In India hero beating villIian and villIian going so far with one punch make no sense 😒 That's why abroad films are good make sense and try to make it real.
No, the women didn't earn their way to their spot and usually didn't need much training or experience nor did they have to have any muscle tone to get the job while men do. Just look at the scrawny bint by the window just as it gets smashed.
Or the only other two cameras out the three that were used that day. #2 gets smashed to hell and the video is ruined. And the only other camera is operated by the person that states afterwards, "I'm ready whenever you are." I've seen this in cartoons several times.
So I know that stunt man was injured and that's terrible, but man does that ragdoll flip he does sell the fuck out of the scene. It's not worth the stuntmens safety but damn does it look cool
The worst thing a stunt person can do is get injured and not look good doing it. Because not only are you injured, the director's going to want you to do another take assuming you're able.
@@C4pt41nN3m0 ehhhh, yes and no. A stuntman's job is to be able to perform dangerous stunts safely and look cool doing it. Of course, safety is relative when getting punched is half your job, but a shot in a movie isn't worth an actual serious injury
I tell people about this scene all the time. The people behind the scenes created one of the greatest car chase scenes ever hands down. Just incredible.
imma say it again, there needs to be a category at all award shows for stunt work in all forms because this is damn art and science rolled perfectly into one
Fast five seems to be that prefect middle ground that most people enjoy. Not too ridiculous like the later movies, but a bit more action packed than the earlier ones. This scene, while still ridiculous, is much more fun to watch than a lot of the recent movies' action scenes
I'm so sad to see what they did to this franchise. The original F&F is one of my favorite films, despite its flaws. Now they're just dumb garbage, not unlike the Transformers movies.
Fun fact: All of the scenes where the chargers are pulling the vault were filmed in Puerto Rico, not Brazil. The sister of one of my friends played a pedestrian on the sidewalk as they passed by with the chargers and the vault towed behind them. They shut down some areas in San Juan city's metropolitan area to film them. The bridge was in Puerto Rico too.
@@ranwolf7650 It does. It's called "Puente Teodoro Moscoso" on a normal day that bridge has Puerto Rican and American flags throughout the length of the bridge on evenly spaced flagpoles.
@@tiagosantos5653 A lot of the movie was shot in Brazil, just not all of it. And some of the Brazil scenes featured actors and extras that were not Brazilian themselves.
Also other details that were in the movie and not in the stunt. Like "the driver had to jump out just at the right time." No, there was no driver when that crane threw the car over the side, that shot of Vin Diesel jumping out was cut in afterwards, lol. Or the scene of the car pushing the safe and then turning around wasn't really all done in one take like he was making it seem. I think the narrator of this video took it a little too literally when they said "everything was real" lol
@@TalkingHands308 haha yup, and when the top half of a car was sheered off he said the driver had to duck down. Uh, no, I'm pretty sure there was nobody in the car when that happened as that would've been way too unsafe. The guy narrating seems to be very naive
I just realized this movie turned 10 years old this year. I was 12 when I saw it in theaters, and to this day, it still remains my favorite movie in the F&F franchise.
Fast and Furious films are films I can never hate. Yeah they’re bombastic and ridiculous but they know that and so they never take themselves seriously. I appreciate that.
@@barlo90 You're entitled to your opinion, but if that's your opinion of all the films, you clearly shouldn't watch movies as many of them were not "shit". Vehicles, especially exotic custom vehicles is a hobby and lifestyle for many, these movies just brought to life what many loved to do with them, which is race. Hence the high adrenaline or if you will octane fueled crazy scenes.
Now see, this is a good use of CGI. There's absolutely no meaning in putting so many people's lives at risk for something that would look almost indistinguishable if you were to utilize CGI. No amount of sloppy ass-tonging from wannabe film buffs who think CGI is the work of Satan is worth that. At the same time, it would look a bit unbelievable if you insisted on 100% practical but chose to not have any people in the scene due to safety. CGI lets you reach that middle ground.
Did you watch this video? Not 100% real. The vault was fake in multiple parts. Some parts didn’t even use the vault, but a truck that had the front of the vault.
Fast 5 is my first and favorite from The Fast and The Furious franchise. Knowing that the stunt they do on Fast 5 is real makes me love this movie even more
Erm tbh it's the least believable lol. Literally taking a turn and the vault start to barrel roll and the 2 cable start to twist together. Next scene they are AUTOmagically parallel & untwisted
2 and 5 are my favourites, all for their unexpected, amazing and yet believable scenes at the climax of the films. 2 Fast 2 Furious being the scene of the insane gathering of street racers pouring out of that massive garage. Both scenes always put a smile on my face. Just... wow.
For those who don't know, Tom Cruise did that (8:31) stunt on his own and even broke his ankle making that jump. That "ankle-breaking" shot is the one that they took for the final cut of the film!!!
Ok, but are you really not gonna talk about how the whole scene was filmed in Puerto Rico, and they had to change all the signs from Spanish to Portuguese?
