Never realized that the “ow” before they say “no, not an ‘ow’, a scream” was used a lot. It was in Attack of the Clones in the beginning when Padme’s ship explodes.
Man the internet scares me. I was making breakfast this morning and thought 'i wonder what the origin of the wilhelm scream is, maybe ill look it up at some point' 10 hours later and this comes up.
Yeah, it's been a stock sound effect for so long that even when it's from the original recording it sounds like it was just spliced in. I think even if I went back in time and listened to it on the actual set I would still feel that way lol.
Out of all odds, all places of the world. We gather here today on the 12th of march 2024 for 31 seconds at a time to remember and appreciate THE most iconic scream in history.
For some reason my brain has categorized the scream as just a sound clip that even when i hear the actor doing it in this longer context my brain feels like the specific "willhelm scream" was added to this video in post. I know it wasn't, but my brain cant square to circle.
I’ve never understood why this particular sound became so popular. It doesn’t sound like a sound a real human being would make. It’s always felt kinda uncanny valleyish to me
But it wasn't famous until George Lucas and Steven Spielberg used it, and clearly, the voice actor didn't think it was "cartoony," as that was his immediate response to being told to deliver "a real scream, of pain," so don't act like everyone is you. There's no need for that emoji. Besides, if you think that this is "the most famous cartoony scream ever," you clearly haven't heard the Goofy yell. That's actually intended to be cartoony.
@@imfsresidentotaku9699 likewise everyone else fails to see what warranted your response to the original. relax. this is the youtube comment section for what is known by pretty much everyone to be a comically cliche sound effect. no need whatsoever to be so overly serious about things.
it's still crazy to me that a person actually made that noise, maybe it's because its been used out of context so much but it just doesn't sound like a noise a person should be able to make