Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Which famous actors have been the most unruly on a movie set?

On the set of The Goat, Gérard Depardieu and Pierre Richard got along so well and laughed so much that they often made director Francis Veber go crazy.

To keep the actors energized during filming, Veber wanted them to eat lunch as late as possible. Nothing worse than actors in full digestion, sleepy and apathetic.

But Depardieu and Richard made fun of the director's instructions.

“We stashed bottles in the car,” says Pierre Richard, “sausages behind a thicket that we were going to taste between two shots because he didn’t want us to eat to keep in shape. »

And in the evening, Veber wanted his stars to go to bed early, always to be in good shape the next day.

“But we pretended to go to sleep at 11 p.m. and came home at 5 a.m. »

The duo also took the opportunity to tease the director at every opportunity.

“We made fun of him because he worked out every morning. We hid behind the windows to watch him sweat! »

Although both actors gave Francis Veber a hard time, the collaboration of the three men produced a masterpiece of French comedy. And Veber will not hesitate to work with them again on Les Compères and Les Fugitifs .

What famous film is based on a true story without anyone knowing because it would be humiliating?

 The Dinner of Cons by Francis Veber is inspired by a true story…

The concept of the “idiot dinner” was invented by the surrealist André Breton in the 1920s. The guest who managed to bring the biggest idiot with him received congratulations from his friends.

This concept was then taken up in the 1980s by Jean Castel, boss of the eponymous private club in Saint-Germain des-Près.

Jean Castel

Only a small circle of show biz insiders knew about it.

One of the regulars at these dinners was the host Jacques Martin.

It was also through the latter that Francis Veber learned of the existence of this nasty entertainment.

The scenario of Le Dîner de cons is largely inspired by real anecdotes provided to Francis Veber by Jacques Martin.
For example, the day before a dinner for idiots, the pigeon that the host of Antenne 2 was supposed to bring had failed him, and he had to find another one in a hurry.

Jean Castel then advised him to invite a famous French director, whose name has remained secret to this day...

The actor Claude Brasseur was also invited to a dinner for idiots at Castel. But on the idiot side.

At the time, he was doing the Paris-Dakar and he was obsessed with racing. All he had to do was plug it in and he could talk about it for hours.

A clearly stupid and stupid subject for the audience at Castel's dinners.

Source:

Vanity Fair - Article by Pierrick Geais (April 2018)

Which actor/actress played two different characters so well that you didn't recognize him the second time around?

 So, ladies first.

Kate Winslet

Pink ( Titanic)

Dr. Erin Mears ( Contagion ). Admit that it's not very similar.

Johnny Depp

Jack Sparrow ( Pirates of the Caribbean )

Willy Wonka ( Charlie and the Chocolate Factory ). This is definitely a radical change in performance, not to mention the look.

Ichabod Crane fighting the Headless Horseman ( Sleepy Hallow )

Charles Dance

Tywin Lannister, the ruthless patriarch of the family ( Game of Thrones )

Dracula's vampiric mentor ( Dracula Untold )

Ralph Fiennes

SS Amon Goeth ( Schindler's List )

Voldemort ( Harry Potter )

M ( James Bond )

Orlando Bloom

Legolas, the legendary archer ( The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit ).

Brian Epkeen, the bad boy cop ( Zulu ).

Alala definitely certain actors and actresses are particularly gifted at playing very different characters physically and mentally. To do this, they rely not only on their performance but also obviously on the work of the stylists who give them the appropriate look.

Which villain had the most understandable reasons for becoming what he became?

 I like complex villains, that is to say those who we understand why they went to the dark side. Of course, they don't have an excuse but they have understandable motivations for doing what they do. And when we put ourselves in their shoes, we can even have empathy for them.

Silva in Skyfall

Since Daniel Craig played James Bond on screen, 007 has faced several dangerous enemies like Le Chiffre and Dominic Greene who did evil just for the money.