@@ChickenJoe12 A) The video was about how real the vault scene was, and at first he makes it sound like it was authentically filmed in Brasil. Also, translating signs and putting them up is a show of how much effort is put into the scene. B) Are you really asking what the film location has to do with the scene? "i d0Nt gET h0W tHE PlACe wHEre tHEy ReC0rDed a sCENe hAs t0 d0 wITh tHat ScENe"
@@jjOnceAgain the place where they recorded the scene actually means nothing in movies, do you know how many times a movie or tv show has filmed in an easier location making it seem like another ? But ok go type more mixed cap words
@@ChickenJoe12 It's not hard to see how the location has something to do with the point. The video is about how much effort goes into making the scene so real and believeable; which, spoilers, was the purpose of spending thousamds changing a bunch of signs to a different language. It shows how much effort they spent to make it feel like it's actually filmed in Brazil. They chose a place with climate and look similar to Brazil, and changed the signs from Spanish to Portuguese. If you can't see what that has to do with the effort to make this scene believeable instead of CGI'ing everything and recording in the streets of LA, then you have a very smooth brain
It was so real, that no matter how many times the vault rolled over, the steel cables kept managing to not become twisted together, or at least when they did twist, they untwisted again despite the vault not rolling in the other direction 🤔
Yeah. There was a stunt driver in the car, and the cable went through the car. Just not the same car or at the same moment. The video has many other moments like these where he believes the editing too much to try to hype it up more when it really isn't needed.
7:05 In the inside view there is a person, but the chain is not atached to something solid so there is no risk, and the next scene where the roof is cut (it was pre-cut, that's why seats hang over the cutting height), you see a remote controlled vehicle. 4:58 Also here, even if it had gone the worst possible way, that scene had near no risk at all, the vault was stationary and the cop cars were remote controled. RC vehicles are quite popular on films, specially on this franchise where they started using them as soon as in the second film 2F2F, for Suki's bridge jump.
@@YOEL_44 Thank you for the explanation. I was sure the narrator had to be wrong there, the stakes were far too high for them not to use remote controlled cars in that scene.
The scene where the vault's being dragged wasn't actually shot in Brazil, but the fact that they even included the "Oi" phone booths (the famous "big ear") is so cool. Such attention to detail.
It truly is one of the greatest action scenes in history. Not just that it was almost all practical, but that many people were in extreme danger. I can't believe they allowed extras to run around the building as the vault destroyed it. And I really cannot believe an actual person was in the cop car on the bridge and actually had to duck under the wire to avoid being decapitated. That is insanity. I've seen Fast Five probably 6 or 7 times and the sequence never gets old. I love the whole series. It has so many different atmosphere's and even genres. From pure street race/car culture in the beginning to cheesy 80's drug film to the higher quality heist films later on. 5 is probably the best. Followed by 6 and 7. 8 was not my favorite. It was a dip in quality and suffered greatly from Paul being gone. Looking forward to seeing how 9 turned out. It's also amazing how the series revived itself. They did well with the 1st, nothing special but enjoyable. Then 2 got pretty bad and Tokyo Drift is just awful in my opinion. Then in 4 they finally started to right the ship, perfected it in 5 and grew it from there.
4:58 Even if it had gone the worst possible way, that scene had near no risk at all, the vault was stationary and the cop cars were remote controled. 7:05 Again, in the inside view there is a person, but the chain is not atached to something solid so there is no risk, and the next scene where the roof is cut (it was pre-cut, that's why seats hang over the cutting height), you see a remote controlled vehicle again. RC vehicles are quite popular on films, specially on this franchise where they started using them as soon as in the second film 2F2F, for Suki's bridge jump. Also, F&F was about the undercover agent Brian, the fact that this one is about Dom's greed, makes it disconnected from the original idea, that's why most hardcore F&F fans don't trully respect anything after the 4th one
To match the time taken to get it moving assuming no friction it would take a ridiculous amount more power than a pair of chargers has. 10ton safe empty. Chargers aren't gonna tow a 5ton trailer an accelerate at the speeds depicted and trailers have wheel, not boxed in by concrete and then dragged on the road.
earlier scenes the whole crew practiced and found a suitable car to beat the security cameras. they also had a decoy safe. it would make totals sense for dom and brian to have practiced extensively to actually learn how to drive towing it. the fact so much of it was practical effects basically proves that. this is easily one of the the all time great action scenes and and still pretty believable narratively.
OMG I remember watching this in the theatres and I knew the vault was moving too smoothly at times but couldn't figure out how or why. Makes sense now. Still love that whole sequence!
Absolutely! No other action is that over the top ridiculous while still managing to look like it could be real. Like, we all know a real safe would be to heavy to be dragged around by two cars, but I guess we'd all agree that if it was possible, this is what it would look like!
This is incredible. An unforseen side effect of the proliferation of CGI is that many people (myself included) just assume that crazy stunts like this are all done on a computer. This team deserves alot more recognition.
@@whirlwind872 Honestly, if any car could haul a bank vault, it would be a Charger. Big displacement engines and a car with a lot of weight to counteract the movement of the vault, it would be way better than the typical small engine, light, Fast and Furious kind of car.
@@thomaspanditfan2435 The Demon could probably also do it pretty well. Part of what I'm pointing out is that cars have strengths and weaknesses based on their characteristics. For quite a while the world has focused only on "fuel economy", and "handling" and somehow ignored the drawbacks to both of those strengths, namely, the car is usually light and has a small, highly over-engineered motor and is slower in a straight line. Comments sections are full of people who overlook the strengths of cars like Chargers, Challengers. etc., which just so happen to be very useful if one needs to do something like this stunt.
