Movies & TV Facts for Kids
Behind-the-scenes facts from film and TV
In the original 1954 Godzilla movie, the monster was actually a man in a heavy rubber suit stomping on miniature buildings.
The Nightmare Before Christmas used stop-motion animation with real puppets — it took three years and over 100,000 individual frames.
The first IMAX film was shown in 1970 at the World Expo in Osaka, Japan — the screen was over 60 feet wide.
The Lego Movie was made with CGI, but animators worked hard to make everything look like it was built with real LEGO bricks — even the water and fire.
In The Lion King, "Simba" means "lion" in Swahili, "Rafiki" means "friend," and "Pumbaa" means "foolish."
The first 3D movie shown to a paying audience was The Power of Love in 1922 — viewers wore red-and-green glasses.
The scary tunnel scene in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) genuinely frightened the child actors because they didn't know what was coming.
The Lord of the Rings trilogy used over 20,000 extras, 10,000 prosthetic faces, and 2,000 suits of armor for the battle scenes.
Pixar animators for Turning Red studied real teenagers to capture authentic awkward movements and facial expressions.
Dorothy's ruby slippers in The Wizard of Oz were originally silver in the book — they were changed to red to show off the new Technicolor film.