Hoy, hacemos un recuento de nuestras secuencias de terror favoritas que dejaron cicatrices físicas o mentales graves en sus intérpretes.
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00:00Hey, are you going to scream?
00:03Hey, hello and welcome to WatchMojo Español.
00:06I am G, and today we will show you our top 20 of the horror sequences
00:10that left some mental or physical scars in its interpreters.
00:15What happened to Kane?
00:16Something has attached itself to him, we have to get him to the infirmary right away.
00:21Number 20, Bear suit, Midsommar.
00:23Listen, you can't speak, you can't move, all right?
00:31Good.
00:32Horror movies are designed to scare.
00:36Does this necessarily mean that the actors will be prepared for everything that can happen on set?
00:41Jack Reiner spoke to Collider in 2019 to promote Midsommar, and ruled out this wrong idea.
00:48The actor described the atmosphere on set as dark and gloomy
00:52when it was time to film his scene inside a bear skin.
00:56Reiner admitted that he was terrified during this ending,
01:00and challenged the public's perceptions of the truth of the cinematographic realization
01:04and its emotional effects on the actors.
01:06These are the candidates for the ninth and final offering.
01:12We patiently await your verdict.
01:15Number 19, The Fall of the Roof, Halloween 4, The Return of Michael Myers.
01:20I want you to get down to the chimney, Jamie.
01:22I can't!
01:23Well, try it, damn it!
01:24The extra content of some famous movies can be very revealing when it comes to set failures.
01:30Ellie Cornell was interviewed in 2013 for a report documenting the making of Halloween 4.
01:36This somewhat underestimated sequel presented a scene where Cornell's character,
01:40Rachel Carruthers, has to slide down a roof next to her adoptive sister, Jamie Lloyd,
01:45played by Danielle Harris.
01:47Cornell revealed that she wasn't aware of how slippery these fake roof tiles were
01:52that were built for the scene.
01:54The actress ended up falling and cutting herself with a loose staple in the structure,
01:58a fall that required a quick reaction and faster stitches.
02:02At the bottom of it, a little staple gun was sticking out, a staple.
02:06And when they slid her down the roof,
02:08that's when it caught her stomach and it cut it right open all the way down.
02:11Number 18.
02:12Autosurgery.
02:13Prometheus.
02:14Get it off!
02:15Come on!
02:17Actress Noomi Rapace told Wired in 2012 that the necessary emergency scene in Prometheus
02:23completely ruined it.
02:25This moment of autosurgery was a conscious tribute to the 1979 original Alien by Ridley Scott,
02:31with Rapace seeking to use the least possible amount of special effects generated by the computer for the scene.
02:37This decision turned out to be the right one,
02:40since the panic and fear are palpable behind Rapace's performance.
02:43It's a time-counter scene to prevent the growing alien creature
02:47from completely incubating inside Dr. Elizabeth Shaw.
02:51And the final results offer a dark parallel to human birth,
02:55although with the most inhuman of the lethal parasites.
03:03Number 17.
03:05The fall of the glass door.
03:06Incident in a ghost land.
03:08Not mine.
03:15It's an old house.
03:16The promotional poster of this film unfortunately reflects an accident of real life
03:20that traumatized the star Taylor Hickson.
03:23During a scene, the young Canadian actress was invited to knock on a glass door,
03:27but the panel broke and she fell between the fragments.
03:31She cut herself so badly that she needed 70 stitches,
03:35and then sued the producer for the damage she caused to her face.
03:38Incident Protection Sync finally declared itself guilty of security violations at the workplace
03:43and paid a $40,000 fine.
03:45Probably that was a poor consolation for Hickson,
03:48who had permanent scars.
03:57Number 16.
03:58Clarice and Hannibal.
04:00The Silence of the Lambs.
04:05You're one of Jack Croft's, aren't you?
04:36They were a perfect couple when adapting the novel by Thomas Harris.
04:48Number 15.
04:49In the classroom.
04:51Hereditary.
04:57In a promotional interview in 2018,
05:00actor Alex Wolff revealed how deeply he felt the terror in the set of Hereditary by Ari Aster.
05:06Wolff stated that the film gets into the bones,
05:09while detailing the physical effort that involved filming it.
05:13When it was time to film a scene in which he gets scared in class
05:16and breaks his nose with a desk,
05:19Wolff was told that the accessory in question would be padded.
05:22However, he was surprised to discover that the padding was minimal,
05:26and the scene left Wolff bloody and truly moved.
05:29With a severe cut in the knee,
05:31a swollen ankle and a numb arm.
05:37Number 14.
05:38The shake of the tent.
05:40The Blair Witch Project.
05:47There were many improvised moments in the filming of The Blair Witch Project in 1999,
05:53as well as several in which the actors were legitimately taken by surprise.
