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roshiq
05-03-2010, 08:27 AM
This list features 15 of the best scenes and lines that were made up by either the actors or directors and were not in the original script.

15. Mars Attacks (Tim Burton, 1996): Alien language

In Mars Attacks, no dialogue was written for the Martians so Frank Welker made up his own language for them.

Fact: The Martian Girl dress had no zipper or buttons (to make it as smooth as possible), so Lisa Marie had to be sewn into it every day.

14. Knocked Up (Judd Apatow, 2007): You know how I know you�re gay?

Paul Rudd and Seth Rogan played off each other brilliantly in this scene, however, a different version than the one in the video was used for the real movie. All of the �You know how I know you�re gay� insults were unscripted and in fact, a large portion of the film was improvised.

Fact: During the �you know how I know you�re gay� scene, Paul Rudd is wearing a t-shirt that has a picture of himself on it.

13. Tootsie (Sydney Pollack, 1982): Party talk

Bill Murray plays Dustin Hoffman�s play writing roommate, and in this scene, he is talking to a bunch of people at a party. Pollack wanted a monologue from Murray, and the other actors in the scene were not informed making any response, interesting. His stories are made to seem like they last the whole party and were all completely ad libbed by Murray.

Fact: Dustin Hoffman suggested the title, which was his mother�s dog�s nickname.

12. Shaun of the Dead (Edgar Wright, 2004): Ed in the Pub

There are several different takes of the scene where Nick Frost�s character Ed attempts to cheer up Shaun by telling stories about the pub regulars. In the scenes, he describes the woman as an ex-pornstar, supposedly all made up on the spot. Simon Pegg�s laughter is genuine as a result of this.

Fact: The non-featured zombie extras were paid the princely sum of �1 a day for their troubles.

11. A Clockwork Orange (Stanley Kubrick, 1971): Dance rape scene

In this Kubrick�s classic the scene in which the gang break into the house was shot many times, but Kubrick wasn�t happy with how it looked. He suggested to Malcolm McDowell, who played Alex de Large, that he add in a little dance spontaneously during the next take. He did, and it was included in the final film.

Fact: Filming the rape scene was so difficult for the actress originally cast in the role. She quit and the part was recast to Adrienne Corri, who was said to have been furious with Stanley Kubrick for the scores of takes he required for this infamous scene, feeling it should have been done swiftly.

10. Caddyshack (Harold Ramis, 1980): The Cinderella story

Bill Murray improvised the �Cinderella story� sequence from two lines of stage direction. Director Harold Ramis simply asked Murray to emulate a kid announcing his own fantasy sports moment. Murray simply asked for four rows of �mums and did the scene in one take.

Fact: The scene where Carl and Ty are talking in Carl�s �house� was almost entirely improvised between Bill Murray and Chevy Chase.

9. Saving Private Ryan (Steven Spielberg, 1998): The barn story

In Saving Private Ryan, Pvt. Ryan (Matt Damon) told a story to Capt. John Miller (Tom Hanks) about his three brothers and a girl from back home. All of this was ad libbed by Matt Damon.

Fact: The Omaha Beach scene cost $11 million to shoot and involved up to 1000 extras, some of whom were members of the Irish Army Reserve. Of those extras, 20-30 of them were amputees issued with prosthetic limbs to simulate soldiers having their limbs blown off.

8. Full Metal Jacket (Stanley Kubrick, 1987): Drill Sergeant

R. Lee Ermey was actually a real drill sergeant and his part in this classic war film was largely unscripted. The beginning of the film is an absolute comic masterpiece, made famous by Ermey�s shouting at the guys who have just joined the army.

Fact: When Ermey said, �I�ll bet you�re the kind of guy that would fuck a person in the ass and not even have the God damn common courtesy to give him a reach-around. I�ll be watching you,�, Kubrick had to stop and ask what a reach-around was as he didn�t know.

