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  2. The biggest mistakes you never noticed in The Green Mile (1999). Add more and vote on your favourites!

    • The Green Mile

      The Green Mile mistakes. Factual error: This movie is set in...

  3. The Green Mile mistakes. Factual error: This movie is set in 1935. Back then, executions were done by hanging. The Louisiana Legislature changed the method from hanging to electrocution in 1940. 9.

    • Frank Darabont
    • Tom Hanks
    • Two Central Characters Almost Went to Different Actors.
    • Bruce Willis Helped Cast A Starring role.
    • Tom Hanks Nearly Played His “Older self.”
    • There Was More Than One Mr. Jingles.
    • Duncan’s Stand-In Snuck onto Set to Get The Job.
    • Darabont Allegedly Threw A Doghouse on Set.
    • Duncan Wasn’T Actually That tall.
    • Many of The Actors “Let Themselves Go” During production.
    • There Was A Funny Naming Coincidence on The Cast Sheet.
    • The Film Is Marked by Two Major Anachronisms.

    Although director Frank Darabont cast Tom Hanks in the lead role of Warden Paul Edgecomb (a choice that delighted author Stephen King) fairly early in production, the director reportedly offered the part to John Travolta, who turned Darabont down. Additionally, the supporting role of Wild Bill Wharton, the rambunctious psychopath played by Sam Rock...

    The character John Coffey’s unique blend of imposing stature and gentle demeanor made casting the part a tricky task. Luckily, Bruce Willis had the right man for the job. Upon hearing of the casting search for the character, Willis was sure his friend and Armageddon costar Michael Clarke Duncan was a perfect fit for the role. Willis used his A-list...

    The story of Hanks’s character Paul’s experiences as a death row warden in 1935 is bookended by two sequences set in 1999 in which a much older Paul introduces and concludes the narrative. Eighty-two-year-old Dabbs Greer played the older incarnation of the character in his final big screen role. Before the casting of Greer, however, the plan was fo...

    Between 15 and 30 trained mice were used to portray the clever ward mascot Mr. Jingles, in addition to animatronics and CGI effects. (Thankfully, the latter techniques were utilized in the scene when Mr. Jingles suffers the wrath of the malicious Percy Wetmore.) The mice were coaxed to their marks with small dishes of food.

    While Duncan had little trouble landing his Green Milegig after Willis’s endorsement, one particular crewmember had to jump through a few hoops … or stow away in the back of a few trucks. Rodney Barnes, an aspiring producer and writer who had been working as a production assistant and set security guard, hoped that by playing stand-in for Duncan he...

    Production concluded approximately one month behind schedule, which would frustrate any director. A rumor about Darabont’s growing irritation alleged that the director threw a tantrum on set, lifting and hurling a prop doghouse in a fit of rage. Darabont actually addressed this story during the movie’s audio commentary featurette available on the m...

    At 6 feet 5 inches tall, Duncan was a large man by anyone’s measure. However, he was practically average height on the set of The Green Mile, alongside costars David Morse (6 feet 4 inches) and James Cromwell (6 feet 6 inches). Blocking tactics gave Duncan the appearance of towering over his costars.

    To achieve era-appropriate body types, several stars’ preparations included neglecting their usual dietary and exercise regimens. The doughier ranks included Hanks, who opted for the look of a slightly chubby everyman; Duncan, who stopped lifting weights in order to avoid an anachronistic level of fitness; and Bonnie Hunt, who gained 15 pounds to p...

    Two of Hanks’s fellow officers, played respectively by actors Jeffrey DeMunn and Barry Pepper, are named Harry and Dean Stanton. The film also includes a crass but cooperative inmate played by character actor Harry Dean Stanton. It was apparently a coincidence—the names came directly from King’s source material.

    When Darabont shifted the setting of King’s story from 1932 to 1935 in order to include reference to the 1935 Fred Astaire/Ginger Roberts musical comedy Top Hat, he overlooked two remaining elements that proved incongruous with the year in question. The first involves the uniforms worn by the lawmen in the film; uniforms weren’t standard for death ...

  4. Dec 10, 1999 · The movie would have been much diminished at two hours–it would have been a series of episodes without context. As Darabont directs it, it tells a story with beginning, middle, end, vivid characters, humor, outrage and emotional release.

  5. Nov 29, 1999 · While “The Green Mile” often grabs, and generally holds, one’s attention through the long journey, there are any number of sequences that could have been tightened or eliminated in the ...

  6. For the first time I found myself disappointed, almost shocked by the lack of side stories and “imaginary” detail. I’m not saying it wasn’t a great book, because it is. However, if you’ve seen the movie, I’d prepare for a drawn out detail of the movie while reading the book.

  7. Feb 10, 2021 · The Green Mile is a touching movie, but changes from Stephen King's novel inevitably had to be made. Here's how The Green Mile is different than the book.

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