Discover the Real-Life Magic That Made These Blockbusters So Epic

Kelsey Berish | June 12, 2023 3:54 pm

We've all seen it, the action-packed scenes with elaborate backdrops and vicious animals - but did you ever wonder how they came to be? Is it some kind of 80s-style magic trick, or is there a more modern way? Welcome to the world of modern-day movies where computer-generated images (CGI) reign supreme! But don't be fooled; there are still those brave souls who tackle special effects in the old-fashioned and practical way. Take, for example, 'First Man,' where specialized lightbulbs were used to recreate an authentic-looking Sun during the Moon landing. So next time your favorite flick has you asking 'real or not real?' when it comes to movie effects that look like CGI, we can assure you - the answer is yes!

Tom Cruise Actually Held On To The Airborne Plane In Mission: Impossible -Rogue Nation

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Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures

Tom Cruise has the reputation of being quite the stuntman, especially when it comes to the Mission: Impossible films. He has dangled from ceilings and hung off the sides of cliffs. But it was Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation where he did the most daring stunt of all.

In the film, Cruise hangs off the side of an airborne plane! While many would assume the studio would never allow such a high-profile actor to perform the risky stunt, Cruise insisted. Attached to wires and wearing protective lenses, so he's able to open his eyes, Cruise hangs on to the side of a plane while it takes off; no CGI needed.

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Arc Reactor - Iron Man

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Walt Disney Pictures, Marvel Entertainment / MovieStillsDB
Walt Disney Pictures, Marvel Entertainment / MovieStillsDB
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The first Iron Man movie paved the way for one of the most successful franchises in cinematic history: The Marvel Cinematic Universe. And while the film obviously uses CGI for a number of scenes, including every time Tony Stark flies in the Iron Man suit, it also has a few practical effects.

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One such scene fans might be surprised to learn isn't CGI, is the poorly thought-out surgery between Pepper Pots and Tony, when she is replacing his arc reactor. Instead of using a green screen shirt, actress Gwenyth Paltrow actually pulled props out of Robert Downey Jr.'s prosthetic chest!

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Paris Cafe - Inception

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Warner Bros. Pictures / MovieStillsDB
Warner Bros. Pictures / MovieStillsDB
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If you've seen Christopher Nolan's masterpiece inception, then you're aware of the cool special effects that are riddled throughout the movie. But what Nolan does differently than other directors is the use of practical effects in favor of CGI. One such scene that looks CGI but is actually all practical is when the cafe in Paris seemingly explodes in slow motion.

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To get the desired effect, we see on-screen, production designer Chris Corbould and cinematographer Wally Pfister used a series of air cannons while filming the scene at 1,500 frames-per-second with a specialized camera. Talk about going all in!

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Interstellar's TARS And CASE Was Controlled By A Puppeteer

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Paramount Pictures / MovieStillsDB
Paramount Pictures / MovieStillsDB
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It might be hard to believe since Christopher Nolan's Interstellar is chock-full of special effects, but the humanoid military machine TARS and CASE are actually real machines. Of course, this is the perfect example of something that would be "easy" to use CGI instead of going through the process of building.

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But that is exactly what Nolan did. He decided since the machine was going to be voiced by an actor, then it needed to be real, as an actor. So, he came up with the blueprint of the machine that would be puppeteered during filming. Of course, the puppet master was then removed during post-production.

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Rey Eats Actual Bread In Star Wars: The Force Awakens

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Walt Disney Studios / MovieSillsDB
Walt Disney Studios / MovieSillsDB
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It might amaze some people, considering it looked as close to CGI as anything else in the Star Wars universe, but the Portion Bread Rey eats as her in The Force Awakens is actually real! Production designer Chris Corbould told MTV during an interview that it took the team three months to come up with the correct "ingredients" for the bread.

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He said, "It started off with the mechanics of getting the bread to rise and the liquid to disappear, but then there was the ongoing problem of what color should the bread be... consistency? Should it have cracks in it?"

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The Infamous Tray Catch In Spider-Man

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Sony Pictures / MovieStillsDB
Sony Pictures / MovieStillsDB
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While Spider-Man is supposed to have some of the quickest reflexes ever, Toby Maguire isn't technically Spidey. So, it isn't unusual for people to think the heavy CGI-based film used a bit of computer animation to make the cafeteria tray-catch scene perfect. As it turns out, McGuire did that all by himself.

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Using superglue on the tray, so Maguire was able to hold it along with co-star Kirsten Dunst, the Spider-Man actor had to perfectly time out each object in order to catch them and have them stay put. Amazingly, Maguire was able to do it! Of course, it was the 156th take when it happened.

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First Man Didn't Use CGI For The Moon Landing

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Dreamworks Pictures/MovieStillsDB
Dreamworks Pictures/MovieStillsDB
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The film First Man was a fictionalized telling of the Apollo 11 moon landing. So, the question remains, what in the film was actually CGI and what wasn't? For us, it was amazing to learn that the actual moon landing scene wasn't CGI, but the creativity of visual effects supervisor Paul Lambert.

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This scene was filmed in a quarry in Atlanta, Georgia, and not in front of a green screen. By using specialized light bulbs to illustrate the sun while on the surface of the moon, the quarry's hills and craters acted as the surface. Insert some expert cinematography and voila, a moon landing worthy of an Academy Award.

