What Challenges Did Ryan Reynolds Face While Filming Buried? ( Photo Credit – Instagram )

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Ryan Reynolds in a coffin for 95 minutes? Sounds like a setup for a Deadpool joke—but Buried was no laughing matter. Back in 2010, the Hollywood funnyman faced one of his darkest fears—claustrophobia—in a role that left him gasping for air, literally and emotionally.

The thriller Buried, directed by Rodrigo Cortés, dropped Reynolds into a wooden coffin as Paul Conroy, an American truck driver in Iraq who wakes up buried alive. Armed with just a lighter, a cell phone, and some profound desperation, Paul tries to outsmart his captors and find a way out. Now, imagine shooting all that inside an actual coffin. Reynolds didn’t just act; he endured.

“Claustrophobia is a primal fear that exists within everybody. For me, I was enclosed in there and had moments of utter panic,” Ryan Reynolds admitted to The Standard. Panic attacks weren’t in the script but became part of the process. A microphone strapped to his chest caught every frantic heartbeat. And when he couldn’t easily get out of the coffin between takes? He just had to stay there. With 60 pounds of wood pressing down, it was less Hollywood glamour and more of a situation where he needed help to breathe.

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