This scene was so incredibly ridiculous that I never in a million years would’ve guessed it was real. I thought this was them jumping the shark but damn apparently that shit is possible. Insane.
Hands down the stupidest scene in any action movie ever... I know that action movies must not priorities to be realistic, but this scene is so far from any realism that is absurd. I admire the effort of the stunt actors, the special effect designers and so on, but the idea itself is retarded.
4:58 Even if it had gone the worst possible way, that scene had near no risk at all, the vault was stationary and the cop cars were remote controled. 7:05 Again, in the inside view there is a person, but the chain is not atached to something solid so there is no risk, and the next scene where the roof is cut (it was pre-cut, that's why seats hang over the cutting height), you see a remote controlled vehicle again. RC vehicles are quite popular on films, specially on this franchise where they started using them as soon as in the second film 2F2F, for Suki's bridge jump.
@@DerDudelino Not saying otherwise, but the dude in the video was trying to imply that there was people in the car in that moment, and appart from nutty, is also wrong
Also the one at 7 mins where he's like "not even an inch" overhyping the 180. It's not a hard move to pull out. The vault has no play on the physics as the cable isn't fully extended when the charger hits the brakes and the vault is moving in a straight line so it's just the driver having to make a simple handbrake turn at 20-40 mph to get out of the way and has more than enough room with 3 lanes to not run into the opposite wall.
Amazing the behind the scenes preparation for these incredible stunts. As over the top these stunts seem to be, they really look great on screen. Congrats to the F and F stunt team. I keep watching these films to see what they do next to top it.
The stunt work on this movie was definitely amazing -b ut there was also a fair amount of CG involved in these shots.. for various reasons. They had different version of the vault for different purposes. Most of the times you see them pull the vault through the city it was the "drivable version" with a driver inside, looking out a small grid window. The pulling cables were much thicker and were later in postproduction painted out and replaced by the shiny cg-wires we see. Another version of the vault had wheels under it as it would otherwise scratch up the whole road. Those wheels were also removed in post and a section added to remove the gap. Sure, they crashed that vault into that building, but there were never people inside. It was a double take and composed together, adding effects. A lot of savety measures on set that were set up like barriers, extra cables and so on were removed later. So of course, many things were done "for real", but that does not mean that someone pulled a real vault thru the Streets of Rio.. oh btw, thses scenes were not filmed in Rio either. But all of that does not take away from the fact that the scenes were well choreographed, planned, and executed with a huge amount of amazing people. The result is an emersive action movie that is just as fun to watch as it was to make. The fact they shot it "In Camera" instead of overly using CG is why it looks so good. Source? I was part of the vfx team and worked on some of the shown scenes doing paint work and set extensions.
@@Undomaranel Language is descriptive, not prescriptive. Therefore, dumb means what people use it to mean, not what a dictionary says it means (and people have colloquially used dumb as a synonym for stupid for decades). When someone says the phrase, “dumb action movie”, you know that they’re talking about Fast and Furious, not a Buster Keaton movie.
This is one of the best parts in an action movie, however the camera work actually makes it really difficult to tell what is going on. Takes away from the awe of the whole scene
@@RP-16 there's only one unlogical scene when they were attemting to go into space with junkyard built shuttle but gotta admit overall the movie was great. Better than Hobbs and Shaw
7:07, this is where you lost me xD "One car gets completely cut in half by the tethering cable, that car had a real person innit who had to make shure they ducked the exact right second or else he would turn out just like the car did." Cant be real, wtf
From Puerto Rico here, alot of scenes in the movie were definetely recorded there. my dad and i would ocasionally show up to the recording, usually distant as we werent allowed to go up close due to the fact we would show up uninvited but a small island has alot of people knowing eachother so word got around when and where filming was happening. We just showed up because we thought it was cool, and my father even ended up being one of the pedestrians in this scene but i don't think his apperance made the final cut (or was just simply offscreen, i wasn't there too so he could've been lying to me also) I also learned Puerto Rico has favela looking places when this movie was being recorded, something i never knew due to being from the main urban area (Toa Alta). Still, one of the most memorable times of my childhood.
Thanks for highlighting this all! I genuinely thought most of this had to be CGI...but I'm now pleasantly surprised and will enjoy watching the film again knowing all the hard work that went in!
I remember seeing this in theaters. To this day, this scene is all I remember from the film. It stood out to me for all the reasons talked about in this video. I remember thinking back and forth that this wasn’t possible, or is it? It didn’t look like cgi, but I kept trying to convince myself it was because I just couldn’t believe it. I honestly didn’t know for sure until this video today. Wild! What a feat!!
It’s crazy that stunt people don’t have their own category at the Oscars, they undoubtedly deserve it!
The oscars probably dont want to raise awareness about risks like this
@Minecraft Penguins perhaps
Factsss
@Minecraft Penguins ah yes the Oscar plaque with controversy, will be a good idea to add a dangerous stunt work Category
Oscars are trash. They deserve better than the Oscars.
The scariest part is the person that had to duck to legitimately avoid getting their head removed 😬
✔
it's simple. Don't fuck up
Ya that’s crazy timing
fr!!
big balls
props to all the stunt people for giving us this alongside countless other masterpieces in cinema!
