Most dangerous film ever made- celebrity family lived with lions for 6 yrs - Continentalinquirer

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Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Most dangerous film ever made- celebrity family lived with lions for 6 yrs

This flick that was billed as the most dangerous ever made is making a return to the big screen nearly 35 years after its original release.
Noel Marshall’s action-adventure film Roar was originally released in 1981 and its 11-year production is infamous for the injuries received by 70 members of the cast and crew.
The film revolves around a wildlife preservationist who lives with his wife and children alongside a number of wild lions, tigers, cheetahs and elephants.
Its re-release is due to be shown at a handful of cinemas in the US in April, and will be made available to the wider public on a number of platforms as well.
The film features Marshall himself, who plays the starring character of Hank, while his real-life partner Tippi Hedren plays the part of his onscreen wife.
Hedren’s daughter, Melanie Griffith, is also featured in the film alongside Marshall’s three sons and a number of animal trainers.
While the plot line for the film itself – two lions putting a family at serious risk by battling for domination – is action-packed, it is in fact the back story that is the most chilling aspect of the tale.
The idea for the film came about when Marshall and Hedren discovered an abandoned plantation house overrun by a large pride of lions while touring wildlife preserves in Africa.
Hoping to raise awareness for the inhumane treatment experienced by big cats in captivity, they approached a number of animal trainers for help make the concept for the film a reality.
The couple then began adopting and breeding lions in their home in Los Angeles and for six years the family of six lived alongside the pack.
They eventually moved to a range north of Los Angeles and began filming.
The trailer for the film documents some of the dangers the family put themselves through during production.
Marshall is featured on a motorbike at the start of a film trailer, riding through a pack of lions as one of them strikes out at him as he passes by.
Later he is tackled to the ground by another lion as a humorous review from HitFix appears on the screen: ‘It’s like Walt Disney went insane and shot a snuff version of Swiss Family Robinson’.


The film became infamous for the injuries received by 70 members of the cast and crew during production


Marshall is featured riding on a motorbike at the start of the trailer as one of the lions strikes out at him



The idea of the film arrived when Marshall and Hedren discovered a plantation house overrun by lions


 Marshall and Hedren wanted to raise awareness for the inhumane treatment experienced by cats in captivity


Noel Marshall was wounded so many times during the course of the film he was hospitalised with gangrene


Tippi Hedren’s daughter, Melanie Griffith, needed facial reconstruction surgery because of her injuries


The film's trailer documents some of the dangers the family put themselves through during production



 Seventy members of cast and crew were injured during the course of the film, but the lions were unharmed

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