Category: Trivia

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Blair Witch Project’

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Blair Witch Project’

    Artisan Entertainment

    If “The Blair Witch Project” taught us anything, it’s that you don’t need big budgets or elaborate gore effects to make a great, utterly unforgettable horror movie. You just need a strong premise and a cast dedicated enough to pull off the illusion. Celebrate the 20th anniversary of this found footage classic by learning more about the making of “The Blair Witch Project.”

    1. Part of the reason “The Blair Witch Project” is so effective is that the actors’ reactions of fear are often genuine. For example, directors Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez would sneak up on their tent at night and shake it suddenly.

    2. The actors agreed to remain in-character as much as possible during filming. They used the safe word “taco” for those moments when they needed a break.

    Artisan Entertainment

    3. The movie’s ad campaign was notorious for convincing many moviegoers it was actually a factual documentary, to the point that many fans sent sympathy cards to actress Heather Donahue‘s mother.

    4. Much of the material for the ad campaign was taken from deleted scenes from the movie. Originally, the movie was intended to include a closing sequence where a news crew investigates the disappearance of the main characters.

    Artisan Entertainment

    5. Even the actors were led to believe the Blair Witch legend was true during filming. They were only told afterward that it was entirely made up for the movie.

    6. “The Blair Witch Project” set a Guinness world record for the highest box office to budget ratio, with the movie earning roughly $248 million on a budget of $60,000.

    7. One way the production saved money was by purchasing a video camera at Circuit City and returning it for a refund after filming was complete.

    Artisan Entertainment

    8. Approximately 20 hours of footage was shot in total, with the final film being whittled down to a lean 82 minutes.

    9. Maryland-based hunters complained about the 1999-2000 season being ruined because so many fans of the movie were traipsing about the wilderness and scaring away game.

    Lionsgate

    10. In addition to two movie sequels (2000’s “Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2” and 2016’s “Blair Witch“), the series’ mythology has been expanded in the form of comic books, novels and PC games.

    11. A spinoff TV series is currently being developed for Lionsgate’s Studio L platform.

  • 13 Things You Never Knew About ‘True Lies’ on its 25th Anniversary

    13 Things You Never Knew About ‘True Lies’ on its 25th Anniversary

    20th Century Fox

    It’s hard to believe it’s been 25 years since director James Cameron and actor Arnold Schwarzenegger last got together to blow things up and make movie magic. They sure don’t make action movies like “True Lies” anymore. Celebrate this big movie milestone by learning more about the making of this beloved action movie.

    1. True Lies is a remake of a 1991 French comedy called “La Totale!”.

    2. Cameron hired a team of writers to help punch up the script’s comedy. He ultimately abandoned most of that material, but he did keep one soon-to-be-iconic one-liner, “You’re fired!”

    20th Century Fox

    3. While its budget may pale in comparison to current blockbusters, “True Lies” set a record by being the first movie with a production budget over $100 million.

    4. Schwarzenegger spent six months training for the tango dancing scene. Schwarzenegger said he used Al Pacino‘s performance in “Scent of a Woman” as inspiration/motivation.

    20th Century Fox

    5. Fortunately, Schwarzenegger didn’t need nearly as much practice for the horseback riding sequences. He was able to rely on his previous experience working on “Conan the Barbarian” and “Conan the Destroyer.”

    6. The moment where Jamie Lee Curtis‘ Helen falls during her striptease dance was an unplanned accident that Cameron kept in the final version.. That’s why Schwarzenegger briefly sits up in surprise when Curtis falls.

    20th Century Fox

    7. Gib’s rant about his ex-wife taking his ice cube trays was inspired by a similar incident from Tom Arnold and Roseanne Barr‘s divorce.

    8. The bad publicity surrounding that divorce made Fox execs reluctant to cast Arnold in the film. Fortunately, Cameron stood up for Arnold and threatened to walk if Arnold didn’t get the part. He ended up being one of the movie’s highlights.

    20th Century Fox

    9. Charlton Heston‘s character Director Trilby is heavily inspired by the Marvel Comics character Nick Fury, right down to the eye patch and job description.

    10. “True Lies” is the only Cameron film to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects but not win.

    20th Century Fox

    11. As of July 2019, “True Lies” still isn’t available on Blu-ray. Cameron has indicated that a new HD transfer was completed, but he has yet to find time in his busy schedule to review and approve it.

    12. A sequel almost happened in the early 2000’s. A script was completed and Cameron and the original cast were slated to return, but Cameron’s enthusiasm waned following the 9/11 terror attacks.

