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View Full Version : G.I.Joe Retaliation: The Stunts (Spoilers Warning!)


TheGabrielAngel
07-05-2012, 04:51 AM
Source: Paramount Pictures Corporation
Photos by: Mike Mayhall, Steve Ritzi, Thomas DuPont and Dwayne Johnson

Warning: the following text might contain spoilers


Read It First On HissTank:

Summer tent pole movies are known for action sequences that defy reality and thrill audiences, and the filmmakers set out to make G.I. JOE: RETALIATION a guaranteed crowd pleaser. Director Jon M. Chu had the benefit of working with a double-punch combination of stunt coordinator Steve Ritzi and fight coordinator Thomas Dupont, who created and choreographed elaborate sequences sure to wow action fans. “The most creative ideas happened in the collaboration between the stuntmen, actors, director, producers and the writers to create a couple of the sequences that are utterly unique in this movie,” explains di Bonaventura. “What audiences are going to find is that when they get into the action it will be intense as hell and something they’ve never seen before.”

Stunt coordinator Steve Ritzi loved the opportunity to create sequences for both the military and ninja storylines and all that each aesthetic had to offer. “It was challenging having two different elements that are so different,” recalls Ritzi. “The G.I. JOE style was much more straight-forward and then we had the ninjas with very specific choreography and other fun unexpected elements like slinging and flying them through the mountains. The combination was really fun.”
In the first act, audiences are introduced to the G.I. JOE team and their level of physical intensity illustrated by two grandiose action sequences that set the bar for the level of action the audience can anticipate. On a mission to neutralize Pakistan’s’ nuclear arsenal, the teams perform a dangerous and high-risk extraction with great precision and skill. The sequence is an action smorgasbord that involves high-height rappelling, hand-to-hand combat, parkour, gunplay and a great deal of weaponry and ammunition. The sequence showcases each of the G.I. JOE team members’ special skill set and their undeniable proficiency and domination as a team.
Shot in NASA’s VAB, short for the Vertical Assembly Building, the production team utilized the 220 foot tall ceilings and never-before-seen rocket boosters to push the limits of the action coverage. “The production value is amazing and we had ROADBLOCK and two other JOE’S repel down the face of this 200-foot rocket into battle,” explains stunt coordinator Steve Ritzi. “There are G.I. JOE’S literally raining from the sky firing at insurgents the whole way down. We had people shooting, falling and fighting at every level and each character has their own moment within the fight. It was pretty elaborate.”
“The scene in the nuclear weapons depot illustrated the units’ cohesiveness and efficiency and showcases their talents as soldiers,” explains Dwayne Johnson.

While celebrating the successful completion of the complicated and dangerous mission with no G.I. JOE lives lost, the team is ambushed and blindsided by a powerful force that essentially wipes out the majority of the unit. The stunts and special effects team orchestrated a powerful and explosive portrayal of a military force under siege. The sequence involved Humvee’s blown 30 feet into the air, numerous rocket-charges staged all over the set and vehicles on fire all within a carefully choreographed sequence that implicated the extensive unit of core G.I. JOE’s, additional Navy Seals, over 30 stuntmen and roughly 40 extras. Doing the stunts practically with little plans for CGI enhancement meant real explosions and the amount of charges and ammunition on the set left little to no error for margin. “Most of the hits and explosions are all very real. We’re not enhancing a lot,” explains Ritzi. “We’re doing charges right next to our actors and stuntmen and wanted to experience them taking the hits and showing the action in a very realistic manner.”

Although the sequence was incredibly complicated, the filmmakers worked as a team to map out the action to create a seamless portrayal of the unfolding devastation. “The special effects guys were amazing and had it designed to where we had these large special effect pods built into the set and Jon M. Chu, Steve Windon, our 1st AD Phil Patterson and I designed the layout where the actors should move to and from with our stunt team filling in the holes,” recounts Ritzi. “It’s a very elaborate sequence that could have gone either way, but everyone really came together and it worked out really well.”
The centerpiece action sequence that is sure to be a much talked about crowd pleaser is a sequence that involves a high-altitude zipline chase and Ninja fight on the mountaintops of the Himalayas. After discovering that STORM SHADOW was healing and seeking refuge with the red Ninjas in a Nepalese monastery, SNAKE EYES and JINX set out to retrieve him and bring him back to the BLIND MASTER for judgment. After an epic fight between the two adversaries that leads to having STORM SHADOW’s unconscious body in tow, the duo are forced to take the only route of escape. The most dangerous sequence follows them down the majestic snow-covered mountainside on a zip line while being chased by hordes of red ninjas.

