One of the advantages DVD versions have on their theater counterparts is the extras and bonus features. People can’t get enough of bloopers, a backstage look, and deleted scenes.
However, the DVD release of ‘The Shawshank Redemption’ never included any of the scenes left on the editor’s room floor. Frank Darabont was actually so embarrassed by the scenes he didn’t include, he thought it would be best for people to never see them.
The Infamous Nine-Hour Scene
The scene that took nine hours to shoot was when Andy and Red talk for the first time. Morgan Freeman's character, Red, keeps throwing a baseball back and forth with Heywood. The scene is less than 4 minutes long, but Freeman had to throw that baseball for nine grueling hours.
Although he didn't complain about it, he did have to wear a sling around his arm the next day. Now, that's commitment to your craft!
Many Scenes Were Deleted
Shawshank is a masterpiece, but like any movie, many scenes were deleted. It's too bad because they could have added more depth to the story. There were scenes, like Jake's funeral, that showed how much the inmates loved Brooks (the crow's owner). There were also hopeful scenes like Tommy getting a visit from his wife, which pushed him to get his life back together.
Another deleted scene is a heartbreaking moment where Red has a panic attack at the grocery store and has to hide inside the bathroom because it feels like a cell to him.
The Recording Problem
Morgan Freeman had to record his iconic voice-over twice. The first time took only 40 minutes and was played out loud during filming to set the rhythm of each scene. So why did they record the voice-over a second time? Well, the first recording had a hiss that the movie's sound engineers couldn't fix.
Since the first recording couldn't be used in the final cut, Freeman had to do it a second time. Though this time, it took the actor three weeks to complete. Who said art was supposed to be easy?
A Change of Title
Stephen King's original title was 'Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption'. The studio shortened the title, not because it was too long, but because many people in the film industry thought the film was going to be a biopic of the actress. Young actresses and supermodels sent audition requests to play Rita.
What they didn't know was that Rita Hayworth (the real one) only appears once in 'The Shawshank Redemption' when her film 'Gilda' is played to the inmates on movie night. The movie never needed anyone to portray Rita.