    20th Century Fox

    13. Following years of rumors, a TV adaptation is being developed for the Disney+ streaming service.

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy’

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy’

    Dreamworks Pictures

    It’s been 15 years since the world first met Ron Burgundy, legend of the news trade and a man whose apartment smells of rich mahogany. So why not grab a trident, dive into the newscaster free-for-all and learn more about the making of “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.”

    1. The Ron Burgundy character was inspired by a former Detroit newscaster named Mort Crim.

    2. According to Will Ferrell, his character’s full name is Ronald Joseph Aaron Burgundy.

    Dreamworks Pictures

    3. Ferrell drew on his years of musical experience for the early party scene where Ron riffs on Jethro Tull. Ferrell has been playing the flute since grade school.

    4. Not that he’s a particularly trustworthy figure on the best of days, but Ron is probably lying when he brags about being friends with legendary newscaster Edward R. Murrow. Murrow died in 1965, years before the events of “Anchorman.”

    Sony Pictures

    5. Ferrell’s frequent costar John C. Reilly had to turn down the role of Champ due to his commitment to Martin Scorsese‘s “The Aviator.” As consolation, Reilly was given a cameo role in “Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues.”

    6. The zoo scenes were filmed at the Los Angeles Zoo, which is a convenient spot since it closed down in the 1960’s.

    Dreamworks Pictures

    7. As bizarre as the news team fight sequence is, it was almost even weirder. An earlier draft of the script featured a plane full of newscasters crashing in the mountains and doing battle with ninja star-wielding monkeys.

    8. Another early draft featured an extra news team member named Marshall Connors. William H. Macy was considered for the role.

    9. Director Adam McKay filmed numerous alternate takes of many scenes, sometimes shooting as many as 20 variations of a single scene.

    Dreamworks Pictures

    10. Amy Poehler originally had a role in “Anchorman,” but her character was completely cut out of the final version.

    11. Because there were so many alternate and deleted scenes left over after the final cut was completed, McKay was able to combine them and create an entirely new direct-to-video movie called “Wake Up, Ron Burgundy.”

  • 13 Things You Never Knew About ‘Forrest Gump’ on its 25th Anniversary

    13 Things You Never Knew About ‘Forrest Gump’ on its 25th Anniversary

    Paramount Pictures

    It’s been 25 years since “Forrest Gump” landed in theaters and provided Baby Boomers everywhere with a concentrated dose of feel-good nostalgia. In the process, it became one of the most critically and commercially successful movies of 1994. Mark this anniversary by learning a little more about the making of “Forrest Gump” and just how much it differs from the original novel.

    1. Tom Hanks wasn’t paid a salary for starring in the film. Instead, he opted for percentage points of the gross, a savvy decision that netted him about $40 million.

    2. John Travolta, Bill Murray and Chevy Chase all turned down offers to star as Forrest.

    Paramount Pictures

    3. Hanks actually based his Southern accent on that of child actor Michael Conner Humphreys, who plays young Forrest in the film.

    4. Comedian Dave Chappelle turned down the chance to play Bubba, fearing the movie would be a box office disaster. Chappelle and Hanks would eventually appear together in 1998’s “You’ve Got Mail.”

    Paramount Pictures

    5. In addition to playing Bubba, Mykelti Williamson has a smaller role in the film as the White House waiter who removes the cap from Forrest’s Dr. Pepper bottle.

    6. “Forrest Gump” is one of three ’90s movies featuring Hanks and Gary Sinise, with the other two being “Apollo 13” and “The Green Mile.” All three were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.

    7. Lieutenant Dan’s Saint Christopher medal was actually worn by Sinise’s brother-in-law during his military tour in Vietnam.

    Paramount Pictures

    8. Sinise later formed a cover band called The Lt. Dan Band, which mainly performs benefit concerts for veteran-related charities.

    9. Hanks’ brother Jim served as his body double for many of the running scenes.

    Paramount Pictures

    10. The Vietnam scenes weren’t shot anywhere near Vietnam, but rather in Fripp Island, South Carolina.

    11. Kurt Russell has an uncredited role in the film. He provided the dubbed voice for Elvis Presley, building on his previous experience starring in 1979’s “Elvis.”

    12. While based on the novel by Winston Groom, the movie version differs significantly from the source material. The novel includes segments where Forrest becomes stranded among a cargo cult in New Guinea and participates in a disastrous movie shoot with actress Raquel Welch.

    Pocket Books

    13. The sequel novel “Gump & Co.” opens with Forrest complaining about how poorly he was depicted in the movie and the hassles of becoming an overnight celebrity. This sequence stems from Groom’s anger toward Paramount, whose questionable accounting figures prevented him from earning any royalties from the movie.

  • 18 Things You Never Knew About ‘Men in Black’

    18 Things You Never Knew About ‘Men in Black’

    “I make this look good,” exclaimed Will Smith of the plain dark suit that was his uniform in “Men in Black.” Indeed, he made it look not just good but effortless.

    The  sci-fi comedy released over 20 years ago (and the inspiration for this summer’s “Men in Black International“) solidified his reputation as the king of Fourth of July weekend releases. The release also launched a film franchise that earned $1.7 billion, and actually made Tommy Lee Jones seem funny.

    Still, as many times as you’ve watched Smith and Jones save the planet from extraterrestrial bugs, there’s a lot you may not know about how the film came together, who almost starred in it, and what it took to accomplish that remarkably icky effects and makeup work. Here are the facts:
    1. “The Men in Black” originated as a six-issue comic book in 1990-91. Created by writer Lowell Cunningham and illustrator Sandy Carruthers, it was much darker in tone than the movie and centered on a secret agency that tangled with such supernatural menaces as demons and werewolves, not just aliens.

    2. Producers Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald picked up the film rights as early as 1992. They wanted “Addams Family” franchise director Barry Sonnenfeld to shoot the movie, but when they approached him, he was already busy making “Get Shorty.” They considered director Les Mayfield (the director of the “Miracle on 34th Street” remake), but ultimately, they delayed the film until Sonnenfeld was available.
    3. The initial script involved locations all over America, but New York City-born Sonnenfeld decided to set most of the action in his hometown. He reasoned that New Yorkers wouldn’t be fazed by aliens living among them, and that certain locations around the city looked otherworldly enough to be useful, from the 1964 World’s Fair structures in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park (where the climax takes place) to the ventilation tower at the mouth of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel (which hides the entrance to the Men in Black HQ).

    4. Clint Eastwood was the first choice to play Agent K, but he turned it down. Jones was a fan of the comic, but he didn’t like the script. But Steven Spielberg, who’d come aboard as executive producer, persuaded Jones, assuring him that the script would be revised and improved.

    5. Chris O’Donnell and David Schwimmer were both considered for Agent J; O’Donnell turned down the role because it seemed to him to be too similar to his Robin in the “Batman” movies.

    6. Schwimmer was busy making his directing debut with “Since You’ve Been Gone.” But the wives of both Sonnenfeld and Spielberg were fans of Smith, who accepted the role before “Independence Day” proved he could be a summer blockbuster leading man.
    7. Similarly, Vincent D’Onofrio wasn’t the first choice to play antagonist Edgar; John Turturro and B-movie icon Bruce Campbell had both been offered the part.

    8. Legendary monster makeup artist Rick Baker came to “Men in Black” fresh from his work creating multiple guises for Eddie Murphy in “The Nutty Professor,” a movie that would win him his fourth Oscar. But turning Murphy into a family of Klumps was a snap compared to the creature work he did for “Men in Black,” which he described at the time as the most complicated productions he’d ever done.

    He told Entertainment Weekly that the alien designs required more sketches “than I did in my whole career.” One reason, he said, was the conflicting demands of producer Spielberg and director Sonnenfeld. “It was like, ‘Steven likes the head on this one and Barry really likes the body on this one, so why don’t you do a mix and match?’ And I’d say, ‘Because it wouldn’t make any sense.”
    9. D’Onofrio had proved willing to go to extremes to alter his physique ever since packing on 70 pounds to play a disturbed Marine in “Full Metal Jacket” a decade earlier. But “Men in Black” may have pushed him even further. “We put Vincent through hell,” Baker told EW, regarding the six hours it took each day to transform D’Onofrio into the decaying Edgar. “His eyelids were glued shut all day.” The actor also came up with the idea of strapping his legs into stiff braces to create Edgar’s lumbering walk.

    10. The cockroaches used in the film were trained and kept in line by being tied together with tiny wires. The American Humane Association made sure none of the roaches was harmed. Squished roach guts were simulated using mustard packets.
    11. Sonnenfeld complained that Jones ruined multiple takes by making laser-gun noises with his mouth whenever he had to act out shooting his weapon. Jones was apparently unaware he was doing this, but it made Smith laugh whenever the director caught his co-star making his own sound effects.

