How to be a 'Fall Guy': Stunt performers on their rough

style2024-05-22 10:49:5115557

NEW YORK (AP) — There are two things to keep in mind while being burned alive for a movie scene.

The first, says stunt performer Ben Jenkin, is not to breathe in a flame. That would be bad. Jenkin was reminded of that over and over before doing his first fire burn (and then seven more) in David Leitch’s “The Fall Guy,” an action extravaganza that affectionately celebrates the rough-and-tumble lives of stunt performers.

The other thing: Keep moving.

“Moving forward and keeping the fire behind you allows you to breathe and to control the fire,” Jenkin says. “Movement is your friend.”

Address of this article:http://sudan.fivesixgroup.com/html-84f299619.html

Popular

New Zealand Black Caps fans look to Twenty20 World Cup with hope, trepidation

Iran's nuclear policy unlikely to change even after president's death

Report says China is accelerating the forced urbanization of rural Tibetans

UN maritime tribunal says countries are legally required to reduce greenhouse gas pollution

Election deniers moving closer to GOP mainstream as Trump allies fill Congress, report shows

US defender John Brooks to leave German club Hoffenheim

New York's high court upholds requiring insurance to cover medically necessary abortions

French Olympic fencer Thibus says she has been cleared of any wrongdoing after abnormal doping test

LINKS