bodymovin
Bodymovin
bodymovin

I took my family to see it and we all absolutely loved it. The whole cinema stayed to watch the credits, and then applauded at the end - a real rarity in British cinemas (last witnessed at the end of Top Gun Maverick, in the IMAX, which really was something special for this Top Gun-obsessed child of the 80s). Blunt

Yeah, I think this is not only unsurprising but also fine and good.

They do a cover version in this one, Not sung by Gosling, even though we know by now that he Can sing, which is a waste as well.

But that’s not what the show was about. Yes, the film was very loosely adapted, but the conceit of the show was that the stunt man investigated mysteries.

Fall Guy hit on some great concepts and ran them right into the ground because of the constraints of the summer blockbuster. The same DNA would work great in other contexts. The pedestrian approach would be a straight documentary or GBBO style competition between stunt performers but I’d prefer five seasons of a

I don’t think it is a question of which one, the actor or the stuntman. I think it is more of a collaboration. Just like costume, make-up and hair are essential to the art of storytelling, so is action.  Nothing beats a really great actor to sell it all. Ryan is a great actor. Making movies is the art of storytelling

How is the existence of an entertaining end-credits stunt reel something of a surprise or an oddity? Have you never seen a Jackie Chan film? 

It’s the closest thing we’ve got to a modern Snatch. I had fun with it 

I didn’t think Bullet Train was bad, just overly stylized (and yes I realize that’s what it was going for). It went for that “underground world with its own set of rules” thing and mostly connected.  I was entertained.

“slack” - are you a card carrying member of the Church of the Sub-Genius by any chance...?

Well, yeah, what with all those taxpayer-funded robot parts.

I vaguely remember it, mostly the catchy show-specific opening theme song (remember those?) about how they do all these dangerous stunts but never get the movie star woman.  Other than that I think it was mostly mystery of the week type stuff.  Fun but lightweight.

I accept this award on behalf of bdad jokes everywhere!”

I don’t remember a ton about the show, but I do recall that the character was supposed to be a bounty hunter when he wasn’t doing stunt work. The plots revolved around that and I’m sure there parceled the action scenes out pretty rigidly. I don’t know if it was as formulaic as The A Team, but I’d bet every episode

I remember when Lee Majors was not stunt-manning, he was bounty hunting, so the movie’s Colt tracking down its AWOL star tracks with that.

I remember Heather Thomas in the opening credits pretty well.

I accept this award on behalf of bad jokes everywhere!

I bestow upon you our highest honor:

When I was a kid I always wondered what he did during the other 3 seasons...