    12. Two weeks before post-production ended, the filmmakers decided a subplot about the Baltian alien race had to go. Careful editing, subtitling of some alien dialogue, replacement of images on MIB computer screens, and re-recording of dialogue eliminated the Baltians entirely from the film.
    13. Months into the shoot, Sonnenfeld decided that the original, talky ending wasn’t working, so the filmmakers came up with several alternate endings before deciding on the action sequence they eventually used. The reshoots added $4.5 million to the budget.

    14. “Men in Black” cost $90 million to make. It returned $251 million in North America and another $339 million overseas.

    15. Smith won a Grammy for the movie’s theme song. It was the former Fresh Prince’s first solo success away from DJ Jazzy Jeff.

    16. Baker won his fifth Oscar for the film’s makeup. “MiB” was nominated for two other Academy Awards, for Danny Elfman‘s musical score and for production design.

    17. Ray-Ban had a product placement deal for the use of its Predator 2 sunglasses as the shades the agents wear to shield themselves from neuralyzer rays. But the prop designers added a glare-reducing coating to the lenses that hid the logo, and Sonnenfeld cut from the film a line of dialogue identifying the brand. (In a sentence taken from Cunningham’s comic, K was to have said, “That’s why they call them Ray-Bans,” but the director thought it was too on-the-nose.) Despite Ray-Ban’s pleas, the filmmakers refused to restore any name-dropping of the brand into the movie. The only mention of Ray-Bans occurred in the lyrics of Smith’s rap. Still, that was enough to send sales of the $100 shades soaring. Reportedly, sales increased three to fivefold, bringing in as much as $5 million.

    18. In 2015, three years after Smith and Jones had enjoyed another worldwide hit with “Men in Black 3,” MacDonald and Parkes announced they were developing a reboot of the franchise, a sequel that would see J passing the torch to a new, female agent — that is, if Smith could be persuaded to appear a fourth time as J. That’s better than the other rumored reboot pitch, one that would have involved a crossover with fellow Sony buddy-comedy franchise “21 Jump Street.” Neuralyze that idea, please.

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Midnight Cowboy’ on its 50th Anniversary

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Midnight Cowboy’ on its 50th Anniversary

    United Artists

    Midnight Cowboy” is now half a century old, and it’s aged very gracefully. It’s still a career highlight for stars Jon Voight and Dustin Hoffman and is regarded as one of the best and most important films of the 1960’s. Celebrate this big anniversary by learning more about the making of “Midnight Cowboy.”

    1. While he plays a Texan unfamiliar with life in New York City, Jon Voight is actually a native New Yorker. In fact, he had trouble getting a handle on his character’s southern accent and resorted to recording native Texans to use for research.

    2. Lee Majors was originally cast as Joe Buck before Voight, but Majors had to drop out due to his commitment to the TV series “The Big Valley.”

    United Artists

    3. Both Elvis Presley and Warren Beatty also voiced an interest in playing Joe Buck.

    4. According to Hoffman, the iconic line “I’m walking here!” was improvised and was the result of his genuine anger when a taxi cab interrupted an otherwise perfect take. Hoffman chose to stay in character even as he took out his anger at the driver.

    United Artists

    5. However, producer Jerome Hellman disputes Hoffman’s account, saying the line was included in one draft of the screenplay.

    6. Hoffman put pebbles in one of his shoes in order to ensure that Ratso’s distinctive limp remained consistent from scene to scene.

    7. Filming outdoors was complicated both by the lack of a permit to shoot on the city streets and because Hoffman was regularly mobbed by fans of 1967’s “The Graduate.”

    Embassy Pictures

    8. Director Jon Schlesinger reportedly wanted to include a sex scene between Hoffman and Voight’s characters, but studio executives rejected the idea.

    9. Bob Dylan‘s “Lay Lady Lay” was written specifically for the”Midnight Cowboy” soundtrack, but Dylan wasn’t able to complete it in time.

    United Artists

    10. “Midnight Cowboy” is the only X-rated film ever to receive an Academy Award, though the MPAA later granted the film an R-rating upon its re-release in 1971.

    11. Both the movie and James Leo Herlihy’s original novel were initially banned in Ireland.

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About Richard Linklater’s ‘Before Trilogy’

    11 Things You Never Knew About Richard Linklater’s ‘Before Trilogy’

    Warner Bros.

