Movie Urban Legends Revealed #11
This is the eleventh in a series of examinations of legends from movies and the people who make them and whether they are true or false. Click here to view an archive of the previous ten.
Let’s begin!
MOVIE LEGEND: Waldo of Where’s Waldo fame appeared in Apocalypto.
STATUS: I’m Going With True
Mel Gibson’s follow up to his blockbuster film about the death of Jesus was 2006′s Apocalypto, which told a story set at the end of the great Mayan civilization in the 8th and 9th Centuries.

In the trailer for the film, Mel Gibson added a single frame showing himself in normal clothes with a cigarette in his mouth surrounded by a bunch of Mayan people.
Gibson, it should be noted, is a perennial jokester, known for doing many practical jokes during the filming of his movies.
Well, in the actual film, Apocalypto, Gibson did a joke similar to the trailer joke, only this time it was not all that well received.
At one point during the film, there’s a mass grave filled with dead bodies.
For a single frame of this scene, Gibson added the following…

Yep, that’s none other than Waldo, of Where’s Waldo (who we discussed earlier in the week in Picture Book Legends Revealed).
You can see it for yourself in this YouTube clip (try to freeze at around the 8 second mark)…
Thanks to almiro for the clip!
MOVIE LEGEND: Stephen Spielberg directed his first work for a studio when he was 21 years old.
STATUS: False
Sid Scheinberg, the Universal Vice President for Production who signed Steven Spielberg to a contract with Universal in 1968, recalled his first meeting with the young director.

I just have one request and I’d like you to give me not so much a commitment, Mr. Scheiberg, but a promise. I want to direct something before I am twenty-one. That is very important to me.
That, of course, would be impossible, since Spielberg was ALREADY 21 at the time, having been born on December 18, 1946.
However, let’s say that Spielberg really meant direct WHILE he was 21. That’s more reasonable, and when he his signing with Universal was announced, Spielberg WAS 21 years old. For six more days, that is, as he was signed in December of 1968.
So Spielberg did not get a chance to direct for Universal until 1969, when he directed a segment of the TV movie (which would eventually be the pilot of) The Night Gallery, a Rod Serling Twilight Zone-ish project.

Spielberg was 22 and directing the great Joan Crawford (it was one of her last roles), which is very impressive.
However, Spielberg apparently felt that being 21 and a director was a bigger deal, so for years, he has referred to his age at the time as being 21.
A few years back, Spielberg was honored at the International Emmy Awards:
I got my start in television. I got my first break when I … was 21 years old directing ‘Night Gallery,’ so I owe a lot to television.
That’s just a sample, he’s made the claim many more times over the years.
In fact, from a profile of his company Amblin Entertainment…
Named after Steven Spielberg’s student film Amblin’, the production company was founded in 1984. Its headquarters was built at Universal Studios, which cost the studio more than $3 million in addition to employee salaries (which are all carried by Universal). The company’s name represents a major launching point in Spielberg’s career. Amblin’ was a 23-minute documentary Spielberg made in film school. Spielberg had bad grades and was not able to attend the top film schools, but managed acceptance at California State University, Long Beach, where he made Amblin’. After seeing the film, Sidney Sheinberg, Universal’s television director and later president of Universal’s parent company MCA, offered the 20-year-old Spielberg a seven-year contract to make Universal television shows at $275 a week. When he directed Jaws for Universal a few years later, Spielberg received five percent of the profits, putting an end to his days of working for a salary, with about $5 million in income.
That’s basically what was the case for years, Spielberg pushed his age back so that when he did Night Gallery in 1969, he was 21 years old, when it reality, he was 22 years old.
His driver’s license, his bios, everything said 1947 as his year of birth.
His age fudging was first reported in the early 1980s, but became a bigger deal when he was sued in 1995 by Dennis Hoffman.
Hoffman produced an independent film that Spielberg directed in 1968 called Amblin’, which was the basis of the name of his company…

