"American Sniper"/Warner Bros.
The latest issue that has film-goers up in arms is the use of a fake baby in the Clint Eastwood-directed war biopic.
The doll's stiffness is evident as Bradley Cooper and his onscreen wife, played by Sienna Miller, pass the partially mechanized baby back and forth as they discuss Cooper leaving for another tour during what is supposed to be an emotional scene.
"American Sniper"/Warner Bros.
- "I have never seen so many terrible fake babies in one film." -The SundayTimes
- "Laughably fake." -Film School Rejects
- "They're conspicuously wobbling rather than moving, which makes the crying sound effects seem a bit eerily detached." -The Telegraph
- "Jarringly fake ... There's just no excuse for that kind of bush-league nonsense." -NewsOK
- "It's so obvious, and neither one of them looks like they are comfortable holding it. The weight's all wrong, and it shows from the way they have to try to liven it up with their own body language. Cooper in particular looks like he's just plain never held a baby." -Hitfix
It didn't get past viewers, either:
Halloween '15 idea: the obviously fake baby in American Sniper. pic.twitter.com/mWIhKeDBRF
- Ryan (@rjhugs) January 19, 2015
I don't get all the American Sniper love. But I do understand Bradley Cooper's nom.He had to hold that fake baby and not laugh.That's skill!
- Ruth (@BabyRuthCT) January 15, 2015
If that fake baby from American Sniper doesn't get a Best Supporting Fake Baby nom, I will be outraged.
- CutPrintFilm (@cutprintfilm) January 15, 2015
I know everyone is down on the fake "American Sniper" baby but I'm just glad it was able to get some work after "Trainspotting".
- Leonard Pierce (@leonardpierce) January 20, 2015
The fake baby in American Sniper still looks more realistic than old man Armie Hammer in J. Edgar. pic.twitter.com/QvpLZQJpCL
- Adam Batty (@adamhopelies) January 19, 2015
But it was journalist Mark Harris' tweet that finally prompted a response from production.
Harris tweeted:
"That plastic baby in American Sniper is going to be rationalized by Eastwood auteur cultists until the end of days."
"American Sniper" screenwriter/executive producer Jason Hall replied via Twitter (and later deleted):
"hate to ruin the fun but real baby #1 showed up with a fever. Real baby #2 was no show. (Clint voice) Gimme the doll, kid."
Many have hypothesized that Eastwood's fast-paced shooting style didn't allow production enough time to find another real baby.
The Hollywood Reporter explained the difficulty of having a real baby on a film set:
Shooting in California poses some challenges when employing a real baby given the state's strict laws (part of the movie was shot in Los Angeles). Infants must be at least 15 days old, and babies from that age up to six months can be employed for only one period of two consecutive hours in any given day. Moreover, that time frame has to be between 9:30-11:30 a.m. or from 2:30-4:30 p.m., and one studio teacher along with one nurse must be on set during filming.
Doesn't sound ideal for Eastwood's directing style.