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  • For all the action, mistakes, easter eggs and cameos in blockbuster movies, the drama

  • and comedy behind the scenes can be just as awesome. We're changing things up, and giving

  • you a rapid fire dose of movie trivia you never thought to look for. Screen Rant presents:

  • Know Your Movies: 20 Amazing Movie Secrets That Will Blow Your Mind!

  • Jurassic World

  • The product placement in the Jurassic Park sequel stuck out like a sore thumb - but it

  • wasn't the studio's work. The director actually requested the sponsors, claiming that if the

  • park were opened today, every part of it would be branded.

  • The Avengers: Age of Ultron

  • The final battle is set in Sokovia, but it was filmed at a London police training college.

  • The statue in the town square was given a fake beard, since it's a well-known monument

  • to Robert Peel, the inventor of the modern police force, and the reason British cops

  • are still called "bobbies."

  • Furious Seven (NOT "7")

  • The director James Wan ("Juan") confused everyone when he said that the seven in the title was

  • the WORD, not the movie's place in the series. Why? Apparently the movie's title is actually

  • a tribute to the classic Japanese movie Seven Samurai, with Wan seeing Dominic Toretto and

  • his team as Hollywood's modern - horsepowered - Samurai.

  • The Martian

  • The secret NASA mission to save a stranded astronaut is given the title "Project Elrond,"

  • a reference to a secret meeting in The Lord of the Rings. When Ridley Scott realized Sean

  • Bean was actually IN that movie scene, and would also explain the name in this film,

  • he wanted to change it. But the crew demanded it stay, since the joke was actually a hilarious

  • coincidence.

  • Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation Tom Cruise is famous for doing his own massive

  • stunts, climbing skyscrapers or hanging onto an airplane. But the actor's training even

  • covers the stunt driving in Rogue Nation. It wasn't to meet the star's demands, either

  • - the stunt coordinator claimed he didn't have a stunt driver who was better than Cruise.

  • Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens

  • Back in 1983, when interviewed about Return Of The Jedi, Mark Hamill gave an interview

  • to TV-AM in the UK and told reporters George Lucas spoke of bringing Luke Skywalker back

  • as an Obi-Wan type character training a new generation of Jedi in Episode VII. He also

  • said Episode VII wouldn’t happen until 2011…

  • Ant-Man

  • Any superhero actor has to hit the gym before shooting their scenes, but apparently, Paul

  • Rudd was more committed to getting into shape than Marvel expected. When they started shooting,

  • the Ant-Man costume had to be altered to compensate for Rudd's added muscle and lost fat. And

  • an unscripted shirtless scene was added shortly after.

  • Mad Max: Fury Road

  • The villain of Fury Road is larger than life in every way - except for the weapon he seems

  • to be praying to. That's an authentic Australian waddy, a weapon used as recently as World

  • War I. When the actor's mother-in-law left it to him, he asked the director to work it

  • into the movie, and the rest is history.

  • Guardians of the Galaxy

  • Marvel may be churning out blockbusters, but they don't spend money if they don't have

  • to. The massive set constructed for the Kyln prison in Guardians of the Galaxy was so expensive

  • to build, the studio only agreed to foot the bill after planning to melt down all the steel

  • after filming, and sell it back to the supplier.

  • Captain America: The Winter Soldier

  • The Nick Fury chase scene through city streets was a hit with fans because it actually seemed

  • realistic - but they didn't know just how realistic it was. The sequence was based on

  • a 2010 Brazilian police chase that looks exactly the same, and the directors even played the

  • police video as part of their original pitch to Marvel.

  • The LEGO Movie

  • A major highlight of the movie is Liam Neeson's role as both Good Cop and Bad Cop. The directors

  • wanted to record them separately, but Neeson thought it would be better to rapidly switch

  • from one to the other. The result was a crazed, manic split-personality filled with improvisation

  • - and fans loved every second.

  • X-Men: Days of Future Past

  • The movie that rebooted the X-Men movie universe had it all: new mutants, returning favorites...

  • even a romance between Wolverine and Storm. The future scene was deleted, but it showed

  • the movie versions of the heroes finally gave in to their attraction like they had multiple

  • times in the comics. Maybe the second time is the charm.

  • Dawn of the Planet of The Apes

  • The movie's original ending saw the apes watching as battleships approached in San Francisco

  • Bay, promising an imminent war. Director Matt Reeves decided to go with a more emotional

  • ending between the movie's ape and human leads. It's a incredible ending scene, even though

  • it was filmed weeks before release, Reeves directing via Skype, and a stand-in for Andy

  • Serkis' actually on set.

  • The Amazing Spider-Man 2

  • It may have killed Sony's solo Spider-Man series, but the original ending would have

  • had fans talking for years. Peter's father Richard Parker coming back from the dead is

  • one thing, but showing Venom in OsCorp's basement - along with the frozen head of Norman Osborn

  • - leaves every fan with unanswered questions of what would have come next.

  • Gone Girl

  • In all the suspense and twists and turns of this story, audiences probably missed some

  • time-consuming CG effects. According to director David Fincher, with the number and variety

  • of wigs that star Rosamund Pike had to wear, there isn't a single shot of her in the movie

  • that didn't require a special effects team to retouch her hairline. Who knew to even

  • look?

  • Man of Steel

  • When Henry Cavill showed up for his Superman screen test, the prototype costume wasn't

  • available - so they used the classic Christopher Reeve version instead. When Cavill stepped

  • out of wardrobe in the brightly coloured, outdated suit with bright red underwear, and

  • everyone on set grew quiet, he knew he had found the man for the job.

  • Interstellar

  • The sprawling corn field used in just a few scenes required 500 acres to be planted and

  • grown. It might sound like insanity on Christopher Nolan's part, but when shooting wrapped, the

  • corn was sold - for a hefty profit.

  • Frozen

  • Most fans know this Disney hit is based on "The Snow Queen" by Hans Christian Andersen.

  • But the main characters' names are no coincidence. Say them out loud fast enough, and "Hans,

  • Kristoff, Anna, Sven" is clearly a play on the author's name that few will catch on their

  • own.

  • Jurassic Park

  • Director Steven Spielberg had young actresses record blood-curdling screams to see how they'd

  • handle the movie's terrifying twists. When he played actress Ariana Richards' tape, and

  • it was the only recorded Scream to raise his wife from bed in a panic, he realized he had

  • found his Lex.

  • Those are some of our favorite mind blowing movie facts, but let us know which ones we

  • missed and stay tuned for more! And remember to subscribe to our channel for more videos

  • like this one.

For all the action, mistakes, easter eggs and cameos in blockbuster movies, the drama

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