"She took it really well which was great, I was worried about her seeing the nudity and sex scenes and all of that but she grew up in a small country town in Australia and said, 'You know what Margot, the nudity was done well and within context of the film.'" "I saw it with my mom on the night of premiere," Robbie recalled. "Because everything was so excessive and out of control, this stuff really happened so we had to take it seriously as if you're the kind of person who would do this stuff, so to us it wasn't a joke but then of course it is crazy when you see it."
In speaking with Hill and his scene-stealing co-star Margot Robbie, there were many surprises during filming and the actors often found themselves thinking "I can't believe we're shooting this." Hill went on to say that after Bernthal made contact with his face, Scorsese decided to continue with the real-life aspect and filmed Hill's face swelling in real time. he completely looks away and leaves me hanging." so I turned to to try and make eye contact to say, maybe, 'Ok, Marty, maybe do something else'. “ looks at me and goes, 'Hey kid, you wanna try when he hits you for real?'" Hill told WENN. Hill still seems surprised at how that scene played out, which came at the request of director Martin Scorsese. Yeah it was a good story, he punched me." "They got split in half when Jon Bernthal punched me in the face," Hill recalled of a memorable scene that finds him on the receiving end of a knockout punch from the "Walking Dead" alum, a punch that apparently was not faked for the cameras. And they weren't all that sturdy, either.