This weekend sees the release of Trainwreck, the newest Judd Apatow romantic comedy starring (and written by) Amy Schumer. While the film’s title may be taking back the term tossed toward any public figure whose crazy antics spark pleasure (and schadenfreude) in us lowly common folk who can’t turn away, it still maintains the dark subtext: a trainwreck is, after all, someone whose messy life is enabled by the industries that profit upon it. Awful as it might be to watch a famous person dive deep into the depths of their own personal struggles, sometimes we can’t help but be mesmerized by them — especially when their behind-the-scenes behavior affected the movies in which they starred.

Here are ten films that featured celebrities whose infamous vices affected their roles — and the films’ productions.

1 John Belushi, 'The Blues Brothers' Belushi, who died in 1982 after injecting a mixture of cocaine and heroin, was a longtime drug user, and his cocaine abuse on the set of The Blues Brothers is infamous. Director John Landis described finding a “mountain” of cocaine in Belushi’s trailer one day after his erratic behavior kept affecting the filming schedule, comparing the SNL star to Tony Montana. It got so bad that many of the film’s cast and crew had to conspire to keep drugs away from him. [Where to stream The Blues Brothers]

2 Daniel Radcliffe, 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows' Child stars are notorious for their inability to cope with the pressures of the film industry — and the fame that comes along with it. Daniel Radcliffe has managed pretty well compared to some of his contemporaries, but he’s also been pretty honest about his issues with substance abuse. Sober since 2010, Radcliffe admitted that he put a lot of pressure on himself to be a great actor, and blew off steam with copious amounts of whiskey. He told Rolling Stone in 2014 that, while he wasn’t drinking on the set of the last Harry Potter film, he was showing up to work still drunk from the night before. [Where to stream Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 and Part 2]

3 Martin Sheen, 'Apocalypse Now' Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam-set update of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness is a paranoid, mind-melding drama to delves into the depths of humanity. One of the most famous scenes, occurring early in the film, features Martin Sheen’s Captain Willard having what appears to be a drunken nervous breakdown in his Saigon hotel room — a scene that was truer to life than you’d expect. To get into character, Sheen got very, very drunk, and then Coppola took advantage of his vulnerable state. “He started to get really weird,” the director told The Hollywood Reporter. “He punched his own image in the mirror, and all this poured out of him.” [Where to stream Apocalypse Now]

4 Wesley Snipes, 'Blade: Trinity' Well, it’s hard to imagine calling a stoner a “trainwreck,” but, according to Patton Oswalt, star Wesley Snipes was so stoned on the set of the third Blade film that he barely got out of his trailer. Oswalt told AV Club that Snipes only shot his close-ups, and the rest of his scenes were filmed with his stand-in. At one point, after a fight with the film’s director, Snipes only communicated through Post-It notes signed “Blade.” Oswald admits, “That was an example of a very troubled shoot that we made fun. You have to find a way to make it fun.” [Where to stream Blade: Trinity]

5 Marilyn Monroe, 'The Misfits' John Huston’s classic western was famously beleaguered by on-set problems. The director himself battled a drinking problem, often passing out during shoots. But it was Marilyn Monroe’s personal troubles that caused the most Hollywood gossip. Her marriage to playwright Arthur Miller (who wrote the film) was crumbling, and she her drug addiction was worsening. Huston revealed years later that he knew Monroe was “doomed” — he admitted in a Rolling Stone interview that he shut down production so that Monroe could go to a hospital and detox — and, sure enough, she died a year later from a barbiturates overdose. [Where to stream The Misfits]

6 Shia LaBeouf, 'Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen' LaBeouf has been, well, a little nuts in the last few years, and his crazy behavior really started during production of the second film in Michael Bay’s Transformers franchise. First, there was his arrest at a Chicago Walgreens, where he refused to leave quietly. Then there was that car crash, in which he flipped his truck while driving in Los Angeles; having refused a breathalyzer, LaBeouf was arrested and charged with drunk driving and later had his license suspended for a year. [Where to stream Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen]

7 Lindsay Lohan, 'Georgia Rule' The mid-aughts were a tricky time for the former Disney star, whose partying ways not only landed her in the tabloids — they also affected her work. While filming Garry Marshall’s dramedy alongside Jane Fonda and Felicity Huffman, she reportedly didn’t show up for work multiple times and cited “heat exhaustion” as the excuse. After her repeated absences began to put the film’s shoot into jeopardy, Morgan Creek Productions executive James G. Robinson sent her a personal note (which found its way to The Smoking Gun) putting her on blast for her “bogus excuses,” saying he was “well aware that [her] ongoing all night heavy partying is the real reason for [her] so called ‘exhaustion.'” [Where to stream Georgia Rule]

8 Joaquin Phoenix, 'I'm Still Here' Casey Affleck’s documentary blurred the lines of fact and fiction, following Oscar winner Joaquin Phoenix as he announced his “retirement” from acting and embarked on a series of erratic appearances (including that infamous Letterman interview). While the whole thing was most likely staged as some sort of performance piece, we had plenty of fun trying to figure out what the hell was happening with Phoenix as he set out to become a rap star. Was he on drugs? Was he crazy? Probably neither — he was just bored. But it was all captured on film, for better or for worse. [Where to stream I’m Still Here]

9 Robert Downey, Jr., 'Less Than Zero' Robert Downey, Jr. had numerous run-ins with the law amid a severe drug addiction in the ’90s and was arrested multiple times for possession of heroin, cocaine, and marijuana. But he was struggling with substance abuse back in the ’80s, around the time he starred in his breakthrough role: as the rich, privileged, and drug-addled Julian in the adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis’ debut novel. Downey admitted that playing the character during work hours made his extra-curricular activities blend into his day job: “The character was an exaggeration of myself. Then things changed, and, in some ways, I became an exaggeration of the character. That lasted far longer than it needed to last.” [Where to stream Less Than Zero]