    Richard Linklater remains one of the most acclaimed indie directors in the business, in no small part because of the enduring appeal of his “Before Trilogy.” With the middle chapter in that trilogy, “Before Sunset,” turning 15 years old, now is the perfect time to revisit the roller coaster love story of Jesse and Céline and learn more about the making of these three classic romances.

    1. Linklater was inspired to write “Before Sunrise” by a similar experience in his own life, where he spent an evening in Philadelphia walking the city and conversing with a woman named Amy Lehrhaupt he met in a toy shop.

    2. Sadly, Linklater only learned in 2010 that Lehrhaupt had died in a motorcycle accident prior to the release of “Before Sunrise.” “Before Midnight” is dedicated in her memory.

    Columbia Pictures

    3. While Linklater and co-writer Kim Krizan wrote the screenplay for “Before Sunrise”  in a mere 11 days, it took nine months to choose Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy as the stars.

    4. Jesse and Céline are the only two named characters in “Before Sunset.”

    Columbia Pictures

    5. “Before Sunrise” contains numerous references to author James Joyce and his novel “Ulysses,” which also features a protagonist wandering a European city for a night.

    6. Linklater originally envisioned “Before Sunset” as a much more ambitious sequel set in multiple cities. But when he couldn’t acquire the necessary funding, he opted for a smaller and more intimate approach.

    Warner Bros.

    7. “Before Sunset” features numerous long take Steadicam shots. The longest of these lasts a full 11 minutes.

    8. The older couple who converse with Céline outside her apartment in “Before Sunset” are played by Delpy’s parents.

    9. Many fans have speculated that Jesse’s frayed relationship with his unseen wife in “Before Sunset” is inspired by Hawke’s marriage to actress Uma Thurman, as the two got divorced around the time of the film’s release. Hawke and Delpy have both acknowledged drawing heavily from their own personal lives when writing their respective characters.

    Fox Searchlight Pictures

    10. Hawke and Delpy have actually played the Jesse and Céline roles in a total of four films. The two characters also appear in Linklater’s 2001 animated film “Waking Life,” where they muse about the strange nature of dream time.

    11. Because “Waking Life” debuted several years before “Before Sunset,” that scene led many fans to assume Jesse and Céline did indeed reunite at the train station. “Before Sunset” proved otherwise, suggesting the “Waking Life” scene never happened or was merely a wistful dream on the part of one of the characters.

  • 9 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Shadow’ on its 25th Anniversary

    9 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Shadow’ on its 25th Anniversary

    Universal Pictures

    25 years ago,  iconic pulp hero The Shadow made the leap to the big screen. The result wasn’t the smash success fans and studios execs were hoping for, but the movie is still an important reminder that Batman wasn’t the first vigilante detective on the block. Celebrate the film’s 25th anniversary by learning more about the making of the odd and deeply underrated “The Shadow.”

    1. Like 1989’s “Batman,” “The Shadow” went through a prolonged period of development before finally seeing the light of day. Producer Martin Bregman originally bought the film rights in 1982.

    2. Sam Raimi lobbied to direct the adaptation but was rejected. Raimi instead went on to create the Shadow-inspired “Darkman” instead.

    Universal Pictures

    3. The version of the Shadow featured in the movie is intended to be an amalgamation of the classic radio and pulp magazine incarnations, drawing plot elements, lines of dialogue and powers from both.

    4. Author James Luceno’s novelization delves even deeper into classic “The Shadow” mythology, including alluding to the fact that the hero’s true identity is Kent Allard, not Lamont Cranston.

    Universal Pictures

    5. Production on “The Shadow” was set back after an earthquake destroyed the Hall of Mirrors set, forcing director Russell Mulcahy to shoot an abridged version of the climactic sequence.

    6. Co-stars Tim Curry and Ian McKellen had worked together before, starring in the stage version of “Amadeus.”

    Universal Pictures

    7. Chow Yun-fat was considered for the role of Shiwan Khan.

    8. “The Shadow” was originally intended to serve as the start of a longer franchise and a major merchandising push. Those plans were abandoned due to its poor box office performance.

    Universal Pictures

    9. Among the various tie-in products canceled was a “The Shadow” video game for the Super Nintendo console. The game was actually completed before its last-minute cancellation, and playable ROM files have been circulating the Internet for years.

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut’ on its 20th Anniversary

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut’ on its 20th Anniversary

    Paramount/WB

    It’s hard to believe it'[s been 20 years since “South Park” made the jump from cable TV to the big screen. Maybe that’s because even two decades later, the franchise is still going strong. Celebrate the time Stan, Kyle, Cartman and the rest prevent all-out war by learning some interesting facts about the making of this very adults-only animated movie.