But in Skyfall, Bond must fight against a much more complex adversary: ​​the charismatic Raoul Silva , who does not seek to enrich himself or dominate the world but just to satisfy his revenge against after she delivered him to the Chinese authorities for illegally spying on them, in exchange for the release of other agents.

After being betrayed by his own hierarchy and suffering torture that disfigured him as seen above, we can understand why he became slightly resentful.

Roy Batty in Blade Runner

He is surely one of the least "evil" villains since his intentions are completely legitimate, at least initially. Indeed, he is a replicant. He and his peers are genetically created humans who serve as our slaves and who have a life expectancy limited to only 4 years to prevent them from becoming humanized.

We can therefore understand that Roy is a little angry, especially when we refuse to grant him a longer life and he sees his friends being shot down. His famous monologue in the rain at the end of the film is so moving that it even makes Roy seem more human than "normal" humans.

PS: even if it is older and therefore less rich in special effects, I liked the 1982 film much better than the 2017 film which is sorely lacking in storyline compared to the first. I even almost fell asleep when I saw it in the cinema with my friends when it came out.

Harvey Dent / Two-Face in The Dark Knight

At the start of the film, Harvey Dent is an honest prosecutor, determined to eradicate corruption and the mafia from Gotham with the help of Batman and Commissioner Gordon.

Then he experienced a descent into hell after the death of Rachel and the burns which disfigured him. He then becomes easy prey for the Joker who convinces him to kill everyone he considers to be involved in the death of his loved one. He then becomes Two-Face , an unscrupulous killer. This shows that, here too, revenge can make us commit terrible acts.


Magua in The Last of the Mohicans

Another case of revenge. Here, Magua saw his village burned and his family massacred by the English, before being reduced to slavery by another tribe who also fought for them. He then develops a fierce hatred of the “Grey Hair” and decides to take revenge with very deadly violence.

Even if his suffering does not excuse all his actions, far from it, we can nevertheless have empathy for him. After all, if our entire family were murdered, revenge might also push us to do actions that are at least very morally questionable.


Koba in Planet of the Apes

Torture can leave terrible psychological effects on humans… and even on apes, as we see in Planet of the Apes . Before being freed by Caesar, Koba spent years of captivity in a laboratory where he underwent enormous tests and torture that left him disfigured and traumatized for life.

He then begins to hate humans and decides to take revenge on them by starting a war against the entire human species, even if it means trying to kill Caesar to achieve this.

Even if Koba went too far, we can still understand his hatred, and these films also have the merit of showing the mistreatment inflicted on laboratory animals.


Which film presents Japan in the most ridiculous way?

 You Only Live Twice, the fifth James Bond with Sean Connery (1967) is one of those films filmed at a time when no one really knew what was going on in Japan and where the local culture gave rise to a lot of fantasies, and of incomprehension.

The film has aged poorly, to say the least. We feel that political correctness will take a hit as soon as Sean Connery arrives in Hong Kong and confides to an attractive native that “Asian women have different taste”…

But it's when James Bond arrives in Japan that the film will really go to hell.

Among other things, the school that trains Japanese secret agents is in fact a ninja school. Because in the 1960s in Japan, the government apparently still relied on ninjas for counter-espionage. And rather than training them in new technologies, the training focused mainly on the use of spears, swords and daggers (in addition to the obligatory karate sessions, naturally).

To this, we must also add the secret agent uniform, with its essential hood. Not very discreet but terribly exotic.

James Bond will then come up with a plan to approach the base of his Japanese enemies incognito without being noticed. And his plan is superbly formidable: he will disguise himself as a Japanese with a wig, tape on his temples to block his eyes, and yellow foundation.

And he's also going to speak Japanese, of course. But very badly and with a Scottish accent to cut with a knife. We’re bordering on the sketch of The Unknowns…

"My name is Bond. Jyeimuzu Bond."

Which famous actors have been the most unruly on a movie set?

On the set of  The Goat , Gérard Depardieu and Pierre Richard got along so well and laughed so much that they often made director Francis...