The sources provide a comprehensive overview of the making and lasting legacy of the 1994 film The Crow, focusing intensely on the accidental death of its star, Brandon Lee, during production in 1993. The episode details how the film, based on James O’Barr’s comic created from personal grief, became a modern myth due to the ironic tragedy of Lee’s demise via a prop gun malfunction, which propelled a fragment into his abdomen. It explains that the movie was completed only through pioneering CGI and the use of a stunt double, transforming the project into a posthumous triumph that both honored Lee's memory and catalyzed significant changes in Hollywood firearms safety protocols. Finally, the sources document the film’s massive commercial success, its defining influence on 1990s goth culture and alternative rock, and the consistent failure of all subsequent sequels and remakes to capture the original's powerful blend of style and soul.