In India hero beating villIian and villIian going so far with one punch make no sense 😒
That's why abroad films are good make sense and try to make it real.
lol masterpiece
You think it's Masterpiece? Lol
No, the women didn't earn their way to their spot and usually didn't need much training or experience nor did they have to have any muscle tone to get the job while men do. Just look at the scrawny bint by the window just as it gets smashed.
@@NightMotorcyclist cope
“hey guys, i forgot to hit record, let’s do it again”
Underrated😂
@@ramia4920 no
your profile picture matches your comment lmao
Or the only other two cameras out the three that were used that day. #2 gets smashed to hell and the video is ruined. And the only other camera is operated by the person that states afterwards, "I'm ready whenever you are." I've seen this in cartoons several times.
@@arushs121 yes
So I know that stunt man was injured and that's terrible, but man does that ragdoll flip he does sell the fuck out of the scene. It's not worth the stuntmens safety but damn does it look cool
The worst thing a stunt person can do is get injured and not look good doing it. Because not only are you injured, the director's going to want you to do another take assuming you're able.
@@C4pt41nN3m0 ehhhh, yes and no. A stuntman's job is to be able to perform dangerous stunts safely and look cool doing it. Of course, safety is relative when getting punched is half your job, but a shot in a movie isn't worth an actual serious injury
It's kind of an unspoken courtesy to use the take if a stuntman gets hurt doing it. (If it's usable of course)
@@fangsabre I keep thinking of Gibby's stunt actor who broke all of his ribs for a children's television show
@@robbiemcneish4459 whats the story behind that
I tell people about this scene all the time. The people behind the scenes created one of the greatest car chase scenes ever hands down. Just incredible.
imma say it again, there needs to be a category at all award shows for stunt work in all forms because this is damn art and science rolled perfectly into one
… rolled… nice
@@heisgreaterthani6085 hehehe, didn't even notice that
too bad awards shows are all a sham. otherwise yes.
There is the Taurus stunt awards but I’m not sure if they get televised or not
If there was people would compete to do crazier riskier stunts to win the award and people will definitely get injured
This was the last good F&F movie for me
lol a verified with no likes
It’s the best one in the series, it would be hard to top it for the remaining movies
I like all the F&F movies for ridiculous they are. If they would be similar to real life it would be straight up boring
The first 8 movies were really good imo, not sure about 9 yet
For me it's the last canon one
Fast five seems to be that prefect middle ground that most people enjoy. Not too ridiculous like the later movies, but a bit more action packed than the earlier ones. This scene, while still ridiculous, is much more fun to watch than a lot of the recent movies' action scenes
The fast & furious franchise from 5/6 or so onwards are basically comic book superhero movies, but without marvel or DC.
I'm so sad to see what they did to this franchise. The original F&F is one of my favorite films, despite its flaws. Now they're just dumb garbage, not unlike the Transformers movies.
fast five was one of the perfect reboot movies i can remember, and yes i know there is fast and furious 4, but fast 5 is the one that delivered.
@@Ben-Rogue that’s a weird take that - see the box office numbers - is very much a minority view.
They want a notch higher than prequels, now they a re absurd
One of the best scenes in the whole franchise. no doubt.
@@buser87 technically it’s not nonsense because it’s all real
@@buser87 the whole stunt is practically real with no cgi dumbass
Don't leave town ...
Terrible troll
@@buser87 its legit stunts tho, so technically it is semi possible.
Fun fact: All of the scenes where the chargers are pulling the vault were filmed in Puerto Rico, not Brazil. The sister of one of my friends played a pedestrian on the sidewalk as they passed by with the chargers and the vault towed behind them. They shut down some areas in San Juan city's metropolitan area to film them. The bridge was in Puerto Rico too.
Wow As long as the Latin American imagery is intact
The bridge leads to San Juan airport iirc
@@ranwolf7650 It does. It's called "Puente Teodoro Moscoso" on a normal day that bridge has Puerto Rican and American flags throughout the length of the bridge on evenly spaced flagpoles.
I knew the movie wasn't shot here in brazil when I heard the accent of the brazilian support characters.
@@tiagosantos5653 A lot of the movie was shot in Brazil, just not all of it. And some of the Brazil scenes featured actors and extras that were not Brazilian themselves.
To be clear, they were dragging a real prop, a real vault would have been much heavier
Thank you. He keeps saying "real" vault as if it's an actual bank safe that they're towing. Of course it's a much lighter prop.
Ya don't say?
Also other details that were in the movie and not in the stunt. Like "the driver had to jump out just at the right time." No, there was no driver when that crane threw the car over the side, that shot of Vin Diesel jumping out was cut in afterwards, lol. Or the scene of the car pushing the safe and then turning around wasn't really all done in one take like he was making it seem. I think the narrator of this video took it a little too literally when they said "everything was real" lol
@@TalkingHands308 haha yup, and when the top half of a car was sheered off he said the driver had to duck down. Uh, no, I'm pretty sure there was nobody in the car when that happened as that would've been way too unsafe. The guy narrating seems to be very naive
NAH it was a REAL vault made out of titanium, watch the stunt director talk bout this scene
Fast 5: "Keep it real"
Fast 6-9: Say what!?
Pretty sure they still do a lot of practical stunts. They do whatever practical they can do. Even in the building jump scene there were practical.