05:57Their reactions to being lost in the woods, for example, were genuine,
06:01as was the night sequence of the attack on a tent.
06:05The lack of a fully developed script
06:08meant that not all the actors knew that the tent would shake,
06:12or that the sounds of the children's voices would be played around them during the scene.
06:17As a result, what the audience ended up seeing on screen
06:20felt visceral, unpredictable and, well, terrifying.
06:28Number 13.
06:30The attack with a lawnmower.
06:32Maximum Overdrive.
06:40This attempt at directing Stephen King is largely seen today through a more comical way.
06:46Despite this, the scene of the lawnmower was quite terrifying
06:51for one of the young actors in the film,
06:53Halter Graham.
06:54Maximum Overdrive was filmed before the prevalence of special effects by computer,
07:00which means that this machine was very, very real.
07:03Although it worked remotely,
07:05its operator lost control during filming and began to run carelessly.
07:10Graham's fear reactions to the lawnmower were equally real,
07:14while things got even worse for the film's cinematographer,
07:18Armando Nanuzzi,
07:20who lost an eye as a result of the wooden slices that came out of the lawnmower.
07:26After which he cut a block that served as a support for the camera.
07:37Number 12.
07:38Back injuries.
07:40The Exorcist.
07:41You see me hit and you see me reach for my back.
07:44I screamed in horrendous pain.
08:11Mother, what's wrong with me?
08:14Number 11.
08:15Meeting Pennywise.
08:16It.
08:17Hi, Georgie.
08:21Aren't you going to say hello?
08:24Call us crazy, but we don't believe that the children's actors of the 1999 adaptation
08:29of The Exorcist and The Exorcist 2
08:33were the ones who created Pennywise.
08:36Call us crazy, but we don't believe that the children's actors of the 1990 adaptation
08:41of It by Stephen King
08:43needed to make a lot of effort to act scared by Pennywise,
08:46played by Tim Curry.
08:48This dancing clown entered the nightmares of a certain generation
08:51almost immediately after It was broadcast on television.
08:55Fear was also palpable in the young actor Tony Dakota,
08:59who played in the film.
09:01Curry delighted the public at the 2017 Fan Expo with the story of Dakota,
09:05who actually broke the character during a take of the scene
09:09because he terrified the malevolent face full of Pennywise's teeth.
09:19Number 10.
09:20Almost drowned.
09:21The Green Inferno.
09:28Eli Roth decided to pay tribute to the Italian movies of cannibals
09:31that he adored with The Green Inferno of 2013.
09:34Unfortunately, this film almost crossed the line of real death on screen.
09:38We speak specifically of the scene in which the protagonist Lorenza Itzo
09:43almost drowns while trying to escape from her cannibal catchers.
09:47Roth and Itzo had agreed a word of security in case the actress was in real danger.
09:52However, Roth told Yahoo in 2015 that the noise of the water
09:56prevented him from hearing Itzo's pleas,
09:58while the latter clung to a rock to save his life.
10:02What is even crazier is that part of the film remains in the final cut of this film.
10:10Number 9.
10:11The Umbrella.
10:12Scream.
10:16We all know that the weapons of utility are common in the film industry,
10:20but the word utility does not always mean that something is harmless.
10:25Skid Oreck and Melissa Barrera discovered this,
10:28although with decades of difference.
10:30During the filming of the iterations of 1996 and 2022 of Scream,
10:34Barrera was almost cut by a real knife
10:37that was part of a set of rubber and harder wire versions.
10:41Oreck, meanwhile, was accidentally stabbed with a retractable utility umbrella.
10:46The actor's reactions were also left in the final cut,
10:50when Nef Campbell hit Oreck with the umbrella in a section of his chest
10:54that was unprotected by a safety vest.
11:01I feel a rose in the air!
11:03Number 8.
11:04Dracula's attack.
11:05The Monster Squad.
11:11Actress Ashley Bank did not need much persuasion to get her to scream
11:15as is due during the filming of The Monster Squad.
11:18This cult classic features a large number of famous monsters,
11:21from a disgusting brachial man and an evil werewolf,
11:25to a very convincing Count Dracula.
11:28Bank starred in the film as a child actress,
11:30while Dracula as Duncan Regear is totally threatening
11:34and is ready to make a good impression.
11:36Yes, we put those two together,
11:38we have a scene in which, as they say,
11:40Bank achieved the required screams in one take.
11:50Number 7.
11:51Baseball bat scene.
11:52The Shining.
11:59What are you doing down here?
12:02Director Stanley Kubrick became famous for his terrible behavior on set
12:06during the filming of The Shining.
12:08It is true that the final result became a horror classic,
12:11but this had a cost.
12:13We are specifically talking about the star Shirley Duvall
12:16and how Kubrick made her film the famous bat sequence 127 times.
