VFX house Rising Sun Pictures contributed its wizardry to The Fall Guy, the hit action comedy from Universal Pictures and Director David Leitch. With a team of more than 150 artists, producers and machine learning specialists, RSP delivered nearly 300 visual effects shots, many incorporated into the film’s spectacular climax, a 10-plus minute nail biter of stunts, car crashes, explosions, helicopter drops and other mind-blowing mayhem.
Leitch’s love letter to action movies and the hard-working crew who make them, The Fall Guy is produced by Kelly McCormick, David Leitch, Ryan Gosling and Guymon Casady; and executive produced by Drew Pearce, Geoff Shaevitz and Glen A. Larson. Matt Sloan is production VFX Supervisor and Chris McClintock is production VFX Producer.
Nearly all the film’s jaw-dropping stunts were executed practically by Leitch, a former stuntman himself, and his production team. Digital visual effects, such as those produced by RSP, were mainly used to support practical visuals with environmental, background and technical elements. “This film is grounded in truth,” says RSP VFX Supervisor Matt Greig. “That’s what made it so much fun! Our role was to enhance what was captured in camera and make integration seamless.”
The film’s extended concluding sequence occurs on the edge of an enormous quarry outside Sydney, Australia. Amid an escalating sequence of crashes, rollovers and blasts, Ryan Gosling’s Colt tries desperately to foil a criminal conspiracy, block the escape of missing actor Tom Ryder (Taylor-Johnson) and recover a recording essential to clearing his name. “The bulk of our work involved that final chase,” notes Greig. “It is an incredibly complex scene, but every moment was precisely choreographed and perfectly executed by the production, so we were able to focus on realism, continuity and hitting the beats in the story.”
RSP augmented practical stunts with smoke, flames, sand, dust and debris. “There were huge explosions in the plate, but some were filmed on windy days and didn’t fully translate to the screen,” explains FX Supervisor Thomas Cant. “We had access to the production plates allowing us to study the real explosions in the real environment and real light. That helped us create elements that matched perfectly with what was shot practically. When we received notes from production that mistook in-camera elements for visual effects, we knew we’d done our job.”
Digital pyrotechnics were also used to achieve continuity in a long narrative that had many edits and unfolds at breakneck speed. “A short sequence where multiple cars flip over were shot over several hours,” Greig explains. “A lot can change in that time in terms of how much dust and smoke is floating over a wreaked car. Our role was to add or subtract particulate matter to make the atmospherics consistent from shot to shot.”
As is typical, the compositing team had to do a lot of routine clean up, removing power lines and other unwanted objects from exteriors, but for this film, certain things normally taken out of shots were instead left in, enhanced or added. “The plot involves a movie-within-a-movie, so we were dealing with both a real set and a fictional set,” explains Compositing Supervisor Phil Outen. “We had to be very careful to distinguish between rigs and camera equipment that had to be removed and similar gear that was part of the story.”
RSP’s CG department pitched in by creating a 360 degree replica of the quarry environment as well as photoreal models of stunt cars and helicopters. Both were used discreetly in partial replacements and transitions. “The production supplied us with very high-resolution scans of the actual vehicles used on set,” notes Greig. “We had wonderful textures of the cars, outside and inside. We were able to build high fidelity models that could be transparently substituted for real cars whenever they were needed. That was fantastic.”
The CG quarry environment was used in close ups inserted into stunt action. Foreground live action was captured on a blue screen stage with actors in cars attached to large gimbals that simulated motion. Compositors added the quarry background and coordinated it with the movement of the car. “The tricky part was ensuring the background matched the precise location of the car as it raced around the quarry,” Outen explains. “The edit was still evolving so, whenever the cut changed, the background had to be adjusted.”
Keeping everything lined up correctly involved tight coordination between the production, picture editors and RSP. “They trusted us to work out the timing,” recalls Greig. “David Leitch, Matt Sloan, Chris McClintock were very clear about what they wanted in each shot, so there was no guesswork. Our mood was, ‘Let’s go for it!’”
The CG helicopter was used in a shot near the end of the sequence where Colt jumps from the crane of a moving camera car to the flying helicopter. Colt’s leap was real, but the helicopter was suspended from a crane and not actually flying. Artists removed the crane and added spinning blades to the chopper.
VFX Producer Rachel Copp notes that the team had a kind of “dress rehearsal” for that difficult shot. Early in the project, the production team asked RSP to produce a temp version for a preview screening. Artists jumped on it and over a weekend, produced rotating blades that looked convincingly real. “That success generated a lot of trust and set the tone for everything that followed,” Copp recalls. “We were able to talk openly and freely about everything that came up. It brought us closer to the production and you can see it in the results.”
RSP’s team also responded to a request from the production to give the shot a wider perspective. “We knew immediately that we could do it,” Greig recalls. “We had our digital quarry, digital helicopter, and digital doubles. We were able to extrapolate from the narrow shot and make it wider while also adding background explosions. We didn’t create the shot; we simply took what was already there and delivered what the director wanted.”
In another scene, the producer in the film ‘Gail Meyer’ says a line that the director wanted to change. Instead of a reshoot, RSP’s REVIZE™ technology—a fusion of machine learning and artistic approaches—was utilised. The result is Gail delivering a different line seamlessly. The studio also applied this technology to creating amazingly lifelike digital doubles and face swaps.
RSP also produced a charming bit of character animation as CG artists created a unicorn imagined by a drugged Colt.
The project spanned nine months, but Outen says the time flew by. “We loved the show,” he insists. “everyone was invested in delivering seamless result and enjoyed the work. We had a great team and a great client, the best of both worlds…epic.”
“It was exciting,” agrees Copp. “We are big fans of David Leitch. As always, there were challenges, but it came together beautifully, and we delivered our shots on time. Another great show.”
Watch RSP’s full VFX breakdown below: