Movie Film Trivia

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The Hunt For Fiction's First Twist Ending

By:Ryan MenezesMarch 15, 2022

The Hunt For Fiction's First Twist Ending


According to many experts, the first movie to feature a twist ending was 2008's Saw V. Viewers who bought a ticket were expecting something interesting, but much of the runtime was instead taken up by DVD extras of previous films in the series. Also, there was some kind of twist ending about the murder traps, but it was lame and not worth remembering.

Of course, all those imaginary experts from the last paragraph are completely deluded; the twist ending started a bit before 2008. But anyone else who says they've tracked down the first ending is likely just as wrong.

The first cinematic twist ending is often said to be 1920's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. We'll freely spoil the twist in the next sentence because we imagine that all of you interested in watching an hour-long silent German film have already heard how this particular famous movie ends. The main character, who has been investigating murders committed by the director of an asylum, is revealed to be a patient at an asylum, and most of the scenes were just his imagination. You've surely seen many movies and TV shows include this same twist, sometimes as a joke. You might say they're all imitating The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari—but if that movie hadn't thought of this twist, someone else definitely still would have.

We'll actually have a bit more to say about "all a dream" and "main character's insane" movies as we continue our plot twist coverage this week. But you already know that such twists are actually older than movies themselves. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland ended with the character waking to reality 55 years before Caligari put the idea on the big screen. A Christmas Carol was another 20 years before that, and the ending wasn't even particularly original back then. It wasn't even the only 1840s Dickens Christmas novella to use that twist: He pulled that same trick in The Chimes.

No, we have to go much further back if we want to find the first twist ending. One popular candidate for the world's first whodunit is "The Tale of the Murdered Woman," a story from the One Thousand and One Arabian Nights. This story's so old we don't even know when it was first written. The first printed version goes back to a century or so before Dickens, but the story dates back to the 12th century, or possibly even the ninth century. "The Tale" ends with a surprise reveal of the murderer's identity; we'll tell it to you tomorrow, but only if you let us live.

Go back another millennium or two, and you have the Old Testament, which contain some of the earliest stories many people know. You can find a few twist endings in there. Take the story of Samson, from which we get the famous quote "Everybody betray me, I'm fed up with this world." Following a series of riddling contests and encounters with duplicitous women, Samson has lost his hair and his super strength with it. You think he is defeated. But in a twist, God gives him one last burst of power, so he manages to knock down the pillars of a temple, killing everyone in it, including himself. The lesson of this story is that sometimes, Bible stories are fun.

Even the Old Testament, however, was based on earlier myths. Samson's predecessor Heracles also died in a twist ending, and some say both are just ripoffs of Enkidu from the Epic of Gilgamesh. That's the oldest written story we have, and it does end with a twist, involving a magic herb and a snake. No, it's different from the story of Eden—here, the herb grants eternal life, and the snake prevents the man from eating it.

You're not going to find any story officially dated earlier than Gilgamesh. If we throw in oral tradition, though, we have Aboriginal myths going back almost another 10,000 years. Back then, people had so few preconceptions about what stories were that everything must have surprised them. The earliest myth therefore might have had a twist ending, even if the ending was just "And then spiders came."
 
Watching Under Siege 2 on tv.... Looking up sone trivia for this film....

According to Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg, she auditioned for the role of Kelly for Steven Seagal. She claimed that during the audition, Seagal ordered her to strip naked after he found out she had been Playboy Playmate of the Year, even though the role did not require nudity. She angrily told him that if he wanted to see her naked, he should buy the Playboy edition that she posed for, and stormed out. Years later, in the wake of several women accusing Seagal of sexual misconduct, McCarthy added that Seagal wanted her to strip because the nudity would be "off screen". Seagal's spokespersons and lawyers have denied McCarthy's story.

During an event for the film, Steven Segal was photographed grabbing Katherine Heigl's right breast and laughing. She was 16 at the time.

