The scene in question saw oil man A.J. Frost, played by Ben Affleck, say goodbye to “deep core” oil driller Harry Stamper, played by Bruce Willis, as he sacrifices himself to manually detonate a bomb to destroy an asteroid on a collision course with Earth
Ben Affleck and Bruce Willis. Pics/AFP
Hollywood star Ben Affleck revealed that he had food poisoning while shooting his emotional goodbye scene with star Bruce Willis in the 1998 disaster blockbuster Armageddon.
“When we shot that scene, I had food poisoning,” Affleck told Fox 32 Chicago.
He added: “I wasn’t an experienced enough actor at that point to know that you can just pick up the phone and be like, ‘I’m too sick to work today.’ I’m like, ‘I better come in.’ So I went and I was literally, it’s the only time it’s ever happened in my life, vomiting between takes.”
Affleck quipped that his distressed state “probably made the scene better,” reports variety.com.
The scene in question saw oil man A.J. Frost, played by Affleck, say goodbye to “deep core” oil driller Harry Stamper, played by Willis, as he sacrifices himself to manually detonate a bomb to destroy an asteroid on a collision course with Earth.
Directed by Michael Bay, other cast members included Billy Bob Thornton, Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler, Will Patton, Steve Buscemi, William Fichtner, Owen Wilson and Michael Clarke Duncan.
The science fiction disaster film follows a group of blue-collar deep-core drillers sent by NASA to destroy a gigantic asteroid, which is the size of Texas, on a collision course with Earth.
Despite receiving mixed reviews from critics, Armageddon was a commercial success. It became the highest-grossing film of 1998, and the highest-grossing film to be released by Touchstone Pictures.
Affleck recalled seeing Buscemi at the premiere of his new Netflix film The Rip, which he said flooded his mind with memories of the film.
He said, “I actually saw Steve Buscemi last night at the premiere for The Rip, and we were reminiscing about that movie and thinking about how that was the weirdest, kind of wonderful, strange, otherworldly movie experience.”
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