48 Hrs. - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "48 Hrs."
48 Hrs. (1982)
Timing: 1:36 (96 min)
48 Hrs. - TMDB rating
6.681/10
1648
48 Hrs. - Kinopoisk rating
7.136/10
15056
48 Hrs. - IMDB rating
6.9/10
93000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Executive Producer

D. Constantine Conte
Executive Producer

Writer

Casting

Judith Holstra
Casting

Editor

Freeman A. Davies
Editor
Mark Warner
Editor

Costume Design

Photo Marilyn Vance #1717
Marilyn Vance
Costume Design

Stunts

Bruce Paul Barbour
Stunts
Photo Tony Brubaker #33739
Tony Brubaker
Stunts
Jerry Brutsche
Stunts
Billy C. Chandler
Stunts

Production Design

John Vallone
Production Design

Stunt Coordinator

Set Decoration

Richard C. Goddard
Set Decoration

Stunt Driver

Makeup Artist

Edouard F. Henriques
Makeup Artist
Michael Germain
Makeup Artist

Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Gregg Landaker
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Rick Kline
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Donald O. Mitchell
Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Original Music Composer

Photo James Horner #66707

James Horner

James Horner
Original Music Composer

Unit Production Manager

Gene Levy
Unit Production Manager

Stunt Double

Photo Vince Deadrick Jr. #12333
Vince Deadrick Jr.
Stunt Double
John Sherrod
Stunt Double

Director of Photography

Ric Waite
Director of Photography

Script Supervisor

Luca Koumelis
Script Supervisor

Hairstylist

Dagmar Loesch
Hairstylist

Set Designer

Margie Stone McShirley
Set Designer

Special Effects

Joseph P. Mercurio
Special Effects

Gaffer

Carl Boles
Gaffer

Music Editor

ADR Editor

Title Designer

Douy Swofford
Title Designer

Sound Editor

John Dunn
Sound Editor
Teri E. Dorman
Sound Editor
Tim Mangini
Sound Editor

Supervising Sound Effects Editor

Richard L. Anderson
Supervising Sound Effects Editor
Photo Stephen Hunter Flick #327654

Stephen Hunter Flick

Stephen Hunter Flick
Supervising Sound Effects Editor

What's left behind the scenes

  • The word 'fuck' appears 48 times in the film.
  • Initially, the role of Reggie Hammond was intended for Gregory Hines, but he was busy filming Coppola's "Cotton Club." Eddie Murphy, who played Reggie, was only the fourth candidate after Richard Pryor, Howard E. Rollins Jr., and Denzel Washington.
  • The role of Jack Keates was offered to Mickey Rourke, but he declined. Furthermore, the role was also offered to Chris Christopher, as well as Jeff Bridges and Clint Eastwood. Bridges refused because he doesn't like cop movies, and Eastwood refused because he wanted to play a prisoner, not a police officer.
  • As in many films by Walter Hill, the director's favorite car, a Sky Blue Convertible Cadillac, plays an important role (it is driven by Nick Nolte's character). The same car can be seen in "Brewster's Millions" and "Red Heat."
  • To convincingly play a psychopath, actor James Remar didn't sleep for several days.
  • According to Eddie Murphy, who played the con man, he was nearly fired once for being considered not funny enough. He didn't find out about this until the end of filming.
  • During the filming of the scene where Sally, played by Denise Crosby, hits Eddie Murphy's character in the stomach with a prop baseball bat (the bat was rubber), he feared that the actress would actually hit him instead of stopping the bat a short distance from his body (as is usually done when filming such scenes). She demonstrated her skill with the bat and her ability to stop the swing in time first to director Walter Hill, and then to Nick Nolte (who played the police officer, partner to Murphy's character), to reassure Murphy, but during the filming of one of the takes she still grazed him with the bat.
  • Eddie Murphy said he didn't know how to 'act' the moment his character draws his weapon, so he just tried to copy Bruce Lee's face. He has consistently done so in similar situations ever since.
  • Michael Eisner, then head of Paramount Pictures, worried that the film wouldn't be funny enough. Director Walter Hill and screenwriter Larry Gross constantly wrote additional material for the characters of Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy. According to Hill, they made additions and changes to the image of the con man played by Murphy right up to the last day of filming.
  • The role of Reggie Hammond was originally intended for Gregory Hines, but he was busy filming Coppola's "The Cotton Club." Eddie Murphy, who played Reggie, was only the fourth candidate after Richard Pryor, Howard E. Rollins Jr., and Denzel Washington.
  • Eddie Murphy said he didn't know how to "act" the moment his character pulls a gun, so he simply tried to copy Bruce Lee's face. He has consistently done so in similar situations ever since.
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