The casting director drew the ire of Steven Seagal after the action star returned from a vacation in Indonesia and discovered that Gary Busey had been hired to play the villain - Busey famously played one of the villains in the first film, who was dispatched via explosion. Matters got worse when it was discovered that Busey had a "pay-or-play" deal which meant he got his fee if he was in the film or not. Ultimately, Busey was paid his $750,000 dollar salary - which allegedly came out of Seagal's pocket as a producer - but didn't work a day on the picture.

During this production Steven Seagal started wearing a girdle to contain his stomach, this was apparently a temporary fix as he intended to lose the excess weight eventually. This has not occurred
Filmmakers pioneered a new technique that enabled them to film all the interior train scenes (practically all the film) in the studio. Tennis balls glued on the studio walls were used as reference points to allow computers to insert footage of Colorado scenery, even when the camera moved around.

I've recently discovered a little gem of a YouTube channel called Space Ice. The guy, who has the perfect voice for the job, takes the everloving piss out of the films of B-Grade action heroes - Seagal, van Damme et al.

Enjoy.


 
I've recently discovered a little gem of a YouTube channel called Space Ice. The guy, who has the perfect voice for the job, takes the everloving piss out of the films of B-Grade action heroes - Seagal, van Damme et al.

Enjoy.



That was epic, so epic I downloaded that video for posterity. :heart:
 

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There have been a number of cases of actors who died before a movie was released. As just some examples, James Dean never lived to see the release of 'Rebel Without a Cause' in 1955. COVID-19 delays meant a delay to the release of 'Last Night In Soho' to 2021 by which time Dianna Rigg had passed on. Jill Clayburgh died of cancer in late 2010 before the release of her final film Bridesmaids and in an especially bizarre case, Dana Plato appeared in the 2002 crime film 'Pacino Is Missing' three years after her tragic death in May 1999, this movie caught up in many delays after filming wrapped up.

Another very strange case is from Australia in April 1992, where in the space of a week two actors died before their respective films that would become two of Australia's best-known and highest-grossing movies were released. These were Daniel Pollock, whose death at Sydney's Newtown railway station on 13/04/1992 was before the release of 'Romper Stomper', and Pat Thomson from 'Strictly Ballroom', who died of a brain aneurism on 18/04/1992 at the age of 51, her death preceding the release of the movie by several months.

In another strange twist proving that sometimes things do happen in threes, the prior Friday (10/04/1992) to the deaths of Pollock and Thomson, Jacqueline Ramchen vanished without trace after dropping her kids to school in Melbourne. She wasn't an actress, but in the 1970s had a television career as a model on game shows under her maiden name Jacqueline Mertens. Jacqui Ramchen has never been seen or heard from in 30 years since, and the case remains unsolved to this day.
 
Some very famous people died before the release of their final film: Richard Burton, Richard Harris, John Hurt, Alan Rickman, Bruce Lee and his son Brandon, Luke Perry, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Spencer Tracy and Carrie Fisher. To name just a few.
 
John Cazale is another. He continued working on The Deer Hunter while knowing he was dying of lung cancer. He died 8 months before the film was released.
Very underrated actor. I can think of so many movies in the 10 to 15 years following his death where his inclusion would have been perfect.
 
Very underrated actor. I can think of so many movies in the 10 to 15 years following his death where his inclusion would have been perfect.
He did 5 films in 7 years. That's all. I always think he did more such was the quality of his performances. Each film was nominated for best picture and 3 of them won.
 

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Some very famous people died before the release of their final film: Richard Burton, Richard Harris, John Hurt, Alan Rickman, Bruce Lee and his son Brandon, Luke Perry, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Spencer Tracy and Carrie Fisher. To name just a few.
Well it's not easy to die before the release of your third last film.

Sent from my Nokia 7.2 using Tapatalk
 
In the cast of the 2007 movie musical 'Hairspray' John Travolta had been in the smash-hit Grease in 1978, while co-star Michelle Pfeiffer had been in the unsuccessful sequel Grease 2 in 1982.

Originally, the lead female role in Grease 2 had been cast to Debbie Harry from Blondie, but she withdrew from the project, the relatively unknown young Michelle Pfeiffer then cast in the role. The really strange thing is that in Hairspray in 2007, Pfeiffer took the role of Velma, a role played by Debbie Harry in the original non-musical Hairspray movie from 1988.
 
River Phoenix is another that died before his last film was released.

He was filming Dark Blood when he died, although the film was mostly shot by then. Due to a variety of factors, it wasn’t released until 2012, 19 years after his death.
 
River Phoenix is another that died before his last film was released.

He was filming Dark Blood when he died, although the film was mostly shot by then. Due to a variety of factors, it wasn’t released until 2012, 19 years after his death.

Another interesting case is a horror film called 'Grizzly II - The Revenge' which was released in 2020 and featured an unknown trio of young actors named George Clooney, Charlie Sheen and Laura Dern. That's because the movie was completed in 1983, but never released for an astounding 37 years.

Two cast members - Dick Williams and Deborah Raffin - both died in 2012, 29 years after the film was completed and 8 years before it was released. One of the better-known cast members - Louise Fletcher - lived to see it released but has since died.
 
Another interesting case is a horror film called 'Grizzly II - The Revenge' which was released in 2020 and featured an unknown trio of young actors named George Clooney, Charlie Sheen and Laura Dern. That's because the movie was completed in 1983, but never released for an astounding 37 years.

Two cast members - Dick Williams and Deborah Raffin - both died in 2012, 29 years after the film was completed and 8 years before it was released. One of the better-known cast members - Louise Fletcher - lived to see it released but has since died.
How old was Laura Dern in that movie? Assume she was only a teen then.
Charlie too, maybe.
 
The British musical film 'Summer Holiday' with Cliff Richard in the lead role was somewhat ironically released in January 1963 - in the middle of one of Britain's longest and coldest winters on record, known as 'The Big Freeze'. A White Christmas for 1962 in areas of England where December snowfall was rare was a sign of things to come, with most areas of Britain snowed in until March 1963.
 
Some very famous people died before the release of their final film: Richard Burton, Richard Harris, John Hurt, Alan Rickman, Bruce Lee and his son Brandon, Luke Perry, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Spencer Tracy and Carrie Fisher. To name just a few.
Paul Walker, James Gandolfini, and more recently Chadwick Boseman, Ray Liotta
 
In the classic comedy 'National Lampoon's Vacation' in 1983, the Griswold family - the father Clark (Chevy Chase), the mother Ellen (Beverley D'Angelo), the son Rusty (Anthony Michael Hall) and daughter Audrey (Dana Barron) - were all looking forward to reaching their destination - the theme park Walley World in California after a long drive from Chicago Illinois.

However, if Chevy Chase, Beverley D'Angelo, Anthony Michael Hall and Dana Barron were a family in real life, they would probably have chosen a vacation destination other than a theme park. Why is that? They and other actors in the theme park scenes where they are riding roller coasters and other theme park rides were badly affected by vertigo, nausea and vomiting especially after multiple takes, making filming these scenes most unpleasant. In one scene Rusty looks absolutely terrified on a roller coaster, which was a genuine reaction from Anthony Michael Hall rather than good acting.

Worst affected was apparently Dana Barron (to date the only one of the five actresses who played Audrey and the five actors who played Rusty to resurrect their role in a later movie in the Vacation franchise) who suffered such terrible vomiting and dizziness from these scenes that she had to lie down between takes and be given anti-nausea medication.
 
Heath Ledger also.
Heath Ledger turned down the Josh Brolin role of Llewelyn Moss in No Country For Old Men, as he wanted to spend more time with his daughter Matilda Rose.

Woody Harrelson, who played the hitman Carson Wells in the same movie, was the son of real life hitman for the mob Charles Harrelson.
 
Heath Ledger turned down the Josh Brolin role of Llewelyn Moss in No Country For Old Men, as he wanted to spend more time with his daughter Matilda Rose.

Woody Harrelson, who played the hitman Carson Wells in the same movie, was the son of real life hitman for the mob Charles Harrelson.
JFK assassin?
 
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