12:22This was far beyond perfectionism,
12:24instead it was designed to take Duvall almost to madness.
12:28Kubrick did it,
12:29and you can see it on screen with Duvall's eyes wide open and his hoarse screams.
12:34It is a sequence in which the audience, like it or not,
12:37becomes a witness to abuse.
12:46Number 6.
12:47No more showers.
12:48Psycho.
12:55The bathroom.
12:56Yeah.
12:57An interview with the star Janet Leigh
12:59in a 1984 issue of the magazine Woman's World
13:03gave an interesting perspective of one of the most iconic scenes of horror cinema.
13:08Leigh told the magazine that she basically stopped showering completely after psychosis
13:13and instead she only took immersion showers.
13:16Leigh also mentioned how she supposedly received
13:18some inappropriate attention from fans who took their obsessions with psychosis a little too far.
13:23The actress emphasized that if she had to shower,
13:26she made sure to be in front of the door with the curtain of the shower open.
13:30You know, just in case.
13:35Number 5.
13:36The chest-breaking scare.
13:38Alien.
13:41We have a question.
13:43How does a director make sure to receive the right visceral responses from his actors?
13:47Well, in the case of Ridley Scott's Alien,
13:50you just don't tell him what's going to happen next.
13:53Veronica Cartwright knew something was going to happen
13:56when the xenomorph emerged from the chest of her co-star, John Hart.
14:00That said, Cartwright's scare exclamations are very real,
14:04a visceral reaction to the wild special effects that are happening before her eyes.
14:09It's an interesting fact that, once you know it,
14:12makes the scene even more intense.
14:17All five of us are like...
14:20And we're not acting.
14:21Number 4.
14:22The birds' attack.
14:24The Birds.
14:25Where are they heading?
14:27Somewhere inland.
14:28Santa Rosa?
14:30Maybe.
14:31Hitchcock was another famous and influential director
14:33with very specific ideas about what he wanted on screen
14:36and how far he would go to achieve those goals.
14:39T.B. Hedren's dream of working with Hitchcock
14:42became a nightmare on the set of The Birds.
14:45The 1963 classic included an attack scene in an attic
14:49where real birds were used instead of fake mechanical substitutes.
14:54This happened even though Hitchcock knew perfectly well
14:58that Hedren was afraid of creatures in real life.
15:01Hedren spent a week receiving scared birds
15:04from the team members who were out of frame
15:07and received many cuts and bruises for it.
15:10The experience was so exhausting
15:12that a doctor ordered him to rest in bed for a week.
15:22Number 3.
15:23Skeletons in the pool.
15:25Poltergeist.
15:30The plot of this film revolves around a haunted house
15:33built on a cemetery of Native Americans,
15:36but the use of real skeletons during a scene in the pool
15:39contributed to the franchise being cursed?
15:42Well, that depends on how much you believe in the supernatural,
15:45but we can't deny that Joe Bad Williams' performance
15:48during this scene is terribly realistic.
15:51However, surprisingly, it wasn't until years later
15:54that Williams found out that these decomposed remains in the pool
15:58were just that, real human skeletons.
16:01This makes the scene 100 times more terrifying in retrospect.
16:10Number 2.
16:11The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
16:19The stories surrounding the production of this film are legendary.
16:23From the heat and the smell,
16:25to the stress of finishing this exploitation horror film
16:28financed by the mafia,
16:30it seemed that everything was against the director,
16:33Tobey Hooper, and the team.
16:35The climax of the film shows Leatherface Gunner Hansen
16:38falling to the ground and suffering an unpleasant wound.
16:41The actor was wearing a metal plate
16:43so he wouldn't cut himself when the chainsaw cut his leg.
16:46However, the speed of the machine heated this metal plate so much
16:50that it caused Hansen an unpleasant burn.
16:53That scream you hear in Hooper's final version?
16:56Yes, that wasn't acted out.
17:05Hey, we haven't reached the end yet, but we're almost there.
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17:14Very well, let's see our position number 1.
17:17Number 1.
17:18The complete film.
17:19The Last House on the Left.
17:30It can be a test of resistance for those who see
17:33for the first time the controversial West Craven horror classic of 1972.
17:38It is a film of crude and dirty exploitation horror
17:41that was originally intended to be a film for adults in every way,
17:46even with the cast of industry actors like Fred Lincoln.
17:50However, it would be the co-protagonist Sandra Peabody
17:53who almost leaves the film
17:55thanks to the methodical interpretation of the star David Hess,
17:59with whom Peabody filmed a disturbing scene of aggression.
18:03This sequence was so heartbreaking
18:05and Peabody's experience was so negative
18:08that the actress finally left the screen
18:10to perform more roles behind the scenes.
18:19Did you know all these stories?
18:21Tell us which one surprised you the most in the comments.
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