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'The Autumn Man' | Anatomy of a scene
Director David Leitch tells an excerpt from his film with Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt.
“Hi, I'm David Leitch. And I'm the director of 'The Fall Guy.' So I'm super excited. This is one of my favorite scenes in the movie. It's just like our setup. You see Ryan and Emily in a flashback where they are flirting. “Oh, I wanted to have a spicy margarita after work. And I was wondering if you drink spicy margaritas? [LAUGHS] “Well, to keep it professional, I can only have one spicy margarita because if I have two, I start making bad decisions.” “This scene was shot all in one take. These are not cuts. So it was really a challenge for what's coming next. Ryan has to play this charming, charismatic guy, knowing that we're actually going to hook him up with a 100-foot descender. A descender is a platform where we drop someone off a building or whatever. And the mechanism below actually slows him down for the last 10 feet. That's the actual stunt team right there. Keir Beck now links him to the other Australian rigging team. And they're getting ready to get Ryan over the edge.” “After this, you and I could both be on a beach somewhere in swimsuits drinking spicy margaritas.” “As a stunt person, this is not unusual. You would carry on a conversation right up until the moment you do the stunt, and find the time to focus yourself while they hang you up. It's amazing that he keeps his composure. We have done this practically. This is all real. And this is in a building in Sydney. It took us about four months to get the permits to build the truss we had to make, and to get all the technical and safety requirements out of the way. And this could be take two. But Ryan was such a good sport. I know at one point he knew, it's called “The Fall Guy,” he knew he should do something like this. So there he goes.” “Action! Action! Action! Action!” [WHIRRING]
Recent episodes in Anatomy of a scene
Film directors guide viewers through one scene of their films, revealing the magic, motives and mistakes from behind the camera.
Film directors guide viewers through one scene of their films, revealing the magic, motives and mistakes from behind the camera.