is does he ever meet up with deirdre!
I did NOT know that about "Rain Man". That's my absolute favorite scene is THE WHOLE MOVIE... "Uh-oh... Fart" LMFAO
You forgot the part where in Lord of the Rings the guy kicked a helmet, broke his toe and screamed. But they kept it in because it fit the moment
The Martian: trips and falls.
Mike: Are you okay?
I’m fine.
Gotta love the usual suspects! Honestly 😍
Teamo
Nhadynteamoquiero
I had no clue about Chris Pratt's dropping the infinity stone, being an accident. Or the flag ripping in LOTR. Both looked intentional and fit perfectly. The moment Anne Hathaway fell, I thought it was a blooper. I always wondered. It looked too natural. You can try to make that happen, but it looked way too natural and perfect to be planned. I'm SO GLAD THEY KEPT THAT!! IT WAS GOLDEN!!! I love that everyone kept laughing in the Usual Suspects. And I love even more that they kept it. And of course the Dustin Hoffman & Tom Cruise moment, was pure gold. I love when people stay in character, even when they mess up. Just keep going with it. It could make it in the movie and make it that much better.
What about the "I know" moment in Star Wars Empire Strikes Back?
The first time ever I've heard any narrator pronounce the word 'homage' correctly. Well done!
No, he didn't. Do some research. It's pronounced 'hommidge', not homaaj. That's just pretentious people trying to sound sophisticated,
THIS IS NOT AN VIDEO ABOUT IMPROVISATIONS !!! ITS ABOUT BLOOPERS THAT MADE THE CUT!! A BLOOPER!! SOMETHING ACCIDENTAL THAT WASN'T SUPPOSED TO HAPPEN BUT IT DID AND IT WAS GREAT!
Marcela Oliveira it’s not that deep nigga😂😂chill out
It's the improvisations that kept the bloopers in, however.
the Usual Suspects laugh scene is the most classic
Leonardo DiCaprio cut his hand in Django, and being the great actor he is, he improvised by wiping the blood all over an actress’s face
Ok stop, he didn't do that to Kerri Washington. If you even thought about it for a second, you'd realize how unbelievable that statement would be. Yes, he did cut his hand in the prior scene and he kept going with the scene through the pain and bleeding; that part is true. But after that scene, he was cleaned up and treated. Blood is a biohazard and there is no way in hell that an actor in his right mind would (or be allowed to) wipe his actual blood on another person.
That part where the fly crawls into Belloch's mouth has haunted me since I was 10!
I love that Hitchcock's McGuffin plot device is mentioned here, but what isn't mentioned that McGuffins ultimately don't matter. They are important to the characters' motivation and keep the plot rolling along, but a true McGuffin doesn't mean diddly squat at the end (ie- the microfilm in Hitchcock's "North By Northwest" is a true McGuffin, because it is lost down the side of Mount Rushmore and neither goodies or baddies end up with it, but who cares?) So, while the briefcase in "Pulp Fiction" qualifies (as does the watch that belonged to Bruce Willis' dad), the stones in "Guardians of the Galaxy" don't, seeing as Quill uses one to destroy Ronan. An object that determines the outcome of a plot cannot be a McGuffin. I guess one way to spot a McGuffin is to ask yourself: if you told someone the fate of the plot device (ie microfilm in "North By Northwest" or infinity stones in "Guardians of the Galaxy"), would you be spoiling the plot? In the former, no. THAT'S a McGuffin. In the latter, yes. No McGuffin here. Incidentally, the term comes from a story about two men on a train in Scotland. One asks the other "what's in that large case". The second man replies "A McGuffin". When asked what exactly IS a McGuffin, the second man says it is used to hunt lions in Scotland. "But there are no lions in Scotland" says the first man, to which the second man replies "Well then, there's no McGuffin".
BabyFaceBren
You are so right. That's what a McGuffin really is: a crucial part of the plot, but only for the characters in a film; but in the end inconsequential to its development. We the audience could not care less about it.
MacDonald’s is serving a breakfast sandwich inspired by Alfred Hitchcock.
It’s called the Egg McGuffin
What’s in it?
It doesn’t matter.
I dont know what to focus on more, the video, or your voice
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. ♥
When I was a kid back in the day, my mom referred to Ursula Andress as Ursula Undress. I swear, the things you remember lol😅
0:02 "If you're in a mervie"
That’s exactly what I thought. I even replayed. Weird vowel!