9 was actualy good. Better than f8. Backstory of dom and his brother which is great topic
@@aamikkalinin6385 fr. It has a much lower rating, but it was sooooo much better. And I like f8
@@biffmcspandex7748 I confused f8 with Hobbs and Shaw. I love f8
Nice.
Stunt coordinators are absolutely insane
Stunt men are more insane. Can you imagine having to duck on cue to not get your head sliced off by a cable with 4 tons of stress on it?
@@DRida64 ikr, I can’t imagine my life could end if I don’t duck on cue.
I think I would be more stressed as the stunt coordinator. Knowing that if you screw up your planning, people die. That would be very stressful.
I just realized this movie turned 10 years old this year. I was 12 when I saw it in theaters, and to this day, it still remains my favorite movie in the F&F franchise.
Fast and Furious films are films I can never hate. Yeah they’re bombastic and ridiculous but they know that and so they never take themselves seriously. I appreciate that.
they have been shit from day
They’re just plain fun. Some people take them too seriously.
@@barlo90you forgot the 1.. seems your intelligence has been shit since day 1.
@@barlo90 You're entitled to your opinion, but if that's your opinion of all the films, you clearly shouldn't watch movies as many of them were not "shit". Vehicles, especially exotic custom vehicles is a hobby and lifestyle for many, these movies just brought to life what many loved to do with them, which is race. Hence the high adrenaline or if you will octane fueled crazy scenes.
like Cosmonaut Variety Hour said, They are literally live action anime at his point
"...so Ludacris."
Ha, I get it.
I had a good chuckle at that one too.
Holy fuck, that scene was actually practical effects this whole time? I'm legitimately blown away.
This scene was epic... I didn't realize how much of it was actually "real" but it damn sure came through on screen. Amazing work.
When movie came out this stunt made news for being real. CGI was applied to when you see people but vault and driving 100% real
Now see, this is a good use of CGI. There's absolutely no meaning in putting so many people's lives at risk for something that would look almost indistinguishable if you were to utilize CGI. No amount of sloppy ass-tonging from wannabe film buffs who think CGI is the work of Satan is worth that. At the same time, it would look a bit unbelievable if you insisted on 100% practical but chose to not have any people in the scene due to safety. CGI lets you reach that middle ground.
@@fireaza very well put. CGI and practical doing what they can together to make stuff happen is awesome to see ^^
Even after watching this video my brain still thinks it's CGI because it's just so bizarre.
Did you watch this video? Not 100% real. The vault was fake in multiple parts. Some parts didn’t even use the vault, but a truck that had the front of the vault.
Fast 5 is my first and favorite from The Fast and The Furious franchise. Knowing that the stunt they do on Fast 5 is real makes me love this movie even more
The vault scene is way more believable than anything they are doing now.
the entire thing went in at instant downhill after Brian was gone
@@mercamia fsx
@@mercamia faxxxx**
Didn't they actually flip a truck?
Erm tbh it's the least believable lol.
Literally taking a turn and the vault start to barrel roll and the 2 cable start to twist together. Next scene they are AUTOmagically parallel & untwisted
2 and 5 are my favourites, all for their unexpected, amazing and yet believable scenes at the climax of the films. 2 Fast 2 Furious being the scene of the insane gathering of street racers pouring out of that massive garage. Both scenes always put a smile on my face. Just... wow.
Ok, that's absolutely insane
It was time to get paid
For those who don't know, Tom Cruise did that (8:31) stunt on his own and even broke his ankle making that jump. That "ankle-breaking" shot is the one that they took for the final cut of the film!!!
jackie chan : "hold my beer"
@@SashaDanisha-g2z The greatest! 🙌🙏
Ok, but are you really not gonna talk about how the whole scene was filmed in Puerto Rico, and they had to change all the signs from Spanish to Portuguese?
What does that have to do with stuntwork.. Or the vault scene?
@@ChickenJoe12 A) The video was about how real the vault scene was, and at first he makes it sound like it was authentically filmed in Brasil. Also, translating signs and putting them up is a show of how much effort is put into the scene.
B) Are you really asking what the film location has to do with the scene? "i d0Nt gET h0W tHE PlACe wHEre tHEy ReC0rDed a sCENe hAs t0 d0 wITh tHat ScENe"
@@jjOnceAgain the place where they recorded the scene actually means nothing in movies, do you know how many times a movie or tv show has filmed in an easier location making it seem like another ? But ok go type more mixed cap words
@@ChickenJoe12 It's not hard to see how the location has something to do with the point. The video is about how much effort goes into making the scene so real and believeable; which, spoilers, was the purpose of spending thousamds changing a bunch of signs to a different language.
It shows how much effort they spent to make it feel like it's actually filmed in Brazil. They chose a place with climate and look similar to Brazil, and changed the signs from Spanish to Portuguese.
If you can't see what that has to do with the effort to make this scene believeable instead of CGI'ing everything and recording in the streets of LA, then you have a very smooth brain
Not to mention all the spanish speaking in Brazil... So little attention to detail, not even detail, what should be common sense
It was so real, that no matter how many times the vault rolled over, the steel cables kept managing to not become twisted together, or at least when they did twist, they untwisted again despite the vault not rolling in the other direction 🤔
have you never heard about suspension of disbelief?