“When we first read that sequence we had to ask ourselves if we could actually pull it off,” recalls di Bonaventura. “It took its shape along the way and, with a little bit of luck, an incredible stunt team to do some seriously crazy things on ropes and a few key visual effects, it will have an excitement level and scale I don’t think audiences have seen before.”

The sequence entailed several months of rigging, huge high-speed winches that were flown up to the mountaintops and anchored down into big tents and thousands and thousands of feet of line that strung between peaks. Expert mountain climbing expert Paul Borne was brought in and with the help of key rigger Dave Lane, Ritzi and the team pulled off the extraordinary sequence. “It’s very elaborate and I think when people see it they’ll assume it was done completely with CGI, when we actually did the majority of it,” says Ritzi. “We had huge 100-foot repels down the sides of mountains, a lot of shuttling back and forth with helicopters and Snowcats carrying equipment back and forth. It was extraordinary.”

Saboteur
07-05-2012, 11:31 AM
The Nepalese monastery battle will be the most climatic scene in the film, in my opinion.

Shin Densetsu
07-05-2012, 12:47 PM
Hey TheGabrielAngel, thats an awesome article but do you have a source for it?

TheGabrielAngel
07-05-2012, 01:40 PM
Hey TheGabrielAngel, thats an awesome article but do you have a source for it?

Straight from Paramount Pictures PR, was not published anywhere else.

luigi
07-05-2012, 02:51 PM
Straight from Paramount Pictures PR, was not published anywhere else.
link?

CornDog_The_Ninja
07-05-2012, 04:56 PM
Doing the stunts practically with little plans for CGI enhancement meant real explosions and the amount of charges and ammunition on the set left little to no error for margin. “Most of the hits and explosions are all very real. We’re not enhancing a lot,” explains Ritzi.

There's that, then they postpone it to add effects to make it 3D.

Fail.

ergozoom
07-05-2012, 07:28 PM
Cool info, thanks.

I didn't realize the rappelling scene in the trailer was filmed in the VAB (actually called the Vehicle Assembly Building now, not Vertical).

Update: I don't think the article means the VAB, which is in Florida at the Kennedy Space Center. I think they were at a NASA facility in Louisiana, but I can't find confirmation of that.

Fox
07-05-2012, 07:42 PM
I get it because justice is blind.

Crazy Legs
07-05-2012, 09:00 PM
lulz The Rock's stunt double has to get tatts as well.

Jay West
07-05-2012, 09:25 PM
lulz The Rock's stunt double has to get tatts as well.

That's not his stunt double. In the movie Mindbender gets a sample of the Rock's dna to clone him for Vince McMahon. But the clone goes evil and becomes Serpentor in the third movie. The Rock recruits Sgt Slaughter and the the Big Show to track down his rogue clone.

IIIzoeIII
07-07-2012, 06:07 AM
well....after reading that I have to say this probably won't be that good..
I don't know if anyone read all the articles about punisher war zone
but I sure did..and it promised to have some of the best action ever created..everything about that movie cheap and corny and plain boring.I think the director was seeing too much of the action with their own eyes and not through the lens of the camera..
I really think the same thing is going on here.Real blows and no CG make for very muted action sequences..they often come off very down to earth and humble..

I really don't think snake eyes killing a few red ninja on a cliff is anything to write home about... neither is blowing a humvee 30 ft into the air..explosions are just not anything exciting anymore..the only way to make them exciting is to make it CG to slow things down and show what's happening..like the destruction in transformers ROTF I dare you to beat that...avengers came close admittedly.
I thought there was a 20 min fight between SE and SS that was going to change hollywood forever...I'm not hearing anything about that now..hmmm..maybe it didn't look so good once they had it all pieced together in the studio..everything I'm hearing has me kinda worried..cause lets face it..in RoC SE jumping over the car was thee coolest thing in that movie action wise and it was CG...that should show you something in cold hard facts...that is the kind of thing we movie goers expect now...look at the fight sequences in FF advent children..that is how ninjas should be fighting in a big hollywood summer blockbuster...watch every episode of mortal kombat legacy you will likely be yawning through almost all the fights up until it's cyber ninja time then you'll be like holy$h!t that was awesome...I could go on and on but no need..I think this movie is going to be sub-par like roc was, that movie just wasted its CG on accelerator suits which we didn't care to see at all.

TFW10
07-10-2012, 09:37 PM
Thanks for the heads up.