Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Mit Magzter GOLD unbegrenztes Potenzial nutzen

Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugriff auf über 9.000 Zeitschriften, Zeitungen und Premium-Artikel für nur

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jahr
The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

How's This for a Cliffhanger?

Fast Company

|

Spring 2024

That poor henchman over there has a hammer stuck in his forehead.

- By Devin Gordon. Photographs by Devin Yalkin

How's This for a Cliffhanger?

The hammer is made of foam, wrapped in duct tape, and technically it's stuck to his head with Scotch tape, not in his head, but still. Tough break. His masked killer, dressed head to toe in black, ninja-style, yanks the hammer out of (off of) his skull, and he tumbles backward onto the mat. One henchman down, four to go.

Afternoon sunlight streams in through a stainedglass window high above the dojo floor of a converted cathedral on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, filling the space with the warm glow of fight-choreography heaven. Off to the side, observing and taking mental notes, are veteran stunt performer turned director David Leitch and his producer wife, Kelly McCormick. Two years ago, they converted this building-the headquarters of their production company, 87North-into an incubator for the kind of car-rolling, helicopter-dangling action movies that studios usually make on a computer nowadays. They train actors here, block out fights, and shoot and edit rough versions of complete sequences. It's a full-service action factory, all under one vaulted roof.

"It's probably the coolest production office I've ever been to," says Ryan Gosling, who spent an entire Christmas season here in 2022 training for 87North's latest movie, The Fall Guy, based extremely loosely on the '80s television series, with Gosling taking over for Lee Majors as a breezy blue-collar stuntman named Colt Seavers. Another actor who worships at the church of 87North is Bob Odenkirk, star of

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Fast Company

Fast Company

Fast Company

EMAIL IS BACK! IT NEVER REALLY WENT AWAY.

FIFTY YEARS IN, EMAIL HAS BECOME MORE ESSENTIAL THAN EVER—AND THE KEY TO UNLOCKING PERSONALIZED AI.

time to read

7 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

RED WHITE & DENIM

LEVI STRAUSS & CO., THE MOST QUINTESSENTIAL AMERICAN BRAND, IS SUDDENLY HOLDING THE TORