After Vin Diesel had left the stage and introduced high-octane Fast X footage, a voiceover asked CinemaCon attendees to remain patient for a special surprise as professionals prepped the stage.

The screen then promoted EightySeven North Productions banner, while a team of stunt professionals stormed the stage to show off their impressive set of skills. It started with a motorcycle rider dragging a man across the stage followed by a gymnastics display, a mini car zooming around the stage and a slew of aerial flips and tricks. Minutes later, filmmaker David Leitch took the stage and detonated two performers who jumped from the Colosseum rafters to maps on the stage.

Related Stories

The spectacle, near the end of Universal’s studio presentation, served as a way for Leitch, a former stuntman, to introduce his upcoming film The Fall Guy. He welcomed his stars Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt to the stage, and they both pretended to be hesitant at first. “Is it safe?” Blunt asked, with Gosling adding, “It was really loud, and there was a tiny car and roughhousing. It just seems dangerous.”

It was totally safe, aside from some Teleprompter issues, and the trio then took a few minutes of comical back-and-forth to introduce their film. (They also gave shout-outs to some special stunt professionals from The Fall Guy, including Gosling’s stunt double Ben.)

“In most films, the actors get all the credit, but the stunt performers do all the work, and that ends today,” said Gosling, who was back on the CinemaCon main stage one day after waxing on about bleaching his hair and shaving his legs to find the right Ken-ergy to play Ken opposite Margot Robbie’s title character in Greta Gerwig’s Barbie.

Leitch then said he was excited to make a movie that portrayed the lives of stunt professionals, the hardworking class of people who risk their lives for very little credit. “I was a former stunt performer so it’s very, very dear to me,” he said.

Gosling stars opposite Blunt, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Stephanie Hsu, Hannah Waddingham, Teresa Palmer and Winston Duke in the Universal movie that is inspired by the 1980s television series. Shot on location in Australia, the film marks a switch from the original 1980s show that starred Lee Majors.

As THR previously reported, it doesn’t focus on a stuntman with a side hustle as a bounty hunter. Instead, the script by Drew Pearce focuses on a battered and past-his-prime stuntman (Gosling), who finds himself back on a movie set with the star (Taylor-Johnson) for whom he doubled long ago and who replaced him. The wrinkle, however, is that the star has gone missing.

“It was a huge honor to step into the footsteps of the iconic Lee Majors,” Gosling added, noting that his character is found at a point in his stunt journey when his girlfriend (Blunt) has broken up with him, and he has broken his back. “My character is going through a lot and directing a huge space opera,” Blunt elaborated on the plot, adding that she is forced to work with her ex in order to save her film. “They are exes and maybe futures if he plays his cards right.”

They then introduced several minutes of footage that played very well in the Colosseum. Producing are Kelly McCormick and Leitch via their 87North shingle. Gosling is also producing, as is Entertainment 360’s Guymon Casady. Pearce will executive produce alongside Geoff Shaevitz, Matt Reilly, Glen Larson and Peter Cramer.

The Fall Guy is set to hit theaters on March 1, 2024.

CinemaCon, the official convention of the National Association of Theatre Owners, is being held inside Caesars Palace in Las Vegas from April 24-27.

Read More: World News | Entertainment News | Celeb News
Hollywood

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Venice: ‘Dirty Difficult Dangerous’ Wins Europa Cinema Labels Award

Dirty Difficult Dangerous from French/Lebanese director Wissam Charaf has won the 2022 Europa…

Oscars Producer Will Packer Explains Why Will Smith Was Not Removed From the Show

Will Packer is shedding light on what happened behind-the-scenes at the Oscars…

Steve Martin Responds to ‘Little Shop’ Co-Star Miriam Margolyes’ Claim of “Horrid” Behavior on Set: “I Have to Object”

Steve Martin is responding to accusations his Little Shop of Horrors co-star…

Cannes: Kelsey Asbille, Finn Wittrock to Lead Horror ‘Don’t Move’ for Sam Raimi, ‘Barbarian’ Producer Alex Lebovici (Exclusive)

Kelsey Asbille (Yellowstone, Fargo, Wind River) and Finn Wittrock (American Horror Story,…