I liked concept for Mike's piece with all the small pieces forming an infinity symbol. I loved how melty the cheese looked on her burger. Ironically it made me crave french fries, which I haven't had since before the first lockdown began last year. I liked Nao's weirdly colored processed food. And seriously, this guy wants to rename this technique after himself? I don't know much about glassblowing, but I'm guessing he didn't invent it which means he can kindly STFU.Īndi's mushrooms growing on bottles was an interesting concept. I really liked watching Chris do that French pulling technique but I was still too mad about the fact that HE DIDN'T FULFILL THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE PREVIOUS CHALLENGE and therefore shouldn't have even been present to make the icebergs for sale piece. I was glad he was able to salvage the body of his insect! I liked how shiny and iridescent he was able to make his beetle. It really gave the green color a beautiful glow.Įlliot's dung beetle recycling a piece of glass was a great concept for this challenge. I loved the way Cat made the spiraling pine tree in the center of her piece. I rolled my eyes when Chris said he hadn't had a chance to look around at what everyone else was doing BUT it all looked mediocre compared to what he was doing and then proceeded to begin describing other people's pieces. Some of them are a lot clearer in their communication than others. One thing I like seeing is how the contestants interact with their assistants each week. "īe sure to check out all of our Academy Originals by clicking here.I liked that they did briefly discuss the environmental impact that glass blowing has and ways to reduce that footprint. "I finished my scene and they were in tears, and Steven says, 'Kid, you got the job.' I keep waiting for that to happen again," Thomas told The Today Show in 2012. "It was the only part of my career that I knew I had before I left the audition room. Nailing an audition and getting hired on the spot a rare occurrence for Thomas, he said. Henry’s performance is just a bread crumb at a time, but he takes you in a wonderful direction to a very, very rousing catharsis. His performance is so controlled, unlike most kid performers, who seem to be giving you 150 percent on every shot. He’s a very controlled, methodical performer who measures what he does and feels what he does and yet broadcasts it in a totally subtle way. Then I came to realize he’s an adult actor, not a nine-year-old. "The improvisation was so heartfelt and honest that I gave him the part right there," Spielberg told Premiere magazine in 1982. Once nine-year-old Henry Thomas was recommended, he was flown out from Texas to read lines and improv in front of Liroff, Spielberg and some others.Īs you can see from this footage, he hit it out of the park. "He became very bossy- it just showed he was not our kid. "In about three minutes it became very clear that nobody liked this little boy," Liroff said. The 12-sided die did not roll in his favor when his true nature came out, revealing that he was not the sweet little angel director Steven Spielberg wanted to be Drew Barrymore's older brother and E.T.'s bestie. the Extra-Terrestrial's BFF in 1981 wasn't as simple as just phoning home.Ĭasting director Marci Liroff explains in this week's video that the young actor who was originally chosen to play Elliott failed miserably in a game of Dungeons & Dragons. Believe it or not, but casting the role of E.T.
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