Marin Independent Journal

`The Fall Guy' a love letter to stunt performers

- By Josh Rottenberg

In his previous life as a stunt double, David Leitch had a simple job: to make the star look invincible. Doubling for Alisters including Brad Pitt and Matt Damon in hits such as “Fight Club” and “The Bourne Ultimatum,” whether taking a punch or dodging an explosion, Leitch was tasked with selling the illusion of death-defying feats while remaining personally invisible. (That leap Jason Bourne makes off a rooftop into a kitchen window in “Ultimatum”? All Leitch.)

“It's the contract we sign up for: We're not supposed to be seen,” Leitch says on a recent afternoon at 87North, the Los Angeles stunt facility and production company he runs with his wife and producing partner, Kelly McCormick, out of a converted former church on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. “That's part of the movie magic.”

Since transition­ing from stuntwork to directing 10 years ago with the gonzo revenge thriller “John Wick,” which he co-directed with Chad Stahelski (due to a DGA ruling, only Stahelski was credited), Leitch has amassed a growing portfolio of high-octane hits including “Deadpool 2,” “Hobbes Shaw” and “Bullet Train.” Now, with his latest action-comedy “The Fall Guy,” Leitch is flipping the script. This time, the stunt double takes center stage.

Arriving in theaters May 3, “The Fall Guy” stars Ryan Gosling as Colt Seavers, a battered, down-on-hisluck stunt performer hired to double an egotistica­l Alister named Tom Ryder (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) on a high-stakes film being directed by Colt's former girlfriend, Jody Moreno (Emily Blunt). When the A-lister suddenly goes missing, Colt

is thrust into a murder mystery where he becomes the prime suspect, all while attempting to rekindle his romance with Jody and help save her film from disaster.

Loosely based on the 1980s TV series of the same name, “The Fall Guy” — which premiered to rave reviews at last month's SXSW Film Festival — is a love letter to stunt performers and all the other unsung crew members who make a movie set work. “I think Colt is a hero that anybody can get behind,” says McCormick. “Who doesn't feel like they work really hard, risk it all and don't get enough accolades?”

That sentiment resonates deeply in the stunt community, which has played an integral, if often unheralded, role in moviemakin­g going all the way back to the legends of the silent era such as Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd. With rare exceptions, such as the largely forgotten 1978 Burt Reynolds film “Hooper” (“the `Citizen Kane' for stuntmen and -women,” Leitch calls it), the stunt world has seldom been placed at the heart of the narrative onscreen. And when it comes to awards, while the Emmy Awards and Screen

Actors Guild honor stunt performers, the film academy has never recognized stunts either on Oscar night or at its untelevise­d Scientific and Technical Awards, despite a persistent campaign stretching back three decades. (The three exceptions: Stunt performer Yakima Canutt received an honorary Academy Award in 1967 for developing safety devices for stuntmen, while stuntman turned director Hal Needham and Hong Kong action star and stunt pioneer Jackie Chan received lifetime achievemen­t Oscars in 2012 and 2016, respective­ly.)

For the stunt community, that frustratin­g disconnect was starkly highlighte­d by Quentin Tarantino's 2019 film “Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood,” which finally landed Pitt an Oscar for his turn as a grizzled 1960s stuntman. “That was the big uproar — you can get an Academy Award for pretending to be a stunt guy but you can't get an Academy Award for actually being one,” says Chris O'Hara, who oversaw the stunt department on “The Fall Guy” and previously worked on “Jurassic World” and “Baby Driver.”

Since the early 1990s, veteran

stunt coordinato­r Jack Gill has been spearheadi­ng the effort to secure an Oscar for stunts. Along the way, Gill, whose career spans TV series such as “The Dukes of Hazzard” and “Knight Rider” and films such as “Fast Five” and “Bad Boys for Life,” has amassed support from filmmakers Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg and stars Pitt, Arnold Schwarzene­gger, Jason Statham, Helen Mirren, Vin Diesel and Johnny Depp.

Gill argues that recognitio­n is long overdue for an aspect of moviemakin­g that has increased exponentia­lly in complexity and sophistica­tion while remaining a key driver of box office revenue. “There is no other department head in the movie business that has that kind of pressure where people's lives are at stake,” he says. “Stunt performers don't want to be actors and walk the red carpet and all of that. What they want is to be acknowledg­ed among their peers for doing something that involves real blood, sweat and tears.”

While academy leaders have historical­ly resisted adding new award categories to a telecast that many complain is already bloated, Gill sees new cause for optimism. Earlier this year, the academy announced that it will award a new Oscar for casting directors beginning in 2026, the first category added since the animated feature film category was establishe­d in 2001, setting a path that the stunt community hopes to follow.

Boosting those prospects, last year the academy moved stunt coordinato­rs, previously categorize­d as members at large, into a newly created Production and Technology branch that also houses assorted technical and production positions including chief technology officers, script supervisor­s, choreograp­hers and music supervisor­s.

“Now we have a seat at the table and some say-so in how this proceeds forward, which is a big step,” says Gill. “If we can be a little more informativ­e with the public and the academy board members about what exactly stunt coordinato­rs do and keep the ball going, I'm hoping in the next one or two years we can see a category. I think that they need it and I think that they want it. We've just got to keep pushing.” (AMPAS declined to comment for this story.)

With “The Fall Guy,”

Leitch is hoping to remind audiences and the academy alike just how critical stunts are to the success of so many films. The movie serves as a tribute to old-school stunt discipline­s — fighting, falling, being set on fire — and features a number of showstoppi­ng action set pieces, including a 225-foot car jump, an 80-foot boat jump and a record-setting “cannon roll” in which a cannon-like mechanism mounted under a vehicle shoots toward the ground while it is traveling at generally inadvisabl­e speed, making it flip. This last stunt, executed by stunt driver Logan Holladay, saw a Jeep Cherokee completing 81/2 revolution­s, surpassing the previous record of seven set on 2006's “Casino Royale.”

“The cannon roll was special,” says Leitch. “When I put it in the script, potentiall­y setting a world record, it was like, `Hey, if we're going to make a movie about a stuntman and an homage to the stunt community, we should try and do something big that's never been done.'”

In an era in which action scenes are routinely cleaned up and augmented with CGI, face replacemen­t and a growing array of AI tricks, Leitch was determined to rely as much as possible on practical “in-camera” stuntwork with all its potential risks to life and limb. “We're doing our best in this film to show that it really hurts,” he says.

“When it's real, it feels different,” says Holladay, whose father worked as a stuntman on the “Fall Guy” TV series in the 1980s. “When you're watching something that's been computer-generated, it's like watching a video game — there's no risk by any person in there. We did everything for real, and that's what keeps you on the edge of your seat.”

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Ryan Gosling, left, and Emily Blunt are the stars of “The Fall Guy.”
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Ryan Gosling, left, and Emily Blunt are the stars of “The Fall Guy.”

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