The historic "Tidalholm Mansion", the gigantic white antebellum house in Beaufort, South Carolina in the USA, the homely setting centerpiece to the movie, and arguably also virtually also a character in itself in the picture, went up for sale in 2013, this being the 30th Anniversary Year since The Big Chill (1983) was released. The Italianate-style manse house was built in 1853 on the banks of the Beaufort River and is situated on a 1.5 acre block of land, the house itself measuring .38 acres (or 7381 square feet). The manor includes a two-bedroom guest cottage and has a private dock and jetty with access to the Intracoastal Waterway, positioned to take full advantage of the nearby cooling body of water. The dwelling is three stories high with and has seven bedrooms and eight bathrooms. The home was constructed by 19th Century magnate Edgar Fripp as a refuge from the summer heat of his cotton plantation. It was used by Union troops as a hospital during the Civil War. The Fripp family later reacquired the property in a roundabout fashion. It had been sold at auction to a person who donated it back to the family. It was as a guest house for a short time from the 1930s to the 1970s when it "entertained many artists, authors and statesmen" according to the broker-babble.
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
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Fan of The Inglorious Bastards or just want to share your movie knowledge? This topic is dedicated to all trivia and questions related to The Inglorious Bastards
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When Quentin Tarantino wrote Inglourious Basterds (2009), even though the plot is different, he bought the copyrights of this film so the title could be the same.
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Enzo G. Castellari's first collaboration with Fred Williamson.
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Fred Williamson did his own stunts.
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Fred Williamson is named as a co-writer on screenplay on deposit at the Library of Congress Copyright Office.
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The picture's opening title card reads: "France 1944".
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In the interview with Quentin Tarantino for an 'extra' in the 2008 re-release of the film on DVD Enzo G. Castellari points out that several scenes had to be re-scripted and/or shot differently as during filming the Italian Government, in response to increasing activity by the terrorist Red Brigade, drafted a law prohibiting the holding of weapons (even blank firing 'prop' weapons) in case they fell into Red Brigade hands. The castle rescue scenes originally featured a massive shoot out, but were rewritten into the covert attack and escape featured, using knives, catapults and crossbows instead of firearms. The scene where Bo Svenson's character shoots the guards in the train lab was shot differently with a single squib at the end of the (fake) MP40 in the long shot, followed by a zoom into Bo's face with the sound of gunfire dubbed. Enzo G. Castellari threw spent rounds into shot to maintain the illusion of the weapon firing with the set electrician waving his hand in front of a lamp to simulate muzzle flash.
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
The Inglorious Bastards - Trivia, Questions and Fun Facts
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