1. Every detail of every costume in the film was handmade.
All of the “jade” in the film is actually painted and treated wood.
2. The ears took some work.
Every actor’s stretched earlobes were actually custom-made silicon prostheses crafted by makeup designers Aldo Signoretti and Vittorio Sodano. Signorett and Sodano were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Makeup for Apocalypto, but lost to the artists who worked on Pan’s Labyrinth.3. Gibson went to the source for the screenplay.
For a foundation to their story, Gibson and co-screenwriter Farhad Safinia used Spanish colonial eyewitness accounts from the period and certain mythological aspects from the Popol Vuh, a sacred Mayan text that tells the creation story and epic mythological histories of Mayan culture.RELATED:
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4. The king didn’t have a royal background.
The actor who played the Mayan King was a local dockworker in Veracruz. Co-writer and co-producer Farhad Safinia found him after Gibson told Safinia to leave set and find local extras willing to be in the movie.5. Gibson was a stickler for authentic language.
All of the dialogue is in the Yucatec Maya language.