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Real Squirrels In Charlie And The Chocolate Factory

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Warner Bros./MovieStillsDB
Warner Bros./MovieStillsDB
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Tim Burton's Charlie And The Chocolate Factory is creepy and yet whimsical at the same time, as are most of his films. And while there are a few aspects where there was no choice but to use CGI for the desired effect, the nut-sorting squirrels was not one of them.

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Would you believe that all of the squirrels in the film were real?! The animals were trained for months, and the nuts they sort are made of metal, so they didn't eat them. They were also trained to attack Veruca Salt's stunt double. But, don't worry, she wore a mask, so she didn't get clawed.

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They Cleared The Streets Of London For 28 Days Later

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Fox Searchlight Pictures/MovieStillsDB
Fox Searchlight Pictures/MovieStillsDB
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Zombie films are typically full of special effects, gory makeup, and interesting cinematography. So, it probably comes as no surprise that 28 Days Later follows the same "formula," if you will. Only, with this film, people might be interested to know that the scene where Jim is wandering around the empty streets of London is actually real and not CGI.

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You might be wondering how on Earth the director was able to shoot an empty London. Well, they opted to shoot this scene extremely early in the morning, before the commuters were on the road. They also asked anyone walking or driving by to take an alternative route.

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The Orcs In The Lord Of The Rings Wore Full-Body Makeup

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The Orcs In The Lord Of The Rings Wore Full-Body Makeup
New Line Cinema
New Line Cinema
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While the adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit had total CGI villains, it's amazing to learn that the orcs and Uruk-hai in The Lord of the Rings trilogy were a bit more than meets the eye. Instead of having the creatures be full-on CGI, such as Andy Serkis' Gollum, they spent hours in makeup.

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Take the big Uruk-Hai leader from Fellowship of the Ring, for example. Actor Lawrence Makoare had to sit through ten hours of makeup and prosthetics, while all Serkis had to sit through was putting on a green suit with dots for the animators.

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Sigourney Weaver's Basketball Skills In Alien: Resurrection

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Twentieth Century Fox/MovieStillsDB
Twentieth Century Fox/MovieStillsDB
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The Alien series is no stranger to special effects. We mean, have you seen the saliva dripping from the alien's gigantic teeth? That is no easy feat. And while some of the effects are brought to the screen using CGI, there is one scene that people might be surprised to find out is all the actor's doing.

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During a scene, while the crew is playing basketball, Sigourney Weaver's character makes a one-in-a-million over the head backward shot. And while the director wanted to use CGI, Weaver was adamant about doing it herself. The talented actress sunk the shot after just a few takes!

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The Casino Royale Stuntman Broke A Barrel Role Record!

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Sony Pictures Releasing
Sony Pictures Releasing
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There's no denying the number of crazy stunts that happen throughout the James Bond franchise. And while most are performed in front of a green screen with stunt doubles, there is one scene that was actually performed with practical effects: the car roll in Casino Royale.

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Not only was the stuntman Adam Kirley putting all of his trust in the crew to retrofit Bond's Aston Martin DBS with a nitrogen cannon, helping it perform the correct number of rolls and not hit him, he actually broke a record. Kirley broke the world record for the number of barrel rolls in one stunt, coming out at seven.

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Special Photography Techniques Were Used In The Fountain

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Warner Bros./MovieStillsDB
Warner Bros./MovieStillsDB
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One of the most visually pleasing films on this list is probably Darren Aronofsky'sThe Fountain. What looks like a movie shot solely in front of a green screen is actually an experiment with a certain type of photography that allows the atmosphere of the setting to look psychedelic.

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To do so, the visual effects team brought in outside help in the form of macro photographer Peter Parks. To create the crazy looking nebula of Xibalba, he photographed chemical reactions. During an interview with WIRED, he said, "When these images are projected on a big screen, you feel like you're looking at infinity."

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They Built A Real Ark For Evan Almighty

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Columbia Pictures/MovieStillsDB
Columbia Pictures/MovieStillsDB
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The film Evan Almighty not only uses CGI, but it also brings practical effects into the equation in the most unlikely places. While building a huge wooden ark seems like something the studio wouldn't want to use their budget on, that's exactly what they did.

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In the middle of a Virginia housing development, the crew working on the movie built a 250-foot long wood monstrosity that reached 50 feet high and 80 feet wide. And the ark wasn't the only real thing in the film. The animals that were to board to ark were also real. The crew brought in 200 live animals for the movie.

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Zoe Bell Knew How To Hang Onto A Car For Death Proof's Chase

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The Weinstein Company
The Weinstein Company
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It's no secret that stuntmen and women do a lot of dangerous work on films, with no actual face time to be had. So, it's nice to see when they become full-fledged actors, such as Zoe Bell. While filming Death Proof, Bell was lucky enough to perform her own stunts, since she is a trained professional.

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While one might think the epic car chase in the film is nothing but CGI (because who wants to risk one of the actors?) it is actually Bell hanging onto the hood of the car! It truly takes a veteran to know how to hang on a racing car properly!

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Iron Man 3 Had A Skydiving Team For The Plane Jump

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Walt Disney Pictures, Marvel Entertainment
Walt Disney Pictures, Marvel Entertainment
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As with all of the Marvel film, CGI is the name of the game. But when it comes to a few things in Iron Man 3, that you have to ask yourself, is this real or not real? One scene, in particular, you might be surprised to learn is actually shot in real-time and not in front of a green screen.

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The scene where Iron Man swoops in and saves people falling from a plane explosion is real and not CGI. The people are actually part of the Red Bull Skydiving Team, and their outfits were rigged with parachutes underneath. The scene took eight days and 600 jumps to perfect!