    1. The movie is notable for being the first “South Park” project to feature Kenny without his ever-present hood.

    Paramount/WB

    2. While Satan and Saddam Hussein were actually voiced by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, respectively, in the credits both characters are listed as being voiced by themselves.

    3. The song “La Resistance” and the character The Mole are both intended as homages to the stage musical version of “Les Misérables.”

    Paramount/WB

    4. While a popular rumor suggests the movie was outright banned in Iraq, the truth is that Paramount never even attempted to distribute it there, fearing an inevitable backlash over Hussein’s depiction.

    5. The movie features exactly 399 curse words, setting a Guinness World Record for an animated movie. The only reason the count didn’t run even higher is that the MPAA requires all films with 400 or more curse words to be rated NC-17.

    6. According to Stone, the movie’s original title was “South Park: All Hell Breaks Loose,” and he and Parker changed it to the more subtly vulgar “Bigger, Longer & Uncut” after push-back from the MPAA. Whoops.

    Paramount/WB

    7. The movie features a tribute to classic rock band Pink Floyd. In the scene where South Park citizens are destroying all Canadian products, a trio of soldiers can be seen with the name tags “Floyd,” “Wright” and “Mason.”

    8. Metallica frontman James Hetfield contributed to the song “Hell Isn’t Good.”

    9. “Blame Canada” was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 2000. It ultimately lost to Phil Collins‘ “You’ll Be In My Heart” from “Tarzan.” In retaliation, Parker and Stone devoted an episode of the show’s fourth season to lampooning Collins.

    Disney

    10. “South Park” held the record for the highest-grossing R-rated animated movie in America for a full 17 years. It was finally dethroned by “Sausage Party” in 2016.

    11. Figure skater Brian Boitano was apparently amused by his depiction in the film. He even collaborated with Parker and Stone in order to commission as series of “What Would Brian Boitano Do?” T-shirts for a charity drive.

  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Hurt Locker’ on its 10th Anniversary

    11 Things You Never Knew About ‘The Hurt Locker’ on its 10th Anniversary

    Summit Entertainment

    Ten years ago, “The Hurt Locker” arrived in theaters and established itself as one of the definitive movies about the Iraq War. Amid the rave reviews, it propelled director Kathryn Bigelow to become the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Director. Celebrate this major movie milestone by learning more about the origins and the making of “The Hurt Locker.”

    1. Screenwriter Mark Boal based the script on his own experiences as a freelance journalist embedded with an EOD Army unit in Iraq.

    2. Bigelow was convinced by ex-husband James Cameron to take on the project. Cameron may have come to regret that decision, as “Avatar” wound up losing the Academy Award for Best Picture to “The Hurt Locker” in 2010.

    20th Century Fox

    3. Even without accounting for inflation, “The Hurt Locker” became the lowest-grossing Best Picture winner in history. Its theatrical run had already completed by the time the Oscar nominations were revealed.

    4. Bigelow wanted to shoot the film as close to Iraq as possible for the sake of authenticity, so much of filming took place in Jordan mere miles from the border with Iraq. Experts had to consulted to make sure the sites chosen were safe from Iraqi snipers.

    Summit Entertainment

    5. Many of the extras in the film were Iraqi refugees seeking asylum in Jordan.

    6. The film was originally intended to star Charlize Theron, Colin Farrell and Willem Dafoe.  Bigelow opted instead for a cast of relative unknowns.

    7. To date, four cast members have gone on to have roles in the Marvel Cinematic Universe — Jeremy Renner (Hawkeye), Anthony Mackie (Falcon), Evangeline Lilly (Wasp) and Guy Pearce (Aldrich Killian).

    Marvel Studios

    8. 100 hours of film was shot for every hour of footage in the final cut, a ratio higher than even that of the notoriously troubled “Apocalypse Now.”

    9. The film was the subject of a lawsuit from Master Sergeant Jeffrey Sarver, who claimed to be the creator of phrases like “the hurt locker” and “War is a drug,” and argued that Renner’s character was based on him. The lawsuit was eventually thrown out.

    Summit Entertainment

    10. Production company Voltage Pictures filed its own lawsuit, targeting thousands of BitTorrent users who downloaded pirated copies of the film.

    11. The 2014 Broadway version of “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” features several references to “The Hurt Locker.” The show features a running joke about inheriting sets and props from a short-lived stage musical version of “The Hurt Locker.”