Buster Keaton’s most dangerous stunt came in 1928 during Steamboat Bill Jr., when he stood still as a two‑ton house façade collapsed toward him with a single open window meant to fall exactly over his body. If he had been even slightly off his mark, the wall would have killed him instantly. The crew urged him to use a double, and the cameraman reportedly looked away as the structure dropped. The shot worked, and it became one of the most iconic practical stunts ever filmed, a moment that defined Keaton’s precision, nerve and place in cinema history.

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