Spielberg signed a contract with Hoffman saying that he would direct the movie for free and some time in the next ten years (1968-1977) in the future do one movie of the producer’s choosing for $25,000 and 5% of the film’s gross.
Well, in 1977, Spielberg bought the rights of the contract from Hoffman for about $30,000.
The debate is over how the settlement was reached. Spielberg claims that Hoffman never gave him any scripts and actually confessed that he was not cut out to be a producer. Hoffman claims that Spielberg told him he was only 20 years old in 1968, so the 1968 agreement would not be valid under California law at the time (now it is 18 years old), so Hoffman took the settlement because he did not have any other real choice.
So when Hoffman found out about the age fudging (which he says he only found out about in 1994), he claimed that was the impetus for his suit. Spielberg counter-sued, saying Hoffman was harrassing him with nonsense. That’s the last I’ve been able to find out about the suit, even using Westlaw. Anyone happen to know when/if the case was resolved?
Thanks to Joseph McBride’s Steven Spielberg bio for the quote from Scheinberg. And thanks to the International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 21, for the Amblin Entertainment description.
MOVIE LEGEND: Underage actors resulted in a number of interesting filming issues during Superbad.
STATUS: True

Christopher Mintz-Plasse was just along with a couple of friends auditioning for a role in Superbad (the casting call was for a regular, typical looking teen) when he decided on a whim to audition as well (using a camera phone to take a head shot).
He landed the role of Fogel, also known by his fake ID name, “McLovin.”

However, due to the fact that he was only 17 years old, certain issues had to be taken with his usage in the film. For instance, his mother actually had to be on the set for the filming of his sex scene!
Here’s Mintz-Plasse on it, from a good interview from The Guardian…
My first ever sex scene in a movie was in Superbad. Because I was 17, for legal reasons my mother had to be on the set. It was real awkward but it worked out OK because when I watched the movie with her the sex scene wasn’t awkward because she’d been right there when it happened. Afterwards we didn’t talk about it; we still don’t speak about that moment. Now, I’m 19 so my mom doesn’t have to be in the room when I have sex, thank God.
In addition, another major scene where underage actors were a concern was the flashback to when Jonah Hill’s character Seth was embarrassed by his classmates discovering that he constantly draws pictures of penises.
First, we see Seth as a kid (played by Casey Margolis) drawing the pictures…

But when we see the actual pictures, we never actually see young Seth with the actual penis drawings, and that is because the hands drawing the pictures are actually those of a young (but over 18) woman…

Similarly, in a later scene when Seth is discovered, the character of young Becky (played by Laura Marano) is shown looking at the pictures…

while an older actress actually holds the actual penis drawings (Marano’s paper is blank).

Heck, you can obviously tell they’re not even holding the pictures in the same fashion!
Man, no wonder W.C. Fields said “never work with kids and animals” – it sounds like a real pain!
Okay, that’s it for this week!
Feel free (heck, I implore you!) to write in with your suggestions for future installments! My e-mail address is bcronin@legendsrevealed.com



And now, for the rest of his life, people will be coming up to Mintz-Plasse on the street and yelling “McLovin!”
You didn’t tell us why the single frame Waldo shot wasn’t well received. Inquiring minds want to know!
Because it was a practical joke in the middle of a horrific scene – people felt it was inappropriate. I think it might even have been cut from the DVD release, as a result.
If anyone knows, let me know!
I couldn’t see the Waldo scene in the video clip but I’ll take your word for it based on the freeze frame.
Freeze it when the clip hits 8 seconds. Try it a couple of times – you’ll get it after a try or two.
[...] and sports, which you can check out here, at legendsrevealed.com. I’d especially recommend last week’s Movie Legends, for a piece about Waldo (of Where’s Waldo fame) popping up in Mel Gibson’s [...]
I couldn’t get it to work, but it’s a flash right before the cut to the next shot, right?
BTW, Spielberg notoriously, oh-let’s-be-nice-and-say- “exaggerates”, a lot about his early stories. He has invented an entire story about faking his way into an office which people still quote to this day, and is by all accounts absolutely false.
It would be interesting if he were lying about his age for a specific reason comprable to Bob Kane, but I think he just wanted to be seen as a wunderkind and the “21″ thing was important to him because of is own personal mythology.
I tend to think that’s the most likely scenario, as well, Sean, that he just really liked the sound of “Directing at 21″ as opposed to the alternate “lied about his age to get out of a contract” story.
And yeah, it’s right at the changeover.
These laws regarding scenes with kids sound absolutely ridiculous. Is there any teenager anywhere who hasn’t seen a picture of a dick? I would expect that a firm majority have drawn a dick at least once or twice.
Is it true that Waldo is named Wally in Britain? What is the point of a name change like that? I’ve noticed in ‘Last Of The Summer Wine’ that ‘Wally’ seems to be an insult of some sort in England, but I don’t know what precisely it means.
It’s a great question, Mary, as to why exactly they changed it from Wally to Waldo in America. I honestly don’t know.
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