15 Fun Facts About “Weird Science”

Eric D. Snider and Mental_Floss present 15 Fun Facts About Weird ScienceHere are three of my favorites…

9. THE SCENE WHERE GARY TALKS LIKE AN OLD AFRICAN-AMERICAN BLUESMAN WAS INSPIRED BY RICHARD PRYOR.
Hall recounted in an interview that he and John Hughes would “watch Richard Pryor movies on the weekend. And we would imitate this character called Mudball that Richard Pryor would do. And so it was really just a product of being Richard Pryor fans that John said, ‘Hey, why don’t we create this scene where you go into a bar and do that?’”

11. IT TAKES ITS TITLE FROM A 1950S COMIC BOOK, BUT OTHER SIMILARITIES ARE COINCIDENTAL.
EC Comics published 22 issues of Weird Science between 1950 and 1953, alongside more popular anthology titles like Tales from the Crypt. Hollywood mega-producer Joel Silver got the rights to all the old EC stuff in the ’80s, and Hughes was in his office one day when boxes of the comics were being delivered and unpacked. Seeing the title Weird Science, and thinking of a beautiful woman he and Silver had seen earlier that day, Hughes said, “What if two kids figure out a way to make that girl that was in the commissary?” This is according to Silver’s recollection, anyway. “I already had rights to the EC books, so that’s how I convinced them to let me have the title.” Now, there was a story in an issue of Weird Science that bore a superficial resemblance to Hughes’ idea—“Made of the Future,” in which a man builds a wife from a kit he got on a trip to the year 2150.

13. BILL PAXTON GOT HIS CHARACTER’S DISTINCTIVE MILITARY-STYLE HAIRCUT WITHOUT HUGHES’ PERMISSION.
His first day on the set, “I told [the film’s makeup artist] I wanted to do a haircut that was really intense,” Paxton told The AV Club in 2012. “He’s the one who suggested the flattop, but long on the sides and slicked back. And he was afraid he was going to lose his job to cut it like that without having it approved by the producer or the director, but I said, ‘Just do it.’” Fortunately, Hughes loved it, along with everything else Paxton brought to the character.

13 Interesting Facts About M. Night Shyamalan Movies

Hollywood.com recently posted 13 Interesting Facts About M. Night Shyamalan Movies.  Here are three of my favorites…

1. Sixth Sense was inspired by an episode of Are You Afraid of the Dark?.

M. Night Shyamalan
GIPHY/Hollywood Pictures

According to M. Night, the film is based on the episode “The Tale of the Dream Girl”, where the premise was: the lead characters are being ignored by the friends/family and don’t understand that they are dead until the end of the episode.

5. M. Night wrote the screenplay for Unbreakable with Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson in mind.

Touchstone Pictures

He always anticipated the two actors agreeing to do the film. This was also their fourth film together, after Loaded Weapon 1 (1993), Pulp Fiction (1994), and Die Hard: With a Vengeance (1995).

6. The Happening is the only movie of his in which M. Night does not physically appear.

GIPHY/20th Century Fox

He’s the voice of Joey, who calls out to Alma a few times in the film.

7. All of his films are set in, or very close to, Philadelphia.

 

Every Message Left on Jim Rockford’s Answering Machine


The Rockford Files always opened with a message left on Rockford’s answering machine.  The message (unrelated to the episode) “…invited the viewer to return to the quirky, down-on-his-luck world of Jim Rockford.”

Here’s a favorite:

“Jim, It’s Norma at the market. It bounced. You want us to tear it up, send it back, or put it with the others?”

Now thanks to That Eric Alper we can listen and download every message used.

33 Things We Learned From Joe Carnahan’s The Grey Commentary


Rob Hunter and Film School Rejects present 33 Things We Learned From Joe Carnahan’s The Grey Commentary.  Here are three four of my favorites…

11. The scene with Ottway waking up in the snow was shot in minus twenty degrees. “See Liam’s face, how red that is, there is no makeup on him,” says Carnahan. “They kept saying ‘you can’t put Liam in the snow, you can’t put Liam in the snow,’ but Liam went in the snow.” Barton says Carnahan and the guys complained so much about how cold it was, but the editing room was probably 75 degrees which was also pretty tough. “There was some days the espresso machine was jammed,” adds Hellmann.

13. Carnahan’s wife told him she thinks Ottway was the lone survivor and the rest were simply facets of his personality. “I thought that was really novel until ten other people, all women, said the same thing to me. I thought my god that’s an interesting little trend.” Barton recalls hearing her say that and thinking “Holy crap, what a great thing to say. We had never thought of that.”

