![real stacks of money on bed real stacks of money on bed](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/b1/7a/51/b17a51b04302b73fc46de46de4143436.jpg)
This is the first version that they offer. You can see an example of a high-grade bill in this scene from the 2014 movie "Let's Be Cops." An alternate solution that Gregg and ISS have been using for the past several years is to simply use real bills. Like the one we showed you earlier, which was printed by RJR Props in Atlanta. High-grade bills are identical to real money but are printed on only one side so that they can't be confused with the real thing. So for those shots, movies will often use high-grade bills. In fact, if you zoom in to this scene from "Breaking Bad," while it's blurry, you can actually see that each bill says "for motion picture use only." These changes should keep the Secret Service away, but they also mean standard fake bills are no good for close-ups. Then there are the obvious additions, like the prominently displayed "for motion picture use only." The seals are a different design, and the signatures on the bill have been changed. And instead of "one hundred dollars," it just reads "one hundred." The smaller details on the bill are also altered. The portrait on the bill is poor quality compared to the real one. These bills look real from afar, but up close are obviously fake, with lots of clear differences when compared to the real thing. The iconic money scene from "Breaking Bad" uses these bills, which were rented from Gregg and ISS. For scenes where the cash is filmed from far away, productions typically use standard-grade bills.