7. Midnight Cowboy (John Schlesinger, 1969): I�m walking here!

This has been disputed as being a genuine ad lib or not as Dustin Hoffman (who plays �Ratso� Rizzo) claims he made it up, and the director claims it was always in the script. The defense of both parties is understandable as the line has become incredibly famous. As Hoffman is walking down the street with Jon Voight�s character, Joe Buck, a yellow cab nearly runs him over which leads Hoffman to bash on the hood and shout �I�m walking here!�, before retorting to his on-screen partner, �Actually, that ain�t a bad way to pick up insurance y�know.�, all in his unique New York parlance.

Fact: Dustin Hoffman kept pebbles in his shoe to ensure his limp would be consistent from shot to shot.

6. The Shining (Stanley Kubrick, 1980): Here�s Johnny!

The dark mood that is created as Jack Nicholson smashes his way through the door is juxtaposed with his version of a catchphrase used on the Johnny Carson Show (A hugely popular show at the time), giving an incredibly creepy, yet humorous effect and making it the best-known line from the film. It was, of course, improvised by Nicholson.

Fact: Allegedly, Kubrick would scream and shout at Shelley Duval (playing Wendy Torrance) in order to get her to show real fear, and it�s even claimed her slapped her in one take.

5. The Empire Strikes Back (Irvin Kershner, 1980): �I love you.� �I know�

Harrison Ford plays the cocky rogue, Han Solo, and in one of his rare scenes where the script required him to show some compassion, the act Ford had cemented for Solo was so strong that the original line, �I love you too� didn�t work. George Lucas told Ford to just say what he thought was best and �I know� was the result, fitting in with his character�s persona perfectly.

Fact: Carrie Fisher stood on a box for many of her scenes with Harrison Ford in order to make up for the height difference and have her appear in the frame with him. Carrie Fisher is about a foot shorter than Harrison Ford.

4. Raiders Of The Lost Ark (Steven Spielberg, 1981): Sword fight

This scene has been made famous not only for what it shows, but the story behind it. The original script had a long sword fight between Indiana (Harrison Ford) and the swordsman in black. However, a day before the shoot was due, Ford got terrible food poisoning and dysentery and after speaking to Spielberg, got the scene changed so that after the man�s impressive pre-fight moves, Indiana just shoots the guy dead, fitting in with the character�s ethos.

Fact: In a deleted scene, where the character of Sallah is confronted by a Nazi soldier, John Rhys-Davies who was suffering from cholera at the time was required to bend down. Unfortunately this prompted the very sick Rhys-Davies to soil himself.

3. Taxi Driver (Martin Scorsese, 1976): You talkin� to me?

The famous �you talkin� to me?� monologue in Taxi Driver was actually completely improvised by Robert De Niro. The original script just said �Travis looks in the mirror�, but Scorsese liked what De Niro did so much, he kept it in the film.

Fact: What he�s saying is actually used as a warm up for actors, the idea being you put the emphasis on a different word each time you say it, i.e. �YOU talking to me?�, �You talking to ME?� and so on.

2. The Silence Of The Lambs (Jonathan Demme, 1991): The hiss

Although he has less than 25 minutes of screen time, Anthony Hopkins won an Oscar for Best Actor for his portrayal as the cannibal, Dr. Hannibal Lecter. The incredibly famous line, �A census taker once tried to test me. I ate his liver with some fava beans and a nice Chianti.�, was immortalized by Hopkin�s hiss, which he originally did as a joke. The result disturbed Jodie Foster (playing Agent Starling) so much that the look on her face in genuine.

Fact: The pattern on the butterfly�s back in the movie posters is not the natural pattern of the Death�s-Head Hawk Moth. It is, in fact, Salvador Dal�s �In Voluptas Mors�, a picture of seven naked women made to look like a human skull.

1. Dr. Strangelove

Rated as one of the best films of all time, Peter Seller�s is often credited as the Co-Writer, improvising so many of his lines within the film. He plays 3 characters in the film, one of them being a wheelchair-bound nuclear weapons expert, who has past associations with the Nazis. Constantly calling the US president �Mein Fuhrer�, strangling himself, and pushing down his involuntary Nazi salutes all made Seller�s character what it is. The final line of the film, �Mein Fuhrer, I can walk!� was also apparently made up by Sellers, as he got out of his chair forgetting he was supposed to be disabled.

