Three of the main characters were the same actor, and yet there are shots with all of them in the same scene. When I saw this as a young adult I didn’t even notice that Mike Myers was playing three roles and was genuinely dumbfounded years later when I found out.
How did they do those scenes so seamlessly?
Wow, dumbass kid I was I never realized he played both roles. I guess he did a great job acting.
Edit: also still trying to figure out who the third character the was, lol
Edit 2: oh, it’s Fat Bastard isn’t it.
Fat Bastard
Ding - crazy good prosthetics, right?
Yeah, it occurred to me after I thought about his voice and that fake Scottish accent of his. Pre-Shrek Shrek.
Post How-I-Married-An-Axe-Murderer How I Married and Axe Murderer.
“Look at the sieze o tha boy’s heid. I’m no kiddin. It’s like an orange on a toothpick.
No kiddin. His heid’s like Sputnik. Spherical, but quite pointy in parts.
Ooh, that was off-sides, wasn’t it? He’ll be cryin’ hiself to sleep tonight, on his huge pilla!”What a terrible day to have eyes… lol
You forget he also played Goldmember in the third movie.
He also played the aptly-named Goldmember.
How did he gain and lose all that weight so fast to play both??
Yes and the baby eating lines were ad libbed so the reaction is genuine, no one expected it.
Ed: Via rob lowe
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Assuming it’s not just using body doubles which is the easiest way, usually you film the same actor twice with the camera left in place and then splice the two films together either by physically cutting and pasting the film or more recently with software. The software also has the advantage that it can blend things better, and fix lighting differences, and differences in film exposure which isn’t as big of an issue now with film quality being more consistent. Often in older films you can often see an obvious difference between the two shots.
There’s also some films where they take a much easier approach where they film one scene and then use a green screen for the second take. This allows for doing the takes at different times since the camera might get moved or other small changes that are difficult to work around in a single day and allows for multiple camera angles to be used more easily, but it can be difficult to get the aspect ratios and depth just right, so it often looks less natural if the first take has the character along the same or too similar of a plane of depth as the second.
Wait 'till you find out that Hayley Mills isn’t a twin.
That was just cloning
Who?
I was amused when I noticed her in the most recent M Night movie Trap.
This is not an endorsement of this movie. I just thought Parent Trap to Trap was an interesting career or maybe the title of her memoirs.
I love this thread haha yay!
I guess you could say… that’s my bag… baby!
I have nothing to add, I just had no idea! I had to look it up, I almost didn’t believe you 😂
I’m not putting anyone down, but I am genuinely amazed that this many people were unaware. If you asked me how many people who watched weren’t aware, I’d have guessed like less than .01%.
I was a kid, and a dumb one lol I’ve confused actors just because they changed their hair. In the same movie. I’m just not good with faces 😂
A few different film techniques.
they could film the actor in different costumes on the same set without moving the camera, and then they put those performances together.
so you can have the profile of Austin powers on the left talking to the profile of Dr. evil on the right, and those were separate performances pasted together so it looks like they’re responding to each other even though Mike Myers was performing those conversations separately during different recordings.
If evil and Austin are in the same shot and it’s an over-the-shoulder, the actor facing the camera is the real actor and the guy not facing the camera is a body double with the same hair or bald mask
so if you were looking at Austin and Dr. evil in the same shot, either those are two separate performances put together and you’ll see that they never touch each other, or if they do touch each other, you’ll notice that you never see the frontal face of one of the actors, which is actually a body double.
and you can see these two techniques and others used in Eddie Murphy’s movies, or pretty much any body double move movie.
Corridor crew should do a vfx artists react video for this movie!
Cloned him by using his Mojo.
That or the magic of scene blocking and editing.
So, back in the day they used a really simple camera trick called a double exposure.
https://abeautifulmess.com/how-to-shoot-a-double-exposure-in-camera/
Look up “Visual FX Artists React” on YouTube. And Captain Disillusion. You’ll learn A TON about stuff like this from them!
I enjoyed this type of scene in Moon as well.
Wait until you find out about the Clumps.
Look up the Nutty professor. Magical