1) Brad Pitt, who was a big fan of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, approached director Guy Ritchie and asked for a role in his film. When Ritchie found Pitt couldn’t master a Londres accent, he rewrote the script to give him the role of Mickey the Gypsy.
2) When Vinny and Sol are sitting outside Brick-Top’s Bookies, about to give him the diamond, the man that approaches the car is not really Bullet-Tooth Tony, it was a look-alike. Vinnie Jones didn’t mostrar up for shooting that día because he was in jail for fighting the night before.
3) In the back of the bar when we are first introduced to Doug the Head, Guy Ritchie is the man lectura the newspaper.
4) The producers couldn’t afford enough extras for the boxing match sequences. Whenever a camera angle changed, the extras had to mover around to create an impression of a crowded house.
5) Lennie James actually hit himself in his private parts with the shotgun while blasting a hole in the muro at the bookies, but continued the scene. That footage was used in the film.
6) When Vinnie Jones is introduced in the movie, he is slamming a man’s head in a car door. It was the head of stunt co-coordinator and action director Tom Delmar, who volunteered for the job.
7) To keep things in order during production, director Guy Ritchie introduced a system of fines on set. There were fines for mobile phones ringing, arriving late, taking naps during shooting, being “cheeky”, being unfunny and/or moaning o complaining. One staff member was even charged for letting the craft service mesa, tabla run out of coffee cups.
8) The role of Brick parte superior, arriba was originally offered to Sean Connery. Connery liked the script and was curious to see Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, so producer Matthew Vaughn hastily arranged a screening for him at extreme short notice. Connery duly turned up and watched the film, before emerging with his judgement: “That is a good film”, he said, “and you’re not going to be able to afford me”. Cue Alan Ford.
9) According to the DVD commentary, Bow, the dog was very difficult to work with. During the car scene with Vincent, Sol and Tyrone, the dog was actually attacking Lennie James, and James was actually bitten in the crotch por the dog but didn’t suffer any serious injury. The dog was replaced after that incident.
10) The pub where Bullet-Tooth Tony is accosted por Sol and company is the same Pub used in the movie Shaun of the Dead. The Winchester, as it was known, is where Shaun and his friends took refuge from the flesh eating zombies.
11) Every mistake that Sol, Vincent and Tyrone make were inspired por various late-night TV shows about real-life crimes gone horribly wrong.
12) Brad Pitt was initially thrown por the British cast and crew’s predilection for using the word “cunt” with such abandon. He soon wore down his resistance and joined in.
13) As he was playing a particularly scummy character, Brad Pitt made a point of rarely washing during the the film’s production.
14) Brad Pitt’s character and indecipherable speech was inspired por many critics’ complaints about the accents of the characters in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Guy Ritchie decided to counter the criticisms por creating a character that not only couldn’t be understood por the audience but that also couldn’t be understood por characters in the movie.
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2) When Vinny and Sol are sitting outside Brick-Top’s Bookies, about to give him the diamond, the man that approaches the car is not really Bullet-Tooth Tony, it was a look-alike. Vinnie Jones didn’t mostrar up for shooting that día because he was in jail for fighting the night before.
3) In the back of the bar when we are first introduced to Doug the Head, Guy Ritchie is the man lectura the newspaper.
4) The producers couldn’t afford enough extras for the boxing match sequences. Whenever a camera angle changed, the extras had to mover around to create an impression of a crowded house.
5) Lennie James actually hit himself in his private parts with the shotgun while blasting a hole in the muro at the bookies, but continued the scene. That footage was used in the film.
6) When Vinnie Jones is introduced in the movie, he is slamming a man’s head in a car door. It was the head of stunt co-coordinator and action director Tom Delmar, who volunteered for the job.
7) To keep things in order during production, director Guy Ritchie introduced a system of fines on set. There were fines for mobile phones ringing, arriving late, taking naps during shooting, being “cheeky”, being unfunny and/or moaning o complaining. One staff member was even charged for letting the craft service mesa, tabla run out of coffee cups.
8) The role of Brick parte superior, arriba was originally offered to Sean Connery. Connery liked the script and was curious to see Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, so producer Matthew Vaughn hastily arranged a screening for him at extreme short notice. Connery duly turned up and watched the film, before emerging with his judgement: “That is a good film”, he said, “and you’re not going to be able to afford me”. Cue Alan Ford.
9) According to the DVD commentary, Bow, the dog was very difficult to work with. During the car scene with Vincent, Sol and Tyrone, the dog was actually attacking Lennie James, and James was actually bitten in the crotch por the dog but didn’t suffer any serious injury. The dog was replaced after that incident.
10) The pub where Bullet-Tooth Tony is accosted por Sol and company is the same Pub used in the movie Shaun of the Dead. The Winchester, as it was known, is where Shaun and his friends took refuge from the flesh eating zombies.
11) Every mistake that Sol, Vincent and Tyrone make were inspired por various late-night TV shows about real-life crimes gone horribly wrong.
12) Brad Pitt was initially thrown por the British cast and crew’s predilection for using the word “cunt” with such abandon. He soon wore down his resistance and joined in.
13) As he was playing a particularly scummy character, Brad Pitt made a point of rarely washing during the the film’s production.
14) Brad Pitt’s character and indecipherable speech was inspired por many critics’ complaints about the accents of the characters in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Guy Ritchie decided to counter the criticisms por creating a character that not only couldn’t be understood por the audience but that also couldn’t be understood por characters in the movie.
ㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤㅤlink