Urban Legends About Movies

There are a whole bunch of urban legends about motion picture films, star celebrities, strange events which (allegedly) happened on movie sets – curses to movie cast and crew members who have worked on certain films. There are even legends about television commercials, stunt people, “extras” who work in the film and television commercial industries. Here is the list outlining movie-related legends, prepared by one of the research paper help services. These movies almost everyone has seen or at least knows about.


1 1959 version of Ben Hur

In 1959, the movie, “Ben Hur” was released with a young Charlton Heston in the lead role as Judah Ben-Hur, a 1st Century wealthy merchant and prince from ancient Jerusalem. The movie is a film adaptation of Lew Wallace‘s 1880 novel entitled, “Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ,” and the first release of the film was in New York City on November 18, 1959, at Loew’s State Theatre. Only two films to date have matched the type and number of awards that Ben Hur has received, those being Titanic (1997) and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003).

The Urban Legend:

There’s a particularly well-known and well-loved action scene in the Ben-Hur movie. This is commonly known as “The Chariot Scene,” for obvious reasons it’s a scene where a chariot race is in progress.

In one scene (apparently), someone died while the film was being shot. When filmmakers and technicians planned to cut this out before releasing the movie (allegedly), the widow of the stuntman/actor who died in this scene was upset, so she protested against the intended final version of the movie without the fatal accident in it. Film-makers complied with the widow’s request to leave the scene “as-is,” and (apparently) if you watch very closely, you’ll see one of the stuntmen get trampled by a chariot team in a shot that looks impossibly real…well – because it’s quite real.


2 3 Men and a Baby (1987) Ghost Cameo

3 Men and a Baby are a movie with three unlikely Mr. Mom types – or 3 men (Peter, Michael, and Jack) not quite ready to be “Dad” figures – are placed in the important position to be the caregivers for one awesome, cute baby! These are three bachelor friends who end up banding together when one man’s girlfriend suddenly requires his assistance with childcare. The men stumble along, learning and teaching each other, mostly by trial and error and minor bursts of common sense – how to care for and care ABOUT the baby. A really funny, heart-warming movie starring Tom Selleck (Peter), Steve Guttenberg (Michael), and Ted Danson (Jack).

The Legend:

Parts of this film were shot in a house and not all of the film was made at a Hollywood studio on a “set” built to look like a house. Apparently, in selecting the house to be used in this movie, nobody heard ahead of time about the little boy who died in the house not long before it was used for the movie. The boy’s ghost can be seen in one scene and the boy is peering through the curtains of one of the home’s windows. Producers haven’t been able to say there’s nothing at the window in that scene because there’s some human shape present!

The 9-year-old boy committed suicide, apparently shot himself with a shotgun. If you look at pictures from the movie, you’ll have no troubles being able to pick out what looks like a boy behind the curtain in a scene involving Ted Danson, whereby Jack’s (Danson’s character in the film) mother is visiting him, offering him some much-needed babycare advice.


3 1939 Wizard of Oz

The Wizard of Oz has been a well-loved and favorite movie to thousands and to succeeding generations of people ever since its release in 1939. The motion picture is an adaptation of novelist, L. Frank Baum‘s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” first published in the year 1890, in Chicago, by the George M. Hill Company. The illustrator for these early publications was William Wallace Denslow who also worked with Baum on other Baum works such as Baum’s “Father Goose: His Book” (1899), “By the Candelabra’s Glare” (1898), and “Dot and Tot of Merryland” (1901).

The Legend:

In the movie, where Dorothy (Judy Garland), The Scarecrow (Ray Bolger), and The Tin Woodman or The Tin Man (Jack Haley) are singing “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” and are merrily skipping, dancing, and otherwise treading through the forest, just as they are ending their song and moving out of camera view – so a segue can occur and a scene change can happen – off to their left (but our center point of view) of the yellow brick road pathway, something is happening.

It is said that over in the trees, off to the left of the yellow brick road where Dorothy, Scarecrow, and Tin Man are skipping and singing along, one of the “Munchkin” actors has hung himself on-set but behind the scene. It is visible in that one camera shot as Dorothy, Scarecrow, and Tin Man curve over to the right and conclude the transitional nature of this scene.

If you watch closely, something is happening in that scene that is not supposed to be happening and was caught on camera. When the film was being edited together and a final version and “cut” decided upon, this scene and its “blemishes” were left in the final film version. This scene/blemish is in every sold version of the film has never been edited out, so this scene is easy to view for pretty much anyone who can find a way to view the movie. By the way, this section of the film is commonly referred to as “The Tinman Sequence,” because Dorothy and Scarecrow have just picked up Tinman, restored his capability to move around, and have invited him to come with them to see The Wizard of Oz in the Emerald City.

Busted:

The Truth About All These Legends is that they’re legends – stories of the untrue variety but stories that make people sit up and listen. Made up of assumptions and other things, but these stories spread like wildfire in the typical “urban legend” way…by mass storytelling and word of mouth of average people who have seen the movies and “heard something not yet verified” but who have decided to pass the information along, anyway.

In Ben Hur, some accidents happened but nobody died. One stuntman was, indeed, injured in the chariot race scene but he made a full recovery and did not die. The scene was NOT edited out of the film, either – so yes, there is an injury that happens on film – but no death.

In 3 Men and a Baby: the “figure you see” is no ghost of a 9-year-old boy who shot himself. It’s a cardboard promotional display of Ted Danson that someone forgot to move out of the way. Naturally, the shape of a human figure is visible – but it’s a “fake” Ted, cardboard version.

In Wizard of Oz: no munchkin committed suicide behind the scenes. There is a large bird off-stage that ends up a little more on-stage than people realized when it stretches a wing and the shadow of this is visible. Because of the expenses involved with film-making in 1939, and the importance of that transitional yellow-brick-road shot, nothing was cut out of that scene and it remains “as – is.” So it’s a bird.

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