From the comments from Half in the Bag: The Bruce Willis Fake Movie Factory:
"I have a friend who worked on a Bruce Willis movie recently. Apparently he has advanced dementia and is trying to work while he can. He has handlers with him at all times."
"...Bruce's lines are being read to him through an earwig by the script supervisor, but unfortunately this is more due to dementia issues than laziness. The guy couldn't remember his lines if he tried, and often has issues interpreting direction and the instructions being given to him."
"'While filming Glass [in 2019], staffers worked around him by cutting and editing and having him overdub lines because he struggled to remember and/or deliver them,' an insider reveals. 'In most scenes on Glass he’s hooded, and they used stand-in and body doubles to replace him. On set, he wouldn’t smile and was always chaperoned by an assistant to guide him while walking.'”
"...there have been rumours that Bruce may be experiencing early onset dementia/Alzheimer's. And that either low-grade unscrupulous 'filmmakers' are taking full advantage of his vulnerability, or he's taking roles where be can be given one line of dialogue at a time due to his memory problems. It would make a lot of sense given the steep drop in quality of his films, which seemed to happen very suddenly."
"I have a buddy that worked on one of these movies last year in Vancouver. He said it was really hard to watch Bruce struggle to just get his lines out. He was forgetting that he was filming a movie and they had to wait for him so they could record his lines. They were not able to get everything they needed from Bruce because they only had him for a few days and then he was off the movie. They ran out of time to film all of his lines."
And there's lots more similar remarks there.
Willis is only 66.
I'm in my early 40s and I'll sometimes forget why I've walked into a room, or doctor's appointments. I never used to do that. I know it's just me getting older, but the thought of dementia still scares the absolute hell out of me, worse than any other potential malady.
"I have a friend who worked on a Bruce Willis movie recently. Apparently he has advanced dementia and is trying to work while he can. He has handlers with him at all times."
"...Bruce's lines are being read to him through an earwig by the script supervisor, but unfortunately this is more due to dementia issues than laziness. The guy couldn't remember his lines if he tried, and often has issues interpreting direction and the instructions being given to him."
"'While filming Glass [in 2019], staffers worked around him by cutting and editing and having him overdub lines because he struggled to remember and/or deliver them,' an insider reveals. 'In most scenes on Glass he’s hooded, and they used stand-in and body doubles to replace him. On set, he wouldn’t smile and was always chaperoned by an assistant to guide him while walking.'”
"...there have been rumours that Bruce may be experiencing early onset dementia/Alzheimer's. And that either low-grade unscrupulous 'filmmakers' are taking full advantage of his vulnerability, or he's taking roles where be can be given one line of dialogue at a time due to his memory problems. It would make a lot of sense given the steep drop in quality of his films, which seemed to happen very suddenly."
"I have a buddy that worked on one of these movies last year in Vancouver. He said it was really hard to watch Bruce struggle to just get his lines out. He was forgetting that he was filming a movie and they had to wait for him so they could record his lines. They were not able to get everything they needed from Bruce because they only had him for a few days and then he was off the movie. They ran out of time to film all of his lines."
And there's lots more similar remarks there.
Willis is only 66.
I'm in my early 40s and I'll sometimes forget why I've walked into a room, or doctor's appointments. I never used to do that. I know it's just me getting older, but the thought of dementia still scares the absolute hell out of me, worse than any other potential malady.