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The Wilhelm Scream (1951 "Aaaaaahhhhhh!!" used in hundreds of movies since)
Damn Interesting ^ | February 11th, 2007 at 11:48 pm | Greg Bjerg

Posted on 02/14/2007 11:12:29 AM PST by dead

In the 1951 movie Distant Drums starring Gary Cooper, a small band of soldiers were crossing a swamp in pursuit of Seminole Indians. While wading through the Everglades one unnamed soldier was attacked and dragged underwater by an alligator. His last sound as he died was a startled scream.


Wilhelm about to scream in The Charge at Feather River

In The Charge at Feather River two years later, a soldier named Private Wilhelm screamed in what sounded like alligator-assaulted agony when he was struck by an arrow. In fact, his cry of pained surprise was practically identical to unnamed soldier's. Both men would soon be forgotten as a bit parts in B-movies, seen by relatively few moviegoers. But the holler they bellowed went on to be heard by millions– if not billions– of people worldwide.

Most movie studios will add sound effects for a film during post-production, and of course it's not unusual for them to recycle sound effects from their archives. In the case of Distant Drums, six short screams were recorded in a studio and creatively titled "man getting bit by an alligator, and he screams". The fifth take was used for the alligator attack, and the others came in handy to give voice to some Indians shot during a raid.

Following the movie's release, the distinctive scream was placed in the Warner Brothers sound effects library and used regularly in that studio's films. Among many others, it was heard in Them! in 1954, Swiss Family Robinson in 1960, PT-109 in 1963, and The Green Berets in 1968.


Star Wars Stormtrooper does the Wilhelm scream

Eventually a sound effect aficionado named Ben Burtt noticed the same scream wailing from the speakers of movie after movie. When he made the swashbuckler parody The Scarlet Blade in 1974, he decided he wanted to use the scream, so he lifted it from another film's soundtrack. A few years later, he was hired to handle the sound effects for Star Wars, and during his audio hunting adventures he heard a familiar cry emanate from the Warner Brothers archive: the original Distant Drums scream. Delighted, Burtt began to regularly insert the dramatic outcry into the projects he worked on, including Star Wars. He dubbed it the "Wilhelm scream" in honor of the first named character to use it, and from there it found its way into cinema legend.

The scream soon became a kind of inside joke for Hollywood sound editors who started watching for places to insert it. Below are just a few of its appearances:

Star Wars (1977)
A stormtrooper is shot by Luke and falls down a shaft in the Death Star.

The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
1) A rebel soldier screams when his gun explodes during the Hoth battle. 2) Chewie knocks a stormtrooper off the platform of the carbon-freezing chamber.

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
1) A Nazi soldier is thrown from the back of a truck into a windshield. 2) A soldier falls from the left side of the truck, ripping the canvas as he falls.

Spaceballs (1987)
Barf uses a section of tubing to reflect four laser bolts back at guards. The fourth one screams.

Batman Returns (1992)
Batman punches a clown and moves him out of his way.

Toy Story (1995)
Buzz Lightyear is thrown out the bedroom window.

Wallace & Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005)
The were-rabbit has a rampage near the end of the film, and picks up Lady Tottington

Superman Returns (2006)
When the train set in Luthor's basement is destroyed

Damn Interesting: The Wilhelm Scream (2007)
As the author realizes that the article deadline was tomorrow

Since it was first blurted out upon the world, the scream has been featured in over two hundred movies, TV programs, commercials, video games, and theme park attractions, and it has been heard by countless people. Notable filmmakers have also specifically requested the Wilhelm scream for their movies after learning of its history, including directors Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, and Peter Jackson.

The person who is the actual voice of the Wilhelm Scream remains a mystery, but many believe it to be the voice of Sheb Wooley. Wooley is most famous for his Purple People Eater, a song which was a number-one hit for six weeks in 1958. He dabbled in acting, and he had a small part in Distant Drums; in fact, he was one of only a few actors who were called back after filming for some vocal work on the movie. He died in 2003, but his wife Linda believes it was his scream. She is fond of saying that Sheb was very talented at performing screams, laughs, and "dying vocals" for the movies. If true, given the use of his scream in such an enormous number of films, it could be said that this obscure actor is one of history's most prolific talents.


Sheb Wooley

Sheb's holler has joined a brotherhood of disembodied sound clips which frequently wander into sound editors' booths. Other members include a thunder clap created for the original one of the original Frankenstein movies, a sound which has been raised from the dead many times over since 1931; and a particular recording of the red-tailed hawk's distinctive cry, a sound which is heard almost any time a tall mountain or sheer cliff appears on-screen. Like Sheb Wooley, the storm cloud and hawk which emitted these vocalizations may have passed on, but their disembodied celluloid echoes have given them a strange kind of immortality.