Fact: In the novel on which the film is based upon, (Red Alert by Peter George) the character of Dr. Strangelove, doesn�t even exist. A testament to Seller�s incredible talents.

Source: Listverse (http://listverse.com/2010/05/03/15-great-scenes-that-were-unscripted/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheListUniverse+%28The+List+U niverse%29)

neverending
05-03-2010, 09:10 AM
Great list. Proof that slavish adherance to literary sources would make for duller movies. Certain allowances must be made.

ChronoGrl
05-03-2010, 10:01 AM
14. Knocked Up (Judd Apatow, 2007): You know how I know you�re gay?

Paul Rudd and Seth Rogan played off each other brilliantly in this scene, however, a different version than the one in the video was used for the real movie. All of the �You know how I know you�re gay� insults were unscripted and in fact, a large portion of the film was improvised.

Fact: During the �you know how I know you�re gay� scene, Paul Rudd is wearing a t-shirt that has a picture of himself on it.


This is actually 40 Year Old Virgin, not Knocked Up...

Great scene, though. I think Rudd is hilarious.


Cool list - I always loved the Indiana Jones story.

ferretchucker
05-03-2010, 10:52 AM
As proved by that list, spontaneous lines such as those usually make for much better reactions from the cast around.

Elvis_Christ
05-03-2010, 04:39 PM
Walken and Hopper's scene in True Romance would be my personal favorite of unscripted greatness.

ChronoGrl
05-04-2010, 07:19 AM
Walken and Hopper's scene in True Romance would be my personal favorite of unscripted greatness.

That was unscripted? That scene is pure brilliance.

Elvis_Christ
05-04-2010, 05:38 PM
That was unscripted? That scene is pure brilliance.

Yeh. They improvised the majority of it. Epic shit for sure.

Bastet
05-04-2010, 09:32 PM
[QUOTE=roshiq;859243]This list features 15 of the best scenes and lines that were made up by either the actors or directors and were not in the original script.

Fact: The pattern on the butterfly�s back in the movie posters is not the natural pattern of the Death�s-Head Hawk Moth. It is, in fact, Salvador Dal�s �In Voluptas Mors�, a picture of seven naked women made to look like a human skull.

Brilliant and informative list. Thank You x Just out of interest, The same Salvadore Dali painting was used as the inspiration for posters for The Descent.

Elvis_Christ
05-04-2010, 11:16 PM
Brilliant and informative list. Thank You x Just out of interest, The same Salvadore Dali painting was used as the inspiration for posters for The Descent.

I only just noticed that the other day. Dali came up with some awesome stuff.

Bastet
05-04-2010, 11:46 PM
I only just noticed that the other day. Dali came up with some awesome stuff.

I would have love to have gotten into the mans mind- I can look at his stuff again and again and see something different each time. Oh and isn't Art appreciation a little high brow for here LOL :D

neverending
05-04-2010, 11:58 PM
I would have love to have gotten into the mans mind- I can look at his stuff again and again and see something different each time. Oh and isn't Art appreciation a little high brow for here LOL :D

Yes, it definitely is. I'm sure you're the only one here with any appreciation of high culture. :p


If you want to get inside Dali's head, you should read his autobiography- The Secret Life of Salvadore Dali.

Bastet
05-05-2010, 12:16 AM
Yes, it definitely is. I'm sure you're the only one here with any appreciation of high culture. :p


If you want to get inside Dali's head, you should read his autobiography- The Secret Life of Salvadore Dali.
Haha, a touch of sarcasm! can go with that. Not sure about the autobiography-purely because I have such a backlog of books to read at the moment. But thanks for the reccommendation x

The_Return
05-05-2010, 03:39 AM
Acting is exploring...God bless directors that allow honest moments like those to happen.