After the end of the 2001 film Rush Hour 2, a montage of Jackie Chan’s mistakes starts rolling. He’s the star of the film, but he repeatedly falls backward while trying to complete a front flip, and faceplants as he’s running through a crowd.
For years, blooper reels were common comedy film fare. As the credits roll in Disney’s Toy Story 2 (1999), Buzz Lightyear deploys his space helmet to find that someone doodled a mustache and beard on it. At the end of 2003’s Haunted Mansion, a group of zombies is dismissed from the scene, and one of them jokes they should go get a beer together.
What a ride. But experts say these post-movie goodies seem to be fading from cinema, partly due to a rise in dramatic post-credit epilogues, and streaming platforms overtaking DVDs.
Where bloopers come from
Bloopers started as an industry inside joke in the 1930s and 1940s, said J.D. Connor, an associate professor of cinematic arts at the University of Southern California.