Article suggested by Justin Johnson

Compilation of Wilhelm Screams


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: scream; wilhelm; wilhelmscream
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1 posted on 02/14/2007 11:12:32 AM PST by dead
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To: dead

Great article. Thanks for posting it.


2 posted on 02/14/2007 11:15:15 AM PST by FReepaholic (If daydreaming were an Olympic sport I'd be a gold medalist.)
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To: dead

Aaaaah!!
After watching some of that clip, I'm going to be listening for that in the next action flick I see!

Cool article, thanks.


3 posted on 02/14/2007 11:15:37 AM PST by Constitution Day
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To: dead
Interesting.

IIRC the fellow who yodeled "Yahooo" for the internet company's ads tried suing when he realized how often his vocalization was being used by them -- and how successful the advertising was.
4 posted on 02/14/2007 11:17:15 AM PST by BenLurkin
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To: dead

That's very interesting. While it sounds kinda gay, the one from the movie "Them" really hit home. It was my first horror movie and I had nightmares for a very long time.


5 posted on 02/14/2007 11:17:32 AM PST by Froufrou
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To: dead

I used to work in an audio post house in L A.

We had this effect in our library and it was titled
"man being eaten by an alligator".


6 posted on 02/14/2007 11:18:34 AM PST by MistrX
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To: Constitution Day
I'll never watch Star Wars in the same way again.

The scream, the scream...
7 posted on 02/14/2007 11:21:08 AM PST by reagan_fanatic (Every time a jihadist dies, an angel gets its wings.)
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To: Froufrou

Great great movie. I wish Blockbuster carried it.


8 posted on 02/14/2007 11:22:25 AM PST by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: dead

"disembodied celluloid echoes "

Sounds like a fitting epitaph to replace the Hollywood sign when the cyborgs take over.


9 posted on 02/14/2007 11:22:32 AM PST by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: dead

I say we rename it to "man turns around and mistakenly meets Hillary."


10 posted on 02/14/2007 11:22:57 AM PST by theDentist (Qwerty ergo typo : I type, therefore I misspelll.)
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To: reagan_fanatic

bttt


11 posted on 02/14/2007 11:23:23 AM PST by 50sDad (Cultural Diversity means never having to say "I don't fit in.")
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To: Constitution Day

I thought I was hot stuff, but apparently my college girlfriend was just channeling Sheb Wooley. :(


12 posted on 02/14/2007 11:23:23 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: ecurbh; RosieCotton

We were just talking about this the other day :~)


13 posted on 02/14/2007 11:24:23 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: dead

The end of the game "Doom 2" promenantly and repeatedly uses a very dramatic "khishunn...!" sound (sort of a cross between something very big being thrown, and an initiator to an explosion). Having taken a while to finish that final level, the sound is permanently drilled into my acoustic memory.

I've heard that sound used in many dozens of videos/movies/etc., to the point that I groan "oh no not again" each time; have never heard one sound clip used so many times over so many years.


14 posted on 02/14/2007 11:24:43 AM PST by ctdonath2 (The color blue tastes like the square root of 0?)
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To: dead

15 posted on 02/14/2007 11:24:59 AM PST by Vaquero ("An armed society is a polite society" Robert A. Heinlein)
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To: dead

Did Howard Dean also steal this scream?


16 posted on 02/14/2007 11:25:43 AM PST by Alouette (Learned Mother of Zion)
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To: Tijeras_Slim

ROFL!!


17 posted on 02/14/2007 11:26:42 AM PST by Constitution Day (Was she the Queen of Sheb-a?)
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To: dead

bimp


18 posted on 02/14/2007 11:28:23 AM PST by ichabod1 ("Liberals read Karl Marx. Conservatives UNDERSTAND Karl Marx." Ronald Reagan)
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To: dead

Now that I think about it, the Dean Scream may have been a dub of the Wilhelm Scream.


19 posted on 02/14/2007 11:29:04 AM PST by ichabod1 ("Liberals read Karl Marx. Conservatives UNDERSTAND Karl Marx." Ronald Reagan)
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To: dead

I was always partial to R. Lee Ermey's scream when he asks Private Joker to see his war face....


"Private Joker, let me see your war face.."

"Sir, my what sir?"

"You know, your war face....AAAAAAAAAAAAAH!"

Priceless.


20 posted on 02/14/2007 11:30:13 AM PST by PAMadMax (Islam is the enemy of all mankind...AlJazeera is its PR Firm)
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