That's cause the cables were treated with a tangle free deep nurisning formula before hand.
7:05 there is absolutely no way a person would be in that car when the cable went through it
Yeah I do not believe that one at all
I was thinking the same thing. He'd be decapitated more than likely
Yeah. There was a stunt driver in the car, and the cable went through the car. Just not the same car or at the same moment. The video has many other moments like these where he believes the editing too much to try to hype it up more when it really isn't needed.
7:05 In the inside view there is a person, but the chain is not atached to something solid so there is no risk, and the next scene where the roof is cut (it was pre-cut, that's why seats hang over the cutting height), you see a remote controlled vehicle.
4:58 Also here, even if it had gone the worst possible way, that scene had near no risk at all, the vault was stationary and the cop cars were remote controled.
RC vehicles are quite popular on films, specially on this franchise where they started using them as soon as in the second film 2F2F, for Suki's bridge jump.
@@YOEL_44 Thank you for the explanation. I was sure the narrator had to be wrong there, the stakes were far too high for them not to use remote controlled cars in that scene.
I'm an awe of the fact that they actually filmed all of that and how exact they had to be for those stunts.
Maybe the real stunt was the friends we made along the way
lol
The scene where the vault's being dragged wasn't actually shot in Brazil, but the fact that they even included the "Oi" phone booths (the famous "big ear") is so cool. Such attention to detail.
Corridor crew- Stuntmen react to bad and great Hollywood driving. You’re welcome. If you’ve ever seen that you’d have known this was real!
wait they talked about this on corridor?!
@@ScorchedEclipse they actually talked about on 3 separate react videos
Respect to the unkillable "CAMERAMAN"
It truly is one of the greatest action scenes in history. Not just that it was almost all practical, but that many people were in extreme danger. I can't believe they allowed extras to run around the building as the vault destroyed it. And I really cannot believe an actual person was in the cop car on the bridge and actually had to duck under the wire to avoid being decapitated. That is insanity. I've seen Fast Five probably 6 or 7 times and the sequence never gets old.
I love the whole series. It has so many different atmosphere's and even genres. From pure street race/car culture in the beginning to cheesy 80's drug film to the higher quality heist films later on. 5 is probably the best. Followed by 6 and 7. 8 was not my favorite. It was a dip in quality and suffered greatly from Paul being gone. Looking forward to seeing how 9 turned out. It's also amazing how the series revived itself. They did well with the 1st, nothing special but enjoyable. Then 2 got pretty bad and Tokyo Drift is just awful in my opinion. Then in 4 they finally started to right the ship, perfected it in 5 and grew it from there.
4:58 Even if it had gone the worst possible way, that scene had near no risk at all, the vault was stationary and the cop cars were remote controled.
7:05 Again, in the inside view there is a person, but the chain is not atached to something solid so there is no risk, and the next scene where the roof is cut (it was pre-cut, that's why seats hang over the cutting height), you see a remote controlled vehicle again.
RC vehicles are quite popular on films, specially on this franchise where they started using them as soon as in the second film 2F2F, for Suki's bridge jump.
Also, F&F was about the undercover agent Brian, the fact that this one is about Dom's greed, makes it disconnected from the original idea, that's why most hardcore F&F fans don't trully respect anything after the 4th one
I’m glad they used the shot of the stuntman actually hurting himself and not redoing it with another stuntman. It’s respectful.
Holy crap, that is so dangerously amazing.
I jsut love how positive and passionate you are when talking about something like this.
I think I remember CinemaSins saying there is no way two Chargers would be able to pull that vault out of the wall
I mean, he's not wrong, right? It wasn't a real vault. A real vault is definitely much heavier.
To match the time taken to get it moving assuming no friction it would take a ridiculous amount more power than a pair of chargers has. 10ton safe empty. Chargers aren't gonna tow a 5ton trailer an accelerate at the speeds depicted and trailers have wheel, not boxed in by concrete and then dragged on the road.
Too heavy, it's unrealistic
@@tompurcell8825 10 tons? That vault would've weighed like 70 tons if it was real and not a prop.
Fast Five was the peak of the franchise
Let’s gooo another video! Thank you Nerdstalgic!
Fast 5 was the peak of fast and furious.
"shifting back into drive."
Oh no
Must be a non car guy
Yeah... That bugged me.
earlier scenes the whole crew practiced and found a suitable car to beat the security cameras. they also had a decoy safe. it would make totals sense for dom and brian to have practiced extensively to actually learn how to drive towing it. the fact so much of it was practical effects basically proves that. this is easily one of the the all time great action scenes and and still pretty believable narratively.
OMG I remember watching this in the theatres and I knew the vault was moving too smoothly at times but couldn't figure out how or why. Makes sense now. Still love that whole sequence!
The greatest Dodge commercial ever
Man San Juan Puerto Rico was destroy for this scene and I love we had a part in it XD
And now we’re here with Fast 9 where Magnets are like Magic.
Lol, i remember watching this movie and thinking: Yeah that's not real.
People often forget how amazing (and how much work) practical effects are.
Fast Five: "keep it real"
Fast nine: *go to space with a fiero*
Hats off with loads of respect to all the stunt coordinators, stunt women/men for the unbelievable work they do that goes so unappreciated. Thank you.
say what ever you want about the F&F franchise, but this scene is one of the most bad ass in modern cinema, period.
