How to Get Beat Up by an INVISIBLE MAN (2020)
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- Опубліковано 19 вер 2024
- Jigsaw's first victim, $7 million USD, and a man dressed to the nines in green spandex...
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Sources:
Jason Blum on Planet Money: www.npr.org/se...
Leigh Whannell on The Big Picture: podbay.fm/podc...
Leigh Whannell on CinemaBlend: • The Invisible Man Dire...
Making Upgrade on a budget: www.fastcompan...
Music:
Time to go to space now !! by komiku
Word Up by Jahzzar (used under terms of Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license: creativecommon...)
Mozart: Piano Sonata no. 11, K. 331 - Alla Turca, courtesy of the European Archive
Strauss: The Blue Danube, courtesy of the European Archive
Ravel: Bolero, performed by the Paris Orchestra under the baton of Charles Munch (I had to absolutely chop the life out of this to make it work in context so please go listen to the whole piece to atone for my sins: commons.wikime...)
Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker (suite), Op. 71a - No.7. Dance of the Flutes, No.8. Dance of the Flowers, No.6. Chinese Dance, courtesy of the European Archive
A few years back I dislocated my shoulder during a martial arts match, did not realize it, got up and continued the match, all the while I remember calmly thinking to myself "my right arm doesn't move. I wonder why"
I broke my finger as a kid and had exactly the same thought. "Huh, I guess my pinky just bends in front of my ring finger now. Weird!" I didn't feel a thing for another hour.
*Plot Twist:* Invisible Man turned out to be John Cena in his purest form.
YOU CANT SEE ME
Internet dorks: Abby from the last of us is too buff!! Woman can't have muscles like that!!
Me: is knocked unconscious by briefly looking at Laura's arms
Get well soon 💐
I think the issue is mainly with the uncanniness of her physique. Abby is just like really weird to look at. I don’t mind strong women but there is an uncanny valley vibe to abby’s proportions.
Then again I think it cause they might have modeled her more off of female strongwomen, and body builders like Donna Moree.
Rather than than athletes like Serena Williams or MMA fighter like Gina Carano. Who i’m used to seeing in the news.
JACOB
My dad had a similar reaction to yours when his finger got caught and crushed in a hydraulic (something) while at his job. Just calmly finished what he was doing, got in his vehicle, went to emergency and asked for assistance.
Adrenaline's one hell of a drug.
I had my hand take a ride on a pneumatic ram into a wire frame. Thanks to the angle the only thing that happened was some bruising on my hand and my left index nail being separated from the finger. Took it all the way to the doctor's and was fine. They even delayed seeing me because they didn't think it was that serious. The part where I started to lose it was when they went to put local anaesthetic in the finger to re-attach the nail. Because I was afraid of needles.
@@logosloki Losing your fingernail: perfectly fine, totally acceptable, should be expected, really.
Intentionally getting stabbed with a small metal sliver that delivers pain relieving medication: RED ALERT 🚨 RED ALERT 🚨PANIC! _PANIC!!!_
The human mind is wild.
In my, passing on second hand grains of salt, limited experience. When people start boxing they flail and panic. So yes a real fight, with an unskilled person, does look more like the kitchen one. But after even a tiny bit of training each punch in a boxing match (live or sparing) is deliberate calculated and responded too. So yes, the hallway fight is very much what a fight between two skilled people CAN look like.
My dad broke his neck a few years ago, he stood up, walked to the car, and told me my mum was driving him to A&E. try convincing an audience that happened
watching this video makes me want to fall on the floor in various fashions
It would be nice to see a movie that takes the most absurd aspects of real violence, pain and injury and slaps them together in a normal workday of some avarage person. A horror movie where the antagonist is not only invisible - but non-existent. It is just the risks we accept every day actualising.
That would be an actual meditation on violence - instead of creating a fictional baseline and ruleset that looks like we expect superheroes navigate through, it would only increase the frequency of the ruleset we live in, every day. With very little consideration about how fragile we are, even against the most common things we interact with every day.
This feels very buster Keaton/Charlie Chaplin esq. maybe hunt down some of their films. You might be happily surprised.
Fight club?
Or that one episode of spongebob where squidward breaks his entire body
It's super cool that you included footage of your own stunts/training. Defintely agree with your conclusion that fake sometimes gets you what you're looking for!
Jill Bearup sent me here. No, I don't live in England, so she didn't just yell out the window BUT she did leave a recommendation for this video on her community tab. I'd thank her right now, but most people in England are probably sleeping. My experience is similar to yours...except mine also includes racially (and otherwise) motivated real fights (card carrying Native American here). And then there was that one night five wolves mistook me for free-roaming kibble. (Spoiler Alert: I lived) I've choreographed fights including with weapons and done stunts (because after the wolves most other things are not so scary) and for fun with friends, did an impromptu fight with an invisible man in which I accidentally did a 360 mid air front somersault feet to feet. My plan was to pretend to be flipped and land on my back, but I somehow put too much energetic torque into it all. WAY cool video. Knowledgeable AND entertaining! Two thumbs way up!
You even provided us with the grains of salt we are to take everything you say with. Very thoughtful.
Great stuff as ever, Laura. I think what you talked about with the performer taking the hits and falls really highlights a big part of why I found this movie so interesting. It's the first (as far as I'm aware) Invisible Man movie that focuses on his victims. All the others he's the main character. The stunts in combination with Elizabeth Moss just killing it in general really bring that change into focus and it's cool as heck.
Oh man, I went to film school and we talked about SAG related rules they didnt tell us about all this stunt stuff at all. Thanks for the great video!
this is such an interesting video! for all i love disecting movies, horror movies in particular, i must admit that i don't think much about the work the actors do involving physical stunts. i've never even really thought about how they would wear pads, let alone hide pads before!
