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  • - [Announcer] Some of the biggest stars in Hollywood

  • are some of the smallest creatures on the planet.

  • Real live insects like spiders, locusts, and butterflies

  • play crucial roles in many memorable blockbuster films.

  • But getting them to perform on camera is no easy task.

  • - Rosie, lift up your leg. This leg.

  • Come on.

  • Oh see, she did this one.

  • Oh, there she goes.

  • And that's just a little trick of putting a little pressure

  • on her back leg that causes her front leg to come up.

  • - [Announcer] That's Steven Kutcher.

  • He's an entomologist and the go to guy

  • for all things bugs in Hollywood.

  • He's worked with a variety of insects on over 100 films

  • in his career including "Arachnophobia," "Jurassic Park,"

  • and "Spider-Man."

  • - Understanding insect behavior is really the key.

  • It's not training them because you don't have time

  • to train them in the film industry.

  • When you work with insects, you wanna corral the insects.

  • You wanna be able to control them.

  • - [Announcer] He's used a number of different techniques

  • to get the bugs to move in the right direction

  • involving lights, air, and temperature.

  • - Let's say you're a bug.

  • How can I make you move?

  • Well, I could blow air at you, like 60 miles an hour air.

  • You're going to move.

  • I could light a little fire under you

  • or set you on something that's really hot.

  • You're gonna get up out of your seat and move.

  • I could chill down the room.

  • - [Announcer] For example, let's take a look

  • at one of the most famous and terrifying spider films

  • of all time, "Arachnophobia."

  • - The great thing about that film was it was before CGI.

  • So we had to do everything real except for one shot.

  • - [Announcer] He devised a clever yet simple rig

  • to get all the spiders where they needed to be.

  • - They would say, "We want a spider to crawl into a slipper

  • "from four feet away."

  • So I came up with this idea of invisible vibrating wires.

  • Chance of vibrating wires that you couldn't see,

  • the camera couldn't see.

  • But I could make the spider go directly to the spot

  • I wanted it to go.

  • - [Announcer] Kutcher's first big Hollywood gig

  • was on the "Exorcist II" and it involved working with

  • three thousand live locusts.

  • - There's a scene where James Earl Jones has to look

  • at a cage of locusts and the locusts were all on the ground.

  • But how do you move hundreds of locusts up on the screen?

  • I said, "Get a light, a studio light that gives off heat

  • "and shining against the side of the cage."

  • And they did and all the locusts moved up onto the cage

  • to be near the heat.

  • Then they took the light away.

  • - [Announcer] In "Jurassic Park,"

  • Kutcher was the man responsible

  • for the iconic dead mosquitoes in amber.

  • - So it's supposed to be a mosquito.

  • First, it's really a crane fly.

  • And I put antenna from another insect on the crane fly.

  • I took a bent insect pin and made it for its mouth part.

  • I created the wings.

  • - [Announcer] And he worked with a live mosquito

  • in the DNA Explainer video.

  • - So I would chill the mosquito down

  • so that it wouldn't move.

  • And then I would drip honey on it.

  • And then it got tumbled down with the honey.

  • - [Announcer] In the 2002 movie "Spider-Man,"

  • there's a scene where Peter Parker first gets bitten.

  • Kutcher was actually above Toby McGuire with a paint brush.

  • - And what the spider will do is it will crawl

  • along the edge until it reaches this part

  • and then it will hang on.

  • And I would just tap it like this which would cause

  • the spider to web down.

  • - [Announcer] While he says he rarely ever gets bitten

  • or stung, he takes precautions

  • to protect the other human actors.

  • In "Roadhouse 66," Judge Reinhold is driving a car

  • and I had to have a scorpion crawl over his shoulder.

  • So I put a little cap on the scorpion's stinger

  • that looked like the stinger so it wouldn't hurt him.

  • - [Announcer] And there's also a rule on set

  • that no bugs are hurt during production.

  • - In making of a movie, you can't harm a cockroach,

  • or a fly, or a maggot.

  • But if the fly flies to craft service, you can swat it.

  • - [Announcer] He can get some of his bugs from pet suppliers,

  • but most he goes out and collects himself.

  • And Kutcher's home is also full of bugs, by choice.

  • - Right now, I have mosquitoes, crane flies, caterpillars

  • in my refrigerator.

  • The world is filled with people who do not like insects

  • which is a great opportunity to teach those people

  • the joys and wonders of all of the arthropods in the world

  • and how you can relate to them.

  • And when you understand how they work,

  • the world is a better place.

  • - To make the spider go, I just tap her back legs.

  • And this gets her to crawl up.

  • To make her stop, I cover her eyes.

  • She has eight eyes.

  • She's just looking for a dark place.

- [Announcer] Some of the biggest stars in Hollywood

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