Absolutely!
No other action is that over the top ridiculous while still managing to look like it could be real.
Like, we all know a real safe would be to heavy to be dragged around by two cars, but I guess we'd all agree that if it was possible, this is what it would look like!
Imagine if they didn't press the record button
well that ain't gonna change my mind into liking fast and furious, the stuns is really impressive tho
Tsundere snob
There is but one issue: The following ones have some equally crazy stunts, but those are sometimes if not even often not practically done.
@@blazethunder5525 bashing someone's opinion is pretty snobbish no?
@@Grim_Concept he sounds like someone who bash other for liking blockbuster movie
@@blazethunder5525 fast 5 was blockbuste r?
Heh. I misssed that
This is incredible. An unforseen side effect of the proliferation of CGI is that many people (myself included) just assume that crazy stunts like this are all done on a computer. This team deserves alot more recognition.
It’s funny how he shifts into his ‘2nd’ Reverse Gear though, when backing upp
Stunts/body doubles should win an Oscar award when it comes to Best Action sequence.
3-4 months of practicing this..lol, I genuinely would like to know how many transmissions they went through in those Chargers
I don't know much about cars, but man do those chargers look ill-suited to towing a bank vault....
@@whirlwind872 Honestly, if any car could haul a bank vault, it would be a Charger. Big displacement engines and a car with a lot of weight to counteract the movement of the vault, it would be way better than the typical small engine, light, Fast and Furious kind of car.
Probably resold as a "lightly used movie car"
@@matthewmosier8439 a demon?
@@thomaspanditfan2435 The Demon could probably also do it pretty well. Part of what I'm pointing out is that cars have strengths and weaknesses based on their characteristics. For quite a while the world has focused only on "fuel economy", and "handling" and somehow ignored the drawbacks to both of those strengths, namely, the car is usually light and has a small, highly over-engineered motor and is slower in a straight line. Comments sections are full of people who overlook the strengths of cars like Chargers, Challengers. etc., which just so happen to be very useful if one needs to do something like this stunt.
The last paragraph about watching movies is truly deep and awesome
This scene was so incredibly ridiculous that I never in a million years would’ve guessed it was real. I thought this was them jumping the shark but damn apparently that shit is possible. Insane.
This scene deserves mention as one of the greatest action sequences in film history. The stakes, the thrills, the fun were all dialed up to 11.
Hands down the stupidest scene in any action movie ever... I know that action movies must not priorities to be realistic, but this scene is so far from any realism that is absurd. I admire the effort of the stunt actors, the special effect designers and so on, but the idea itself is retarded.
Everyone:fAsT N fUrIoUs Is fAkE
Fast and furious: Its not too late to take that back
I don't believe at all that the stunt man had to duck under the cable to avoid being decapitated. That's unnecessarily reckless.
Fast five really took Chargers to another level. Now everyone wants/has one
Nobody wants those low-tier chryslers, get real.
what rezneba said
4:58 Even if it had gone the worst possible way, that scene had near no risk at all, the vault was stationary and the cop cars were remote controled.
7:05 Again, in the inside view there is a person, but the chain is not atached to something solid so there is no risk, and the next scene where the roof is cut (it was pre-cut, that's why seats hang over the cutting height), you see a remote controlled vehicle again.
RC vehicles are quite popular on films, specially on this franchise where they started using them as soon as in the second film 2F2F, for Suki's bridge jump.
Yeah, but you could do all of this fairly easily with CGI. The fact they put in this much work to do it real demands respect.
@@DerDudelino Not saying otherwise, but the dude in the video was trying to imply that there was people in the car in that moment, and appart from nutty, is also wrong
Also the one at 7 mins where he's like "not even an inch" overhyping the 180. It's not a hard move to pull out. The vault has no play on the physics as the cable isn't fully extended when the charger hits the brakes and the vault is moving in a straight line so it's just the driver having to make a simple handbrake turn at 20-40 mph to get out of the way and has more than enough room with 3 lanes to not run into the opposite wall.
Amazing the behind the scenes preparation for these incredible stunts. As over the top these stunts seem to be, they really look great on screen. Congrats to the F and F stunt team. I keep watching these films to see what they do next to top it.
The stunt work on this movie was definitely amazing -b ut there was also a fair amount of CG involved in these shots.. for various reasons.
They had different version of the vault for different purposes.
Most of the times you see them pull the vault through the city it was the "drivable version" with a driver inside, looking out a small grid window. The pulling cables were much thicker and were later in postproduction painted out and replaced by the shiny cg-wires we see.
Another version of the vault had wheels under it as it would otherwise scratch up the whole road. Those wheels were also removed in post and a section added to remove the gap.
Sure, they crashed that vault into that building, but there were never people inside. It was a double take and composed together, adding effects.
A lot of savety measures on set that were set up like barriers, extra cables and so on were removed later.
So of course, many things were done "for real", but that does not mean that someone pulled a real vault thru the Streets of Rio.. oh btw, thses scenes were not filmed in Rio either.
But all of that does not take away from the fact that the scenes were well choreographed, planned, and executed with a huge amount of amazing people. The result is an emersive action movie that is just as fun to watch as it was to make. The fact they shot it "In Camera" instead of overly using CG is why it looks so good.
