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GET LOW “No Animals Were Harmed”®
Felix lives in a small town where no one likes him very much. He plans his own
“living funeral” party and invites the town in hopes that it will clear up a
past incident that involved him.
Featured Animal Action
Felix (Robert Duvall) owns a mule. In several scenes, the mule is seen in
its stall inside a barn. The stall was custom-built for this film and had a top
door that opened and a feed trough. The area was checked for safety before
filming and the trainer brought the mule inside the stall to get it familiar
with its surroundings. One trainer hid inside the stall with the mule as the
scenes were being filmed, while another stood nearby and used a bait stick to
get the mule to look in various directions. The number of cast and crew members
allowed on set was limited. In one scene, Felix and Mattie (Sissy Spacek) stand
in the barn and talk as they pet and feed the mule from their hands. The actors
were instructed on the handling of the mule and the trainers stood nearby. All
meals and treats that the mule ate were part of its regular diet.
As Felix exits the barn in one scene, he finds the mule sitting on the grass in
front of the barn. The mule is sitting with its back legs stretched out in front
of him, like a person sitting straight-legged. The trainer put the mule on its
mark and cued it to lie down on its side. Then he cued it to sit up on its hind
quarters. Although this position looked a bit awkward, it was a trained behavior
that the mule was accustomed to.
Felix prepares a cart and begins to walk it toward the mule, which is running
free in the yard. A trainer placed the mule on its mark while another trainer
stood shaking a feed bucket where the mule was supposed to run.
The mule pulls a cart in a couple of scenes as Felix controls the reins. A
trainer hitched up the mule to the cart and instructed the actor, who was also
given driving lessons before filming began. A trainer hid in the cart whenever
possible. Items placed in the cart were lightweight and easy for the mule to
pull.
Felix is feeding the mule when suddenly a man comes out of a nearby café and
begins to argue with Felix. The man throws a rock at him and it hits the mule,
which rears up. This scene was filmed in separate shots. The rock was a prop,
made of plastic foam. Trainers then cued the rearing action, which the mule was
accustomed to doing. The wagon shafts (what the mule’s harness was attached to)
were made of lightweight balsa wood and were beig held by the trainers. They
were not attached to the wagon when the mule reared. The grounds were checked
for hazards ahead of time and streets were closed to traffic. Some cars were
parked on a nearby street and another car was driven slowly away from a nearby
curb, but it was kept a safe distance from the animal.
American Humane also monitored a scene in which the mule pulls a wagon with a
casket on it and rears up, breaking the wagon shaft and appearing to injure
itself. Although there is a brief scene of the mule pulling the casket, the
rearing and “injury” was cut from the theatrical release.
American Humane’s On-Set Oversight
Find out how filmmakers work with American Humane and a get a complete guide
to our ratings system.
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