11 actors who had a difficult time shooting iconic films â and what they said about it
âHe wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is,â said Megan Fox, of working with Michael Bay on âTransformers.â
11 actors who had a difficult time shooting iconic films â and what they said about it
"He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is," said Megan Fox, of working with Michael Bay on "Transformers."
By Brianna Zigler
June 24, 2026 12:34 p.m. ET
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Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant in 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit'; Tippi Hedren as Melanie Daniels in 'The Birds'; Megan Fox as Mikaela Banes in 'Transformers'. Credit:
Everett; FilmPublicityArchive/United Archives via Getty; Robert Zuckerman/DreamWorks/Paramount
Sometimes, the movies we love the most werenât exactly adored by the actors making them.
Making a feature film is no easy task, and depending on the style of movie, the plot, the location, the special effects, and so much more, it can be more arduous than normal. Itâs also not uncommon for an overbearing or unpleasant director to make the production experience more of a nightmare than it needs to be.
It can be difficult to learn that an actor had a bad time filming one of the best movies of all time, like Mia Sara not getting along with John Hughes on the set of *Ferris Buellerâs Day Off *(1986)*, *or Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron arguing while making *Mad Max: Fury Road* (2015).
Though weâd like to believe that the actors on the sets of our favorite films held hands, smiled, laughed, and became the best of friends, the reality is that a movie is just a job â and often, itâs a difficult one.
** takes a look at 11 actors who didnât have the greatest experience while making an iconic movie.
Marilyn Burns, Texas Chain Saw Massacre
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Marilyn Burns as Sally Hardesty in 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre'.
Late actress Marilyn Burns starred in Tobe Hooperâs *The Texas Chainsaw Massacre** *(1974)*, *a horror staple thatâs gone on to influence countless movies since. However, in one of Burnsâ final interviews before her death in 2014, she divulged that making the movie wasnât as fun as watching it.
âThe van was suffocating,â Burns told *Screen Crush**.* âTedious. Hot. Miserable. We were traveling with five actors and the camera guy and sound and director and continuity guy. All of us in this van, going 15 miles an hour, trying not to make any noise. Just crawling along as they kept changing the script. We'd stop to sit on the side of the road when they decided that the lines weren't working. That was the first couple weeks of shooting. It was real hot and miserable, especially when Ed [Neal, who plays the hitchhiker] came on and gunpowder had to explode and we didn't know what we were doing. They just put gunpowder on his hand and lit a match. We almost killed ourselves!â
While Burns admitted that she was certainly looking forward to the end of filming, she also stopped other cast members from quitting. âI picked up a couple of them on the way to set just to make sure they'd show!â she recalled. âNobody except me thought it was going to get done. I'm sure Tobe and Kim [Henkel] did. I was determined to see it to the screen.â
Richard Dreyfuss, Jaws
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Richard Dreyfuss as Matt Hooper in 'Jaws'. Everett Collection
The movie that turned young Steven Spielberg into a blockbuster director was a notoriously difficult production, in no small part due to technical difficulties caused by *Jaws*â fake shark, Bruce. But there were a plethora of other issues too, related to the script, the budget, the location, and more.
One of *Jaws*â stars, Richard Dreyfuss, spoke to *ROUTE Magazine* about the troubled time making the legendary film â though heâs done that a lot. âIf thereâs a subject that, if I had a fair choice of reaching for a pistol and putting it in my mouth, I would choose that before I chose talking about *Jaws* again,â the actor quipped.
To paint a picture of the particular chaos, Dreyfuss explained, âWe started shooting on May 2nd without a script, without a shark and without a cast. I wasnât hired until May 3rd and the script was all over the place, and no one realized that we, as a film unit, were the first film ever attempted on the real ocean. Just imagine the unanticipated consequences of that ignorance.â
When asked about the atmosphere on set, Dreyfuss added, âNot great. It was very difficult â a lot of stress. Iâd much rather create the necessary stress out of acting than have to endure it in real life.â
How to watch the 'Mad Max' movies in order, from Max's V8 to Furiosa's Cranky Black
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What happened to the cast of 'Jaws'? See the stars of the first summer blockbuster more than 50 years later
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Harrison Ford, Blade Runner
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Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard in 'Blade Runner'.
Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty
Shooting the sci-fi cult classic was âa long slog,â according to star Harrison Ford, who played the titular blade runner Rick Deckard. "I didnât really find it that physically difficultâI thought it was *mentally* difficult,â he told *Vanity Fair* in 2017.
Part of the reason the shoot felt so grueling was because Ford and director Ridley Scott clashed over script decisions. Scott wanted Deckard to be revealed as a replicant, but Ford didnât like that idea. âI felt that the audience needed to have someone on-screen that they could emotionally relate to as though they were a human being,â the actor said.
âRidley made a tactical error, because Harrison very much wanted to collaborate. He wasnât going to be the type of guy who said, âIâm a superstarâjust let me do my thing,ââ said Paul M. Sammon, a journalist who was present on-set and wrote a book about the production, *Future Noir.*
Speaking recently about *Blade Runner* in 2025, Ford told *Variety* that it was an âextraordinary experienceâ despite shooting for â50 nights in rain.â
âIt was sort of miserable to make,â he continued, âbut it holds its own.â
Megan Fox, Transformers
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Megan Fox as Mikaela Banes in 'Transformers'.
Robert Zuckerman/DreamWorks/Paramount
Megan Fox got candid in a 2009 interview with *Wonderland* magazine when asked about what it was like working with director Michael Bay on the *Transformers* movies. Famously, Bay gave Fox the direction to âbe hotâ while filming.
âHeâs like Napoleon,â Fox said of Bay, âand he wants to create this insane, infamous mad man reputation. He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is.â She did admit, though, that when he wasnât on set, Bay was much more tolerable.
âI kind of really enjoy his personality because heâs so awkward, so hopelessly awkward,â she added. âHe has no social skills at all. And itâs endearing to watch him. Heâs vulnerable and fragile in real life and then on set heâs a tyrant.â
Speaking about the note to just âbe hot,â Fox said, ââMike,â Iâll say, âWho am I talking to? Where am I supposed to be looking at?â And he responds, âJust be sexy.â I get mad when people talk to me like that.â
Tippi Hedren, The Birds
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Tippi Hedren as Melanie Daniels in 'The Birds'.
FilmPublicityArchive/United Archives via Getty
Old Hollywood star Tippi Hedren had an infamously difficult relationship with Master of Suspense Alfred Hitchcock, who directed the actress in *Marnie* (1964) and, most notably, *The Birds* (1963)*.*
In an excerpt from her memoir,* Tippi: A Memoir, *Hedren recounts the real-life horror of making the avian horror film, and the moment when everything *really* went wrong. For the climactic âbedroom scene,â Hedrenâs Melanie would be terrorized by a flock of bloodthirsty birds â with no way to escape.
Though Hedren was supposed to film with mechanical birds, she learned that very morning that the mechanical birds werenât working, and they would have to use live ones.
âI heard Hitchcock yell, âAction,ââ she wrote, âand right on cue, the handlers began hurling those live birds at me. It was brutal and ugly and relentless.â
Ultimately, they spent multiple days filming what amounted to a minute-long scene. âI was pelted with still more live, screaming, frantic birds, while the birds that were tied to me began pecking me as theyâd been trained to do,â Hedren recounted. âI was too focused on my own survival to notice, but I was told later that it was even more horrifying and heartbreaking for the crew to watch than the previous four days had been, and there wasnât a thing anyone but Hitchcock could do to put a stop to it.â
Bob Hoskins, Who Framed Roger Rabbit
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Bob Hoskins as Eddie Valiant in 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit'.
Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett
Acting against animated creations is standard practice these days in our Marvel and *Star Wars-*ified world. But when *Who Framed Roger Rabbit* (1988) was made, it was a gigantic undertaking, trying to create a believable universe in which real people interacted with hand-drawn, animated characters.
The strenuous process took a toll on star Bob Hoskins, who spends the entire film chatting with various cartoons. This was long before the days of mo-cap or green screens, and acting with imaginary scene partners was far from the norm. Thus, Hoskins trained himself to âhallucinate.â
âIt screwed up my brain,â he once said, per *Express**.* âI would be sitting, talking normally and suddenly a weasel would creep out of the wall at me.â His doctor had reportedly told him to take a break from acting for five months, but instead, he took a full year.
Hopefully, it was some sort of solace for the late actor that his performance was truly remarkable, in a film that serves as not just a turning point for motion picture special effects, but also stands as a timeless and masterful work of art.
Malcolm McDowell, A Clockwork Orange
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Malcolm McDowell as Alex DeLarge in 'A Clockwork Orange'.
Turner Classic Movies/Courtesy Everett Collection
In a 2021 interview with *NME*, *A Clockwork Orange* star Malcolm McDowell talked about the âtortureâ of making Stanley Kubrickâs controversial classic, during which McDowell sustained an eye injury.
âOne of the electricians said: âHeâs tryinâ to kill you Malc, heâs tryinâ to kill you,ââ McDowell recalled. â[Kubrick] was a control freak, without a doubt, on everything. [Kubrick] showed me a picture of this and I went, âOh yeah? Wowâ. He goes, âWhat do you think?â âWhat do you mean what do I think? Itâs an eye operation going on.â He said: âIâd like you to do that.â I went: âWhat? Thereâs no way! No, no, no.â But he already had a doctor from Moorfields [Eye Hospital, in London] coming over to talk to me about it.â
He continued, âAnd of course this doctor comes over and heâs the guy in the movie. âYouâll have no problem, your eyes will be anesthetized,â he said. âYou wonât feel a thing.â Well, famous last words. That wasnât exactly accurate. So they scratch my corneas and then a week later [Kubrick] says: âIâve seen all the stuff, and itâs great, but I need a real close-up of the eye.â And I went: âWell, why donât you do it on the stunt double? Thatâs what he gets paid for.â âMalcolm, your eyes are⊠I canât do that.â So I had to go back in and do it again! And of course, they scratch my corneas [again], nothing like originally, but I knew it was coming.â
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Sam Neill, Possession
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Isabelle Adjani as Anna and Sam Neill as Mark in 'Possession'.
The 1981 art-house horror classic *Possession* is about to get the remake treatment from *Smile* director Parker Finn. Die-hard fans of the film may object to this, but at least its production won't be as extreme as the original's â hopefully.
In Sam Neillâs memoir *Did I Ever Tell You This?*, the *Jurassic Park* star heavily discusses his fraught time making Andrzej Ć»uĆawskiâs chaotic film, which is about a couple going through a divorce, leading to something far more sinister.
About Ć»uĆawski, Neill wrote that he âdidnât like him muchâ: "What he saw as direction often was just downright bullying.â Still, Neill admitted that the director was an artist, adding, âHe had vision. He was a true cineaste. And they are rare.â
âĆ»uĆawski asked more of you than you could possibly give," he said. "There were times when he would scream, bellow at [co-star Isabelle Adjani] right in her face. It was distressing to see.â
Later, Neill pondered whether he might be considered a victim of abuse due to the Polish directorâs practices. In an interview with *The Independent**, *he also discussed when Ć»uĆawski forced him to hit Adjani.
Neill had said of *Possession,* âI call it the most extreme film Iâve ever made, in every possible respect, and he asked of us things I wouldnât and couldnât go to now. And I think I only just escaped that film with my sanity barely intact.â
Zoe Saldaña, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
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Zoe Saldaña as Anamaria in 'Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl'.
Before she was a Guardian of the Galaxy, Zoe Saldaña had a small role early in her career in another major Disney franchise: *Pirate of the Caribbean.* In the first film, *The Curse of the Black Pearl* (2003), she appeared as the pirate Anamaria, whose ship was stolen by Jack Sparrow.
However, her first franchise experience wasnât a good one. When *The Hollywood Reporter* probed Saldaña about how she âhatedâ making the movie, she replied, âThose werenât the right people for me. Iâm not talking about the cast. The cast was great. Iâm talking about the political stuff that went on behind closed doors.â
âIt was a lot of above-the-line versus below-the-line, extras versus actors, producers versus PAs. It was very elitist,â she continued. âI almost quit the business. I was 23 years old, and I was like, âFâ this!â I am never putting myself in this situation again. People disrespecting me because they look at my number on a call sheet and they think Iâm not important. Fâ you.â
Mia Sara, Ferris Buellerâs Day Off
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Mia Sara as Sloane Peterson in 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'.
Mia Sara has been forever immortalized as Sloane Peterson, the titular character's girlfriend in *Ferris Buellerâs Day Off.* However, the experience soured Sara on acting, and after a mostly low-key career, she retired in 2012. Mike Flanagan would, however, end up persuading her to appear in his 2025 film, *The Life of Chuck*.
In an interview with *The Times* in June 2026, Sara said plainly, "I don't really give interviews because making *Ferris Bueller* was not that good an experience for me. But I'm very aware of what a precious thing this movie is, and I don't want to disappoint people."
Her primary reason for disliking the work? "I didn't get along well with [director] John [Hughes]." In that same interview, she went on to call him a âstrange guy.â
"He wanted us all to hang out together and to introduce us to the French New Wave films," she said. "But the others were seasoned actors, and I was a snotty New York kid and had seen all those movies, so he was frustrated in that desire. I didn't have the emotional maturity to deal with other people's egos, or my own."
Charlize Theron, Mad Max: Fury Road
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Charlize Theron as Furiosa in 'Mad Max: Fury Road'.
Jasin Boland/Warner Bros
A book about the intense process behind the making of *Mad Max: Fury Road* shed more light on the tense relationship between stars Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron.
Kyle Buchananâs *Blood, Sweat and Chrome* features testimony from the cast and crew as to how bad things got between the two actors, âciting everything from different approaches to acting to just general animosity and distrust,â per *.*
On one particularly bad day, however, Hardy showed up three hours late to set, and Theron laid into him.
"Whether that was some kind of power play or not, I don't know, but it felt deliberately provocative. If you ask me, he kind of knew that it was really pissing Charlize off, because she's professional and she turns up really early," said first assistant camera Ricky Schamburg.
âShe was right. Full rant,â camera operator Mark Goellnicht recalled. âShe screams it out. It's so loud, it's so windy â he might've heard some of it, but he charged up to her and went, 'What did you say to me?' He was quite aggressive. She really felt threatened.â
Though Theron didnât want to âmake excuses for bad behavior,â she also admitted it was âa tough shoot.â Ultimately, Hardy copped to his actions: "The pressure on both of us was overwhelming at times. What she needed was a better, perhaps more experienced partner in me,â he confessed.
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