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    Home » Director David Leitch’s “The Fall Guy,” A Love Letter To Stunt Performers, Debuts At SXSW

    Director David Leitch’s “The Fall Guy,” A Love Letter To Stunt Performers, Debuts At SXSW

    By SHOOTWednesday, March 13, 2024Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments1203 Views
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    Ryan Gosling arrives for the world premiere of "The Fall Guy" at the Paramount Theatre during the South by Southwest Film Festival on Tuesday, March 12, 2024, in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Jack Plunkett/Invision/AP)

    By Jake Coyle, Film Writer

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) --

    Coming nearly straight from the Oscars with a truck full of Kenergy, Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt rolled into the South By Southwest Film and TV Festival to premiere "The Fall Guy," an affectionate, action-fueled ode to stunt work and the dedicated professionals that throw their bodies into filmmaking.

    "The Fall Guy," directed by stuntman-turned-filmmaker David Leitch, was perhaps the most anticipated world premiere to hit this year's edition of SXSW. Given that Blunt and Gosling were both coming off Sunday's Oscars where they were each nominated — and where Gosling's "I'm Just Ken" brought the house down — the buzz was even stronger Tuesday night.

    "Don't worry, I'm not going to sing. I promise," Gosling said before the film, prompting the crowd to boo.

    But that was the only sound of disappointment that emanated from the raucous Austin, Texas, audience that lapped up every minute of "The Fall Guy," an action movie loosely based on the 1980s TV series that Universal will open in theaters May 3.

    In the film, Gosling stars as Colt Seavers, stunt double for a major movie star named Tom Ryder (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) who, after a back-breaking fall, is coaxed into returning to set to work on the sci-fi directorial debut of his lost love (Blunt). "The Fall Guy" has wall-to-wall action set pieces, both staged in the movie-within-the-movie and that occur in off-set adventures.

    "We really wanted to celebrate crews and the magic behind the scenes," said Leitch, who was Brad Pitt's stunt double, among others, before making his first feature, 2014's "John Wick." His last film, "Bullet Train," also starred Pitt.

    But that clever bit of casting had nothing on the playful role reversals of "The Fall Guy." It features a megawatt A-lister playing a stuntman whose face is treated like a liability for movie, acting alongside many of the stunt workers who actually worked on "The Fall Guy." That includes Logan Holladay, who performed Gosling's stunts, like a record-breaking car crash with 8 ½ rolls.

    "There's a moment in the film where he buckles me in for a stunt he's about to do. And after it happens, I come out of the car and he pats me on the back for a stunt he just did," Gosling said. "What I love about this movie is that in any other film you would not know that, but in this film, you do."

    The SXSW premiere of "The Fall Guy" came with some of its own stunts. A pair of motorcycles sped through the crowds milling outside the Paramount Theater before Blunt and Gosling arrived in the back of a pick-up.

    Blunt and Gosling weren't the only ones fresh from the Academy Awards. Leitch and his wife, Kelly McCormick, (a producer on "The Fall Guy") produced a clip reel of stunts for the telecast. Though stunt performance isn't an Oscar category (a sore point that comes up in "The Fall Guy"), Leitch thinks it will happen soon. The academy recently voted to add an Oscar for casting.

    "I do feel it's changing," Leitch said. "I think the academy wants it and it's going to happen."

    But, in the meantime, "The Fall Guy" seeks to give stunt performers – among other crew members – a moment in the spotlight.

    "There are so many cynical movies about movie making. But the truth is in my experience, everyone cares so much," Gosling said. "Even if it's a prop, even if it's a mug, the prop person will bring out 10 mugs and will have broken one of the handles and glued it back because they thought maybe it broke at one point but has sentimental value to you."

    Sentiment plays more of a role in "The Fall Guy" than you might think, too. Though Leitch said it was initially less prominent in the film, Gosling urged him to expand the love story component. "The Fall Guy" may exalt anonymous film workers, but it's lifted by the charisma and chemistry of its two leading stars.

    "Emily could create chemistry with a trash can," Gosling said of Blunt, who was nominated for her supporting performance in the best-picture winner "Oppenheimer."

    Another "Fall Guy" co-star — an attack dog that responds only to commands in French — had particular poignance for Gosling.

    "Eva (Mendes) and I used to have a dog named Hugo who was a Belgian malinois, who was an attack dog. And he only spoke French," Gosling said. "He's passed now and this is my homage to him. I miss that dude. He was a bon garcon."

    But in countless ways, the greatest romance in "The Fall Guy" is for the movies. Among those that get specifically name-checked are "Rocky" and "The Last of the Mohicans." In those films and others, the bruising toil of stunt workers is designed to be invisible. "The Fall Guy" flips the script.

    "I have to say," Gosling said, "I'm Ryan Gosling and I did almost none of my own stunts in this movie."

    Director David Leitch is repped by Minted Content for commercials and branded entertainment

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    Category:News
    Tags:David LeitchRyan GoslingSXSWThe Fall Guy



    Director Sang-il Lee’s Movie About Kabuki Is A Surprise Hit In Soul-Searching Japan

    Wednesday, September 3, 2025

    A three-hour film about the esoteric world of Kabuki is defying the odds at the Japanese box office, with tickets selling out at some cinemas.

    "Kokuho," which means "national treasure," has already grossed more than 10 billion yen ($68 million), making it the second-highest grossing Japanese live-action film of all time, and the first to achieve that in more than two decades.

    It stars heartthrobs Ryo Yoshizawa and Ryusei Yokohama who portray longtime rivals and soulmates. They are both Kabuki "onnagata" actors, meaning they specialize in women roles, from gorgeous princesses to damsels in distress.

    They look stunning, and convincing, having gone through months of training with a real Kabuki actor.

    Japan has submitted the film for the international feature category at the Academy Awards. The short list of the 15 films from which the final nominations come will be announced Dec. 16.

    "Kohuko" got a favorable reception at the Cannes Film Festival. And it's been seen 7.4 million times in the first 73 days in Japanese theaters, many of them repeat viewers.

    The plot of "Kokuho" — pronounced Koh-koo-hoe — explores perennial themes of family and the grueling hardships of being an artist, set to the backdrop of the intense but dreamlike life of the Kabuki actor.

    It also pays homage to old-style yakuza movies, as well as obliquely to Western gangster films, like "The Godfather," because one of the heroes is the son of a gangster.

    Tales of intrigue and violence
    In short, it's not the kind of material that usually makes a hit movie in Japan, where action-packed blockbusters or animation based on popular manga comics or spectacular special effects have drawn audiences in the past.

    But the... Read More

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