Editors Picks

When Movie Bloopers Were Too Good To Cut!

Here are some of the movie bloopers that made the cut

Thanks, Alex for the voiceover

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94 Comments

    • 🤣 I wanna know how many guys are waiting for a call from her?
      other wise it is a bar story that no-one believes ” hey man i was once asked to make out with Scarlett Johansson in the back of a van”

    • Probably the more accurate question would be, “how many numbers were offered?”. I doubt she’d take any of them.

    • I’m sure most of the people who said no figured this was a setup. If some hot woman wants to have sex with you out of the blue you’re going to get drugged and robbed. Some guys will take their chances anyway.

  • Al Leong is legendary. I remember trying to find him in every action movie I watched as a kid.

  • “Im walking here! im walking!” from dustin hoffman is still probably the most iconic bit of improv ever.

  • This is 1 of the reasons you get good actors in films. A good director lets actors act. This shows acting gold in these films.

  • Another Leonardo DiCaprio moment was in DJango. He cut his hand during an intense scene. He just looks at the cut dripping and continues, doesn’t miss a beat. First time watching I was blown away. Excellent actor.

    • He didn’t cut his hand a big piece of glass was stuck in his hand then while staying in character he pulled it out and smoked his cigarette like an absolute legend

    • ​@jbonedevil8636 he didn’t just smoke a cigar. He rubbed his blood all over Kerry Washingtons face when he was saying his lines about doing with his property whatever he wants.

    • except for the part where he wiped his actual bloody hand all over Kerry Washington’s face. Maybe don’t fucking do that, it’s a huge biohazard risk!?

    • One of the all time great scenes. Crazy he used his real blood on Kerry Washington’s face – so her freaking out reaction must have been real as well!

  • The ending scene in Captain Phillips movie is insane, it shows how much of an actor Tom Hanks really is!!! The performance was one of the best performances in the entire movie!

    • Yeah that was incredible, absolute text book of selling the scene. No wonder it seemed so real if the nurse was a real navy medic, she just ignored he was Tom Hanks.

    • That scene was so well done. I don’t think a writer could have wrote it better. And it would have been hard to convey to actors what needed to be done. Took a great actor and a person from the field to to it so brilliantly.

    • I remember that scene, all the tension from the movie getting released in the end in the form of chock, it’s the scary of it, feeling yourself going into chock, amazing actor. Tom Hanks is probably the best when it comes to portraying emotions and creating an amazing cinematic experience.

  • Its impprtant to have that flexibility. The actor who keeps acting and the director who keeps rolling, magical things happen lol

  • The ability the actors can have to stay in character and roll with an improv scene or an accident like a slip and you find out they weren’t part of the script is a true credit to them

    • I think that may come with experience as well… First time – you are startled that you broke something, you made a mistake etc.
      Next 100th-1000th time? Nah, just keep it rolling 🙂

    • The first thing you learn: NEVER break character until the director says “CUT”. Even onstage as a musician – no matter what happens – the show must go on.

    • The lines an actor or an actress has to play in a script are “only” the words that this caracter would say in specific situations.
      Based on what those lines and situations say about the caracter’s personality, a big part of the actor’s / actresses work is to create a caracter “outside” of the script.
      This enables him or her to ideally stay in caracter, whatever may happen.

  • Buster Keaton’s stunts were insane , and all for a laugh , absolute legend . Sometimes the ad libs are spot on and many writers would have loved to have owned those lines .

  • Pro tip: when you put two cameras on a scene, with one perfectly angled up to the time clock on the wall, you know he’s going to punch it because you planned for that. With that setup, there’s a literal zero percent chance that he decided to punch it out of the blue, after those cameras started rolling. If it wasn’t already in the script then what almost certainly happened is that he had the idea, he said to the director, “How about I punch this thing right off the wall”, and the director thought it was a great idea.

    • Yeah, the same goes for half of these “bloopers”. It’s obvious because of the framing that it was in the script, improvised with the full cooperation of the director, or it happened as a blooper and then the director said, “let’s do that again but make sure we catch it on camera”. Gandalf’s head bump for example. There’s zero chance that they set that shot up that way just for a shot of him just walking.

  • In the UK Rishi Sunak was never meant to be elected as Prime Minister but the Conservatives thought it would be a good laugh, so let him stay. The rest is history.

  • If Scarlett pulled up in a free candy van and told me to get in, tell my mother she raised me better but I jumped in anyway

  • Went and watched the scene with Tom Hanks and it’s perfection. She is so real and slips into her training but there is genuine care and reaction to him in her voice. He gave them such realistically acted trauma that they went on autopilot with their training. Brilliantly done.

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