Pink Floyd: The Wall - videos, teasers and stills from filming

All videos, teasers and footage from the filming of the film "Pink Floyd: The Wall"
Pink Floyd: The Wall (1982)
Timing: 1:35 (95 min)
Pink Floyd: The Wall - TMDB rating
7.938/10
1618
Pink Floyd: The Wall - Kinopoisk rating
8.123/10
41665
Pink Floyd: The Wall - IMDB rating
8/10
90000

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on Pink Floyd’s double album — “The Wall,” which achieved platinum status 23 times and has sold a total of 11.7 million copies worldwide.
  • In the scenes for the song “The Happiest Days of Our Lives,” the lyrics recited by the teacher and laughed at by the class are taken from Roger Waters’ song “Money” from the album “The Dark Side of the Moon.”
  • The most famous and charting song from “The Wall” is “Another Brick in the Wall, Part II,” which sings about the oppression of schoolchildren by teachers.
  • The film is partially based on the biographies of Roger Waters and Syd Barrett.
  • Throughout the film, Pink can be seen watching clips from the 16th episode of the “Tom and Jerry” cartoon series (1940-1972), which is also owned by MGM.
  • In the film, the main character wears an Ingersoll Mickey Mouse watch from the 1930s, which can be noticed at the beginning of the film.
  • Bob Geldof wrote in his autobiography that he first heard about the project from his agent while riding in a taxi, and that he initially refused it on the grounds that he simply didn't like Pink Floyd's work. Roger Waters found out about this not because he read it in Geldof's autobiography, but because the taxi driver turned out to be his brother.
  • Bob Geldof cut himself badly during the filming of the scene where his character trashes a hotel room, but to the surprise of everyone present, he only allowed a doctor to be called after director Alan Parker (1944-2020) finished filming the scene.
  • In the scene where Pink calls home from America and hears a male voice on the other end of the line, they actually used a real international call to the UK through an unsuspecting telephone operator. The conversation was recorded and overlaid on the footage. However, on the album, the call comes at the end of the song “Young Lust,” while in the film it is shown first, followed by the song.
  • Bob Geldof is afraid of blood, so filming the scene with the razor was difficult for him. Initially, it was supposed that he would only shave his eyebrows, but the actor got into the role and shaved his entire body. This is a reference to the band's founder, Syd Barrett (1946-2006), who suffered from a mental disorder caused by excessive drug use and left the band in the early 1960s. According to the other members of the band, once during some dinner party, Barrett got up from the table without saying a word to anyone, went out, and went home, shaved his head, and returned to the table as if nothing had happened.
  • Many of the extras in the scenes filmed as visuals for the songs “Run Like Hell” and “Waiting for the Worms” were actually members of neo-Nazi groups (they were hired for greater realism). Artist Gerald Scarfe was genuinely frightened when they once arrived on set with a two-crossed-hammers symbol shaved on one side of their heads. In the late 1980s, a fascist group called Hammerskins even emerged, using crossed hammers as their symbol, which Parker, Scarfe, and Waters strongly disapproved of, as they had originally intended to make this scene in the film an anti-fascist anthem.
  • The music video for “Hey You” features British police officers in full riot gear, equipped to disperse protesting crowds. During editing, Roger Waters and Alan Parker reviewed the footage and concluded that the film's atmosphere was becoming increasingly bleak. They immediately decided to cut the song altogether – to make the overall atmosphere of the film less depressing, and because the footage sometimes duplicated shots already used in the visuals for other songs. The cut material was considered lost for some time, but was later found, albeit in black and white.
  • In the music video for “The Thin Ice,” Bob Geldof’s character is shown lying on his back on the surface of the water in a pool. Geldof was known for his dislike of water and couldn’t swim (nor could he stay afloat), so his body was supported from below by a clear plastic mattress, similar to the ones used during the filming of the flight scenes in Richard Donner’s (1930-2021) science fiction film *Superman* (1978).
  • Throughout the film, footage from the 16th episode of the "Tom and Jerry" (1940-1972) cartoon series, which is also owned by MGM, can be seen on Pink's television.
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