Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles 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.