Great Falls Tribune

Ryan Gosling shines as a romantic stuntman

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In “Barbie,” Ryan Gosling’s job is Beach. In “The Fall Guy,” it’s Stunt and he’s pretty great at his gig.

Gosling nicely follows up his Oscarnomin­ated Ken as an embattled Everyman who falls 12 stories, gets thrown through glass and pulls off an epic car jump, among other death-defying moments in the breezily delightful “Fall Guy.”

Director David Leitch, former stunt double for a fella named Brad Pitt, revamps the 1980s Lee Majors TV show as an action-comedy ode to the stunt performers who never get their due, while Gosling and Emily Blunt dazzle as likable exes who reconnect amid gonzo circumstan­ces.

“I’m not the hero of this story. I’m just the stunt guy,” says Colt Seavers (Gosling) in voiceover as we first meet him. Colt is considered Hollywood’s best stuntman, doubling for egotistica­l Alister Tom Ryder (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and fostering a flirty relationsh­ip with camera operator Jody Moreno (Blunt). However, a stunt goes awry on his latest movie, breaking his back as well as disrupting his love life, mental health and entire status quo.

A year later, down on his luck and confidence still shook, Colt is parking cars as a valet at a burrito joint when he gets a call from producer Gail Meyer (Hannah Waddingham). Jody, now an on-the-rise director, needs him in Sydney to work on her first huge sci-fi epic “Metalstorm.” He gets there and after a gnarly cannon roll in a stunt car where he takes out a camera, Colt learns that not only did Jody not ask for him, she doesn’t want him around at all.

Still, the old spark’s there and it turns out she does really need him: Tom has befriended some shady dudes and gone missing, and Gail tasks Colt to both keep Tom’s disappeara­nce on the down-low and also find the dude. Alongside stunt coordinato­r and pal Dan Tucker (Winston Duke), Colt uncovers a criminal conspiracy and in the process goes undercover as Tom in a nightclub (wearing

Ken-esque shades and a cool coat), gets so high he sees unicorns and teams up with a dog that only takes commands in French.

Colt is put through the wringer during his twisty hero’s journey, and it’s impossible not to love him through every punch, kick, stab and dangerous feat because of Gosling’s offbeat charisma. Before “Barbie,” he showed his considerab­le comedic talents in “The Nice Guys” and “Crazy, Stupid, Love,” yet marries them well here with a healthy amount of vulnerable masculinit­y and sublime nuance. With him, a thumb’s up – the stuntman’s go-to signal that everything’s OK – is also a way for Colt to try and hide his sensitivit­ies.

Like Leitch’s other movies, from “Bullet Train” to “Atomic Blonde,” “Fall Guy” is filled with fights, explosions and assorted derring-do for Colt to (barely) live through. One mayhem-filled car chase scene has Gosling’s character tussling with a goon on an out-of-control trailer interspers­ed with Blunt singing Phil Collins’ “Against All Odds.” (It’s essentiall­y a two-hour argument for a stunt Oscar category.) The movie sports a definite musical heart, with an amusing scene between Jody and a weepy Colt set to the Taylor Swift lovelorn jam “All Too Well,” and is also interestin­gly timely considerin­g a plot point about deepfake technology.

The one downside with this sort of stunt spectacula­r: Colt’s mission to find the narcissist­ic Tom and getting into hazardous shenanigan­s takes away from his romantic stuff with Blunt. Playful and quick with the zingers, their characters rekindle their romance in awkward fashion – in one sequence, she spills all sorts of tea about their past relationsh­ip in front of their crew – and you miss them when they’re not together.

For ’80s kids, Majors was the “Fall Guy” – and Leitch’s movie pays tribute in multiple ways to the show and its scrappy spirit – but Gosling makes for a fabulous heir apparent. He’s not just Ken. He’s also Colt, and Gosling’s not done showing us the true extent of his talents.

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