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Disturbing On Set Deaths That Still Give Us Chills - YouTube
Channel: Grunge
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Movies might be safe spaces for audiences
to experience a few harm-free thrills, but
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making those stunning visual dynamics happen
can be risky business for everyone involved.
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These movies in particular had some of the
most horrifically fatal set accidents in Hollywood
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history.
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Gone in Sixty Seconds 2
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Before the 2000 reboot of Gone in Sixty Seconds
crashed its way into the box office, the first
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film's director Toby Halicki endeavored to
make his own follow-up to the 1974 original
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with what would've been called Gone in Sixty
Seconds 2.
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Halicki already had a history of on-set scares
with the first film, as he suffered a nasty
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spinal injury while performing a big jump
scene in the third act.
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Nevertheless, Halicki returned to the story
in 1989 and decided to ramp up the stunt surprises
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even further by having a tractor trailer collide
with a water tower.
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Unfortunately, the cable supports for the
structure snapped, knocking over a telephone
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pole, which crushed Halicki under its weight.
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The Twilight Zone: The Movie
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John Landis' original segment in 1983's Twilight
Zone: The Movie, titled "Time Out," starred
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actor Vic Morrow as a bigoted man named Bill
Connor who's made to experience his own hatred
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through the eyes of others as he time hops
through some of the 20th century's most heinous
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race-based conflicts.
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The segment was originally supposed to end
with Bill rescuing two Vietnamese children
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from jungle warfare to redeem himself, but
filming that scene took a horrific turn.
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Morrow carried the children, aged six and
seven, across a river as a helicopter flew
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overhead to simulate the danger of the scene.
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The craft was helmed by an experienced pilot,
but a mortar effect exploded too closely to
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the vessel after the director demanded that
the pilot fly the craft lower than he'd been.
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The helicopter careened out of control due
to the blast, and the impact cost the lives of all three
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actors.
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According to co-star Dick Peabody,
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"Vic's last words in life, while holding two
children and waiting for the director to say
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'action' were, 'I've got to be crazy to do
this shot.
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I should've asked for a double."
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Midnight Rider
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The Jesup, Georgia set of Midnight Rider became
a crime scene once director Randall Miller
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was charged with manslaughter after one of
his crewmembers perished in a very preventable
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accident.
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The cast and crew was sent out to a local
train trestle to film a scene with William
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Hurt laying in a bed on the tracks, and they
were told they'd have a 60 second window to
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escape if a train came along.
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Unfortunately, it wasn't nearly enough time
to get everyone to safety, and 27-year-old
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camera assistant Sarah Jones was fatally struck
by the vehicle, while several others were
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injured.
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The grisly incident was captured on film by
the crew's cameras, and the film's director
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pled guilty to involuntary manslaughter as
a result of the accident.
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He was released early from his sentence in
2016, but is still legally forbidden to be
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involved in a film in any capacity involving
safety responsibilities.
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The Crow
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Actor Brandon Lee, son of martial arts superstar
Bruce Lee, was all set to step off of his
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father's famous coattails with a starring
role in The Crow, but his life was tragically
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cut short during what should have been a routine
stunt shot gone terribly wrong in March 1993.
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A Magnum .44 pistol used in a scene was supposed
to be loaded with a single harmless blank,
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but had a piece of a bullet still lodged in
the chamber from earlier.
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When it was fired off by Lee's co-star Michael
Massee as planned, the bullet pierced Lee's
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abdominal aorta; he could not be saved despite
several hours of surgical effort.
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The studio and filmmakers had the option to
table the pic altogether, with insurance covering
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the production expenses.
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However, they decided to forge on and finish
with subs coming in to round out Lee's remaining
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pieces so that his life's last work could
be shared.
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The actor who pulled the trigger later said,
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"I wasn't even supposed to be handling the
gun until we started shooting the scene, but
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they changed it.
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I don't think you ever get over something
like that."
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The film was eventually released to resounding
praise in 1994, and, contrary to urban myth,
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did not include the actual footage of Lee's
fatal wound.
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Top Gun
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All those aerial trick maneuvers that made
Top Gun such a maverick movie came at a devastating
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cost for one of the pilots who helped make
them happen.
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The life of Art Scholl, an experienced airman,
was lost during production of the 1986 action-adventure
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classic after he lost control of his plane
during an inverted flat spin and crashed into
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the Pacific Ocean.
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Eerily enough, the circumstances of the accident
were strikingly similar to what happened in
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the events of the movie itself, in which the
character Goose also perished after failing
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to recover from a flat spin.
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The move was considered relatively low-risk
for a pilot of his caliber, and it's impossible
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to know exactly what went so wrong that day,
as his vessel and body were never found.
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And that wouldn't be the last Tom Cruise movie
to cost an experienced airman his life.
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American Made
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The Colombian production of American Made
became the site of a tragedy when two pilots
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lost their lives in a plane crash on the set.
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The film, which gives cinematic life to the
true story of Barry Seal, a pilot who ran
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covert operations in Central America for the
CIA, required a lot of aerial shots and acrobatics
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in dangerous conditions.
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And in September 2015, one effort to return
for more sky shots became catastrophic when
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the plane crashed near a small village.
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Local villagers reportedly discovered the
wreckage shortly after witnessing the crash
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and found that all three pilots inside were
alive, albeit burned.
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By the time medical assistance arrived, however,
only one was alive, while the other two had
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passed away.
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The families of the deceased brought legal
action against the studios, alleging that
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actor Tom Cruise and director Doug Liman demanded
"lavish" shots during long days, which may
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have contributed to the cause of the plane's
crash.
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Cruise himself had reportedly been on a helicopter
flight through the same terrain just minutes
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before the fateful crash.
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