29/01/2026
To those always screaming “PRACTICAL EFFECTS ARE ALWAYS BETTER THAN CGI!!”…
There is a movie from 1981 called Roar that opens with a credit reading: "No animals were harmed in the making of this film... but 70 cast and crew members were."
It is widely considered the most dangerous film ever produced.
The director, Noel Marshall, and his wife, Tippi Hedren, had a dangerous theory. They believed that using animal trainers was "artificial."
They thought if they just flooded the set with 150 lions, tigers, and cheetahs, and let the actors live with them, the animals would naturally be friendly.
So, they didn't use trained circus animals. They used wild, unpredictable predators.
The result was a war zone.
The set was so terrifying that the crew quit in waves. Over 300 crew members walked off the job during production because they feared for their lives.
And the danger didn't stay on the property.
The security was so bad that lions frequently escaped the set and wandered into the local town. At one point, the sheriff had to shoot three lions that had broken out, and neighbors were constantly reporting fully grown tigers in their backyards.
Inside the fences, the injuries were the stuff of nightmares.
The cinematographer, Jan de Bont, was literally scalped by a lion. He had his entire scalp lifted off his head and required over 200 stitches to reattach it.
The director’s stepdaughter, a young Melanie Griffith, was mauled in the face. A lion’s claws missed her eye by a millimeter, requiring facial reconstruction surgery that she feared would end her career.
Even the director wasn't safe. Noel Marshall was bitten so many times that he developed gangrene from the dirty wounds, but he kept filming anyway.
The production was supposed to take six months. It took 11 years.
When it finally hit theaters, it was a catastrophe. It cost $17 million to make and earned back only $2 million, bankrupting the director and ending his marriage.