Source? I was part of the vfx team and worked on some of the shown scenes doing paint work and set extensions.
Thank you. I'm pretty sure that that was shot in Hato Rey (a part of the San Juan pueblo in Puerto Rico). San Juan is the capital of Puerto Rico.
Practical Stunt technology is so advanced that people can no longer distinguish it from CGI.
If you watch Corridor, you did know :))
Yessir!
thats y fast five is my fav f&f movie
this is pinnacle F&F, after that it went a little too over the top. and then we have 7 and beyond
gotta love how they flew outta space with a god damn car
This stunt encapsulates what I love about Fast and Furious. If you’re going to make a big, dumb blockbuster make a BIG, DUMB blockbuster😂
A couple of them are little too dumb lol
@@MrGrimlocke Dumb means silent, you can't speak. _Show don't tell._ Stupid means stupid XD
@@Undomaranel Language is descriptive, not prescriptive. Therefore, dumb means what people use it to mean, not what a dictionary says it means (and people have colloquially used dumb as a synonym for stupid for decades). When someone says the phrase, “dumb action movie”, you know that they’re talking about Fast and Furious, not a Buster Keaton movie.
This universe has a cartoon series on netflix that is just as over the top as fast and the furious
@@seankeller1560 it's not dumb thou
That’s why it was the best one
I've always loved this scene and thought this looks so good it could be real. Lmao. Now I know it is
Bruh that safe scene I just indescribably good
Fast 5 was the last good ol’ fashion fast and furious movie
This was very interesting , u earned a sub. Shame they don’t still do real stunts with this level of dedication.
This is one of the best parts in an action movie, however the camera work actually makes it really difficult to tell what is going on. Takes away from the awe of the whole scene
That's FF for you. they have like 30 cuts per second.
This Vid made me See Fast 5 again!
In that exact scene with Tom Cruise he ended up just missing the jump and broke his foot i think it was
I watch that movie like 7 years ago and i still cant forget how cool that chase was
“If we keep it real”
Ahh yes because the new fast films keep it real.
Pretty sure they still do a lot of practical stunts. They do whatever practical they can do. Even in the building jump scene there were practical.
@@thomaspanditfan2435 I saw F9 and this one throws all logic out the window. They’re basically super hero’s now.
@@RP-16 there's only one unlogical scene when they were attemting to go into space with junkyard built shuttle but gotta admit overall the movie was great. Better than Hobbs and Shaw
@@aamikkalinin6385 I guess it’s logical when you have family
Incredible!!! This was my favorite of the franchise and now knowing this sequence was REAL practical effects and not just 2 tons of CGI?! 😊
Correction- Stunt drivers Pulled off the greatest real stunt in movie history.
I loved this movie so much
Lol “shift back into drive”
My guy
It’s a manual
There is no drive
(Great video tho!!! Subbed ❤️)
LMAOOOOO
Stunt people deserves more recognition
7:07, this is where you lost me xD "One car gets completely cut in half by the tethering cable, that car had a real person innit who had to make shure they ducked the exact right second or else he would turn out just like the car did." Cant be real, wtf
Yeah, when he said this I knew it was a bullshit video
@@fishrsa9046 Real. I worked on the sequence.
@@tonyliberatore7749 yeah and I was the driver of the cop car
I remember seeing this in cinema and everyone clapped after this sequence. Truly legendary.
Fast five is probably the last one of the series i enjoyed
tbh I enjoyed all of them, didn't like anything past 5 but they were enjoyable. Aside from Hobs and Shaw cuz fuck that movie( haven't seen f9)
Imagine one of these actors being your driver.
Dangerous but confident.
Only hollywood can do a stunt in real life and then make it look totally ridiculous and fake in the movie.
One of the last sensible fast and furious movies. 👍👍👍👍👍
And there's Tom cruise who is doing insane stunts without CGI
Fast Five is my favourite of the franchise
This scene was actually filmed in Puerto Rico, I’d imagine it’s easier logistically because it’s a US territory
They would also probably have trouble getting permission to film those things in rio
From Puerto Rico here, alot of scenes in the movie were definetely recorded there. my dad and i would ocasionally show up to the recording, usually distant as we werent allowed to go up close due to the fact we would show up uninvited but a small island has alot of people knowing eachother so word got around when and where filming was happening. We just showed up because we thought it was cool, and my father even ended up being one of the pedestrians in this scene but i don't think his apperance made the final cut (or was just simply offscreen, i wasn't there too so he could've been lying to me also)
I also learned Puerto Rico has favela looking places when this movie was being recorded, something i never knew due to being from the main urban area (Toa Alta). Still, one of the most memorable times of my childhood.
Thanks for highlighting this all! I genuinely thought most of this had to be CGI...but I'm now pleasantly surprised and will enjoy watching the film again knowing all the hard work that went in!
I remember seeing this in theaters. To this day, this scene is all I remember from the film. It stood out to me for all the reasons talked about in this video. I remember thinking back and forth that this wasn’t possible, or is it? It didn’t look like cgi, but I kept trying to convince myself it was because I just couldn’t believe it. I honestly didn’t know for sure until this video today. Wild! What a feat!!
Fast Five had some of the most bad ass practical effects for a car chase scene.