17 Secrets Movies Did a Really Good Job of Hiding
If you already noticed any of these, you're probably watching too many movies.
Published 4 years ago in Wow
If you're ever watching a movie and something on the screen makes you pause and rewind, then you're probably one of the people who caught these insane details. These are the kinds of things cinephiles talk about when they say a movie is worth rewatching again and again. Even if you remember the plot, you may have missed these fun little moments. Some of them are so small and subtle it's a miracle anyone even noticed them in the first place. BTW if Martin Scorsese is reading this, let us know when the Godfather IV is coming out. It's like way past due. Find more fun and funny movie nonsense here.
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Blade Runner 2049. In the plot of the film, replicants can be identified by a serial number on their eye, which is exposed by looking up and to the left. When the film’s title cards starts, the first word is “Replicant,” which is in the upper-left of the frame, forcing the viewer to mimic the gesture.12
A weirdly iconic image of Fellowship of the Ring is Boromir staring at the ground in frustration. THere’s a practical reason for why he’s looking down. His speech had been rewritten the night before, so he taped his new lines to his knee, hiding his looks at the script by building it into his character’s expressions.14
Gravity. If you look in the reflection of Kowalski’s helmet, you can see what appears to be a camera and boom mic reflected in the glass. So, it’s a goof, right? Not exactly. None of the glass on the astronaut helmets in Gravity is ever real during its entire runtime, its always computer-generated. The reflection is also computer-generated. Director Alfonso Cuaron inserted it to make it look like the scene was shot in space with a camera crew, not in a studio. You know, for laughs.15
Here’s a freaky detail from Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Because the combination of live-action and animation was so ground-breaking at the time, it was sometimes easier to fake having a human in the frame. So, during the chase scene with Benny the Taxi, there are shots where Eddie is actually animated, but only for quick snippets (once you see it, you can’t unsee it though).16
One of the soldiers that meets Superman in Man of Steel is Aaron Smolinski, who actually played Superman. Kind of. He played the toddler of Clark Kent back in 1978, and he was only two years old when he did it. This is the third Superman film he’s starred in to date (he also has an uncredited cameo in Superman III as a boy at a photo booth).