21. The high-pitched howl emanating from the woods as the men scramble to start a fire after being chased by the wolves was actually made by Quentin “Rampage” Jackson. They recorded him and modified it some, but he’s the source.

****SPOILER ALERT****

33. The post-credits shot, a remnant of their attempts to capture Ottway’s fight with the wolves, was included for purely artistic reasons on Carnahan’s part. “It certainly, to me, doesn’t answer any questions,” says Barton, “in a good way.” Carnahan adds that a lot of people don’t seem to realize that’s the back of Neeson’s head resting on the wolf’s slowly breathing form.

The Secret History of the Batman Movies That Were ALMOST Made

Frank Miller, Joel Schumacher, Paul Dini and other filmmakers discuss details of the Batman films that nearly made it to the big screen in Aaron Couch’s Before ‘Batman Begins’: Secret History of the Movies That Almost Got Made for The Hollywood Reporter.

I’m still holding out hope that someday someone will take Batman: Year One and/or The Dark Knight Returns all the way (and do it/them right).

The 10 Best Monster Movies of All Time

Recently  Maane Khatchatourian posted in Variety The 10 Best Monster Movies of All Time.

While I don’t think the list was  a great one, I’ll play along.  Here’s my ranking (and comments for their choices)…

  1. Creature from the Black Lagoon – One of my favorite movies of all time.  I don’t know how many times I’ve seen Creature from the Black Lagoon, but I always enjoy it!  Wondering when it will be updated/rebooted?

  2. The Thing (1982) – I saw it on it’s original theatrical run.  Scary then and scary now.

  3. Alien – Another one I saw when it was first released.  I’ve grown to love it even more over the years.

  4. King Kong – The original Kong is still King.

  5. Bride of Frankenstein and Frankenstein The Godfather II and Godfather of monster movie sequels.

  6. Jaws – I have a tough time with this one being labeled a monster movie.  Jaws is a classic though.

  7. Jurassic Park – Still the best of the Jurassic Park/World movies.

  8. The Fly (1958) – “Help me.  Help me.”  Chilling.  Another film that I’ve grown to appreciate more over the years.

  9. Gremlins – Not a fan.

  10. Godzilla (1954) – Not a fan of the original Godzilla movies although I watched them enough as a kid with my grandpa.

15 Fun Facts About “City Slickers”


Roger Cormier and Mental_Floss present 15 Fun Facts About City Slickers. Here are three of my favorites…

1. JACK PALANCE WAS BILLY CRYSTAL’S ORIGINAL CHOICE TO PLAY CURLY.

When Crystal first came up with the seed of the idea for City Slickers, he immediately thought of Jack Palance as the crusty bad guy with the heart of gold. He thought of him because the first movie he had ever seen was the 1953 movie Shane, where Palance played the bad guy. The actor left a lasting impression on Crystal, who was seven years old at the time of his first movie-going experience. Because his father produced jazz concerts, Billy saw Shane seated on Billie Holiday’s lap.

5. CHARLES BRONSON WAS ANGRY OVER BEING ASKED TO PLAY CURLY.

Jack Palance initially turned down the role of Curly, as he was committed to another project. So Crystal offered the part to Charles Bronson, who was not pleased. He cursed Crystal out because “I’m dead on page 64!” Palance, of course, ended up taking the role (and the rest is history).

6. PALANCE GOT INTO AN ARGUMENT WITH THE DIRECTOR ON THE FIRST DAY OF SHOOTING.

The veteran actor yelled at Ron Underwood over his first direction, but everything went smoothly after that. When Crystal asked what had happened, Palance explained that he always gets nervous on his first day of shooting. Sure enough, Tim Burton told a similar story about Palance snapping at him on his first day of shooting on Batman over how he was told to walk out of a bathroom, with Burton admitting that the incident scared him “to death—I literally saw white and left my body.”

Celebrity Phobias

A phobia is defined as…

…a type of anxiety disorder, usually defined as a persistent fear of an object or situation in which the sufferer commits to great lengths in avoiding, typically disproportional to the actual danger posed, often being recognized as irrational.

Common phobias are a fear of public speaking, spiders, snakes, heights, dogs, thunder or lightening, flying and so on.

Eddie Deezen takes a look a celebrity phobias in his piece, “Hey, What Are You Afraid Of” at Neatorama.