7 Secret Movie Tricks We Ignored

Films
7 months ago

Cinema is a wonderful world that allows us to plunge in and forget about our problems. Yet in order to create this perfect world, filmmakers put in maximum effort and use a number of tricks.

Bright Side looked closely at our favorite movies and noticed several tricks that we rush to expose.

Forever wet asphalt

Have you noticed that in night scenes the characters always ride on wet roads, like it’s been raining? It’s all because wet asphalt looks more aesthetic. Plus, shooting a wet road at night gives contrast and reflects the light better.

Fake crowd

In many films, extras are used to create crowds. However, this is very costly for a movie budget, so filmmakers often use other methods: they create the effect of the crowd by taking a picture of a small group of people at the right angle and "finishing" the crowd with the help of computer technology. Another method is inflatable mannequins, which were used in The King’s Speech.

Mini special effects

In order not to overload the movie budget, filmmakers look for other ways to create some particularly expensive special effects (for example, if they need to blow up an expensive object or landscape). Many of them use computer technology, but most often they use mini copies of objects: skyscrapers, aircraft, etc. They look much more believable than artificially created computer ones.

Tasty glass

It’s rare for an action picture not to have a scene where a character spectacularly flies through a window, breaking the glass. Traditionally, sugar glass is used. It cannot be distinguished from real glass, it’s safe, and also very tasty. However, filmmakers today more often prefer thin plastic glass, which is much more boring.

Car dialogue

When the characters are engaged in endless conversations in a car, and the driver more often looks at a passenger than at the road, you start to fear for the actors’ lives. Keep calm: they’re safe. To shoot such a scene, film professionals often useprocess trailer, and the car stands on a platform.

Milk clouds

To make sinister clouds gather over a city, filmmakers use the patented Cloud Tank machine, which injects paint or milk into a water tank. And if they need to portray a UFO among the clouds, as in Independence Day, they use a Frisbee in milk.

Watermelon — a sound engineer’s assistant

To create a spectacular soundtrack, sound engineers have to use a variety of tricks. Mass shootings are successfully replaced by fireworks, and the sound of birds’ wings is simulated by turning over a book’s pages. Yet the main assistant of sound engineers is a watermelon: with the help of it, you can reproduce the sound of a head splitting, a punch in the face, or a dragon’s egg cracking.

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