The "Stuntmen React" series by Corridor is good.
16:00 I feel like you’re too much of an expert for your own sense of enjoyment of the movie. I didn’t even notice the guards being arranged like that and was very excited in that scene
I miss my martial art classes so much too!! My family look at me funny when I moan about missing a good wrist lock. (Thank you for the video!)
The Nutcracker with a scene of a woman being strangled is a combination that I didn’t see coming but works weirdly well
"Why is he there???" killed me lol
I loooved this stunt-specific film analysis, and I’d love to see more like this!
Brief aside about your stunt work: Have you ever considered auditioning for Power Rangers? A woman who can do stunt work always has a huge leg up in that show, a lot of actors also go on to work in stunts.
I haven't watched Power Rangers in 25 years, but I would absolutely watch a series starring Laura Crone. Alas, I get the impression she has loftier goals.
Fascinating topic i'm so glad to learn more about. Have been so into movie and film youtube these days but finding a discussion of this piece of the process is awesome.
I know right? So glad that this type of content exists.
The plot holes in this movie are insane and honestly made it unenjoyable tbh
Back watching this again because it's just so fascinating to me. This is the sort of video that makes UA-cam almost worth it as a Thing That Exists.
Jill Bearup recommended this video, so I had to check it out. I definitely wasn't disappointed :D this was 27 minutes very well spent.
Welcome to the first non-video game video on our Razbuten voyage, don’t fret though, it’s definitely worthy of your watch
I broke my toe on a door frame, hopped about in pain for thirty seconds, then calmed down and got on with things. It took half an hour of the pain not subsiding, with people telling me “you can’t have broken it, we’d know”, before I took my sock off and went “hm, it’s not supposed to be sticking out that way.”
This was fantastic. I dont have much of a comment, but I found this dissection absolutely fascinating
I'm so glad Jill Bearup introduced me to your channel 💙
This is awesome, thank you, internet personality Laura Crone
i remember i used to get into arguments with my friend as to what constitutes as "realistic" when it comes to movies. usually it just means "something i didn't notice". or "it conformed to my view of reality. reality that is largely informed from seeing other movies" such as the sound of explosions or crashes or things in real life that don't happen as often. what an explosion, or window breaking "sounds like" to us is what the sound editor thinks a person thinks a window breaking sounds like XD
we argued over the bullet curving in the movie "Wanted". Like, obviously it's not possible ... and I would like to know why I just accepted at face value and my friend didn't. but i couldn't get him out of the rut of saying "cuz it's not realistic" like, obviously not! XD and I get that he's trying to say, without being able to find the words, that for some reason he wasn't willing or able to suspend disbelief for that (and apparently for many people, cuz that was a common complaint about that movie). And i can't get to his reason for that when he won't move past "it's not realistic" XD
I always get so excited when I see you posted 🙌🏼
honestly mood on weird reactions to injury and stuff- ive accidentally cut myself open many times, and my reaction was always like "Oh, wow, looks like im bleeding. That's odd."
Oh boy I have so many weird injury stories. But I think the most startling one for bystanders was the broken collar bone. I (age 5ish) had knocked my chair over while eating dinner and hit the wall sideways. My cousin started hollering for grandma, who came out to me still sitting on the floor under the chair. "I think I broke a bone" I tell her, and she says she thinks I'm exaggerating, because if I'd broken a bone I'd cry or something. She moves the chair, looks at my shoulder and the collar bone was very obviously broken under the skin.
So she calls my mom, and drives me to the hospital. Mom meets us in the parking lot and when I see her I try to wave, flinch because I used the broken one, and waved again with the other arm.
Other stories include: fell out of a moving car and was dragged by the seatbelt but somehow got no injuries. Broke my foot and didn't know for three days. The many times I've gotten an injury and didn't know it had broken skin until the blood itched (I bleed very slow).
I'm going to this movie on Saturday, going to be looking for all the stunts now! Super informative video, thanks 😊😊😊
This was interesting, thank you! I've included your video in our article about the movie
Loved the video!
This was the last film I saw in the theater before covid hit and its the first horror movie that actually scared me a few times. WE went for my friends birthday and I'm happy we did!!
Great video!! I'm so happy I'm not the only one making action filmmaking videos from a stunt performer's perspective anymore!! lol. woohoo
Really great video! :D
I never knew I wanted to learn about any of this! so interesting, I love it
This is such a fascinating topic. Thanks for making this video.
Very interesting video. Could you post some of your stage combat fight scenes?
Commenting for the algorithm.
Love your videos! Commenting for the algorithm.
this video ruined me. i can't watch anything without thinking about how much the stunts cost. i spent all of Elf wondering how the stunt man did a fall off a ladder and how well he was compensated.
Hmm...Having watched this with no understanding of the content of the movie, I was expecting the invisibility to be a metaphorical thing rather than a literal stealth suit. Something about how victims of domestic abuse can be willing to lie about the source of their injuries to a truly alarming degree, making the perpetrator invisible in the eyes of the law. Or maybe that's the premise and the stealth suit is to make it make sense in universe as well as in a metaphorical sense.
Either way, interesting video and excellent analysis.
“sitting with gusto” hahaha
I'm working with Heidi Moneymaker on my current gig, I'm gonna mention this video to her that namedrops her as the end all be all of today's stunt performers.
Loved the video! I just feel embarrassed it took me until the video was almost over for the grains of salt joke to click
My stories not nearly as serious as yours but I recently got some vaccinations and I burst out laughing both times I got stabbed with the needle. I have no idea why.
I haven't seen the movie but this is really interesting
You should watch it, it's fantastic
Fantastic content! Have some engagement!
U ever seen the original movie way better