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  • Narrator: In this shot from "Central Intelligence,"

  • a man on a motorcycle does a backflip

  • and then knocks The Rock's character over.

  • But look behind the scenes

  • and you'll see nobody was injured that day,

  • because this shot was actually two separate takes.

  • This is a stunt trick known as a camera lock-off.

  • And it's just one of many tried-and-true techniques

  • Hollywood uses in films and TV shows,

  • making even the most unimaginable stunts come to life.

  • In this scene in "Baby Driver,"

  • Ansel Elgort's character pulls into a parking spot

  • and then runs out moments later.

  • In reality, that's a stunt driver driving into the spot.

  • The driver's side gets covered by this pillar,

  • which is also hiding Elgort.

  • So as Elgort runs out, it looks like

  • he's the one getting out of the car in the first place.

  • This is a trick known as a Texas switch,

  • an in-camera effect in which the actor and their double

  • will actually switch places midway through the action.

  • The move involves close collaboration

  • between the stunt crew, camera crew, and director.

  • Whether it's a whip off of the actual actor

  • to something to come right back to them,

  • you can't just go focused on that person

  • and then put another person in.

  • Narrator: And the set needs a natural hiding place

  • for the switch to occur,

  • like this rock that Sean Connery is hiding behind

  • in "From Russia With Love."

  • The Texas switch isn't just for action.

  • It's even become a comedic staple,

  • in everything from "The Naked Gun"...

  • to "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World."

  • Knives Chau: Is Scott here?

  • Oh, you know what?

  • [glass shattering] He just left.

  • Narrator: In this scene in "Elf," for example,

  • Buddy needs to put a star

  • on top of a very tall Christmas tree.

  • First, Will Ferrell runs off camera.

  • Then the double runs out

  • and launches himself on top of the tree.

  • [tree crashing]

  • "Maleficent: Mistress of Evil" contained many moments

  • where Angelina Jolie had to perform dialogue in midair.

  • So how exactly did they make it look like she was flying

  • while allowing for her to comfortably

  • and safely act in the scene?

  • They used this device, called a tuning fork,

  • which consists of two prongs that lock into

  • both sides of the performer's body.

  • The rig is controlled by a steering wheel

  • that is driven by stuntpeople in blue or green suits

  • who are erased in postproduction.

  • Tuning forks were especially useful

  • for the shots where Maleficent hovers in the air,

  • and the steering wheel makes 360-degree turns possible.

  • This was key for scenes where the Fey twist

  • and turn in the air in "Maleficent,"

  • or when Mulan performs full spins in the air

  • in the live-action remake.

  • You can also see it in action in "Captain Marvel"

  • when Carol Danvers realizes her full potential.

  • But the fork isn't a complete replacement for wires,

  • which are still crucial for flight.

  • According to stunt coordinator Monique Ganderton,

  • wirework helped give the character more mobility

  • in "Captain Marvel" and "Endgame."

  • She had two wires on her hips only,

  • 'cause I like them to have freedom in their upper body.

  • And then a guy in a blue suit behind

  • just kind of puppeteer the leg up,

  • so her body could go side to side

  • and then come back up into an upright position.

  • Narrator: In "Men in Black: International,"

  • a menacing alien tosses Agent H down a staircase.

  • To achieve this violent-looking motion,

  • filmmakers use a trick called a ratchet pull.

  • During a ratchet pull, a performer is tied

  • to cables powered by an air-pressure cylinder,

  • which pulls them either backwards, forwards, or upwards.

  • The more pressure you use, the farther they'll go.

  • In "Twilight: Eclipse," for example,

  • Monique Ganderton was ratcheted 20 feet forward

  • after a CG wolf attacked her character.

  • Sometimes a simplified version of a ratchet pull

  • called a dead man will do.

  • Instead of tying a performer

  • to a complex rigging system off camera,

  • the performer is tied to

  • a solid, stationary object in-frame.

  • Monique: What happens is, when you fully commit,

  • you run, and you jump,

  • and you hit the end of that line,

  • and it just whips you back onto the ground.

  • Narrator: You can see it performed

  • during the battle of Wakanda in "Infinity War."

  • Monique: It gives for this violent,

  • this really simple but violent action.

  • Narrator: The dead man can also be used

  • to pull somebody off a horse,

  • like you see here in this cut sequence from "Chaos Walking."

  • And when Thor gets hit by Thanos in "Endgame,"

  • both a traditional ratchet pull

  • and a dead man were actually needed

  • so Chris Hemsworth's double, Bobby Holland Hanton,

  • could be pulled forward and then thrown to the ground.

  • Getting a stunt performer to go through glass,

  • like in this scene from "The Hunt,"

  • requires a lot more force than just a person's body weight.

  • When a character needs to jump or fall out a window,

  • productions use tempered glass,

  • which shatters into tiny, harmless bits

  • instead of sharp shards.

  • But the glass itself is so strong

  • actors would simply bounce off it,

  • as you can see in this gag.

  • So in these moments, the special effects team

  • rigs the glass with explosives timed to go off

  • the exact moment the performer falls through.

  • Daniel: By cracking it, you weaken the whole system.

  • Narrator: In "The Hunt," the doubles

  • were attached to a wire that pulled them backwards

  • just as the explosives go off.

  • Exploding glass also helped hoist stuntman Daniel Hargrave

  • out a window in "The Accountant."

  • If you look on the ground, you can see how tiny

  • the broken glass pieces actually are.

  • Stuntpeople are finding efficient ways

  • to update this trick too.

  • In "John Wick 2," the character

  • is thrown through a glass sculpture.

  • Daniel: Basically the performers had to hit the glass

  • and let the computerized system do its thing.

  • They put four charges that were pressurized into the glass,

  • so it was on a pressure system.

  • As soon as that glass pushed against the charger,

  • it had, like, maybe a eighth of an inch of pressure on it,

  • so as soon as you'd push through, it would blow.

  • [glass shattering]

  • Narrator: This risky stunk from "Central Intelligence,"

  • in which The Rock's Bob Stone is hit in the head

  • by a motorcycle, was made possible

  • by clever camerawork and visual effects.

  • In a trick known as a camera lock-off,

  • two actions are shot separately from a camera

  • that is locked into the exact same place both times.

  • Then those two shots are combined using visual effects.

  • First, filmmakers shot a motorcyclist doing a backflip.

  • Then, in another shot from the same angle,

  • stunt double Tanoai Reed was pulled back

  • on a ratchet to imitate impact.

  • The wires were erased and the two shots layered together

  • into a seamless whole.

  • For moments like this,

  • stuntpeople can actually get hit by cars.

  • But lock-offs can lessen the pain of vehicular hits.

  • Take this moment in "Atomic Blonde,"

  • where Gascoigne, played by Sam Hargrave,

  • is hit by a car and then smashed into a van in front of him.

  • Daniel: Sam was on a ratchet,

  • so he ran to his mark, and we ratcheted him into the van.

  • So no car hit him.

  • And then I was driving the car, and we just,

  • same thing, lock-off, I slid in as if I hit him,

  • and then they merged together.

  • And then he just turns, and you see a wide shot of him

  • getting hit and flipped into this car.

  • [grunts]

  • Narrator: In "Underworld," the werewolf Lucian

  • has to run at superhuman speed.

  • And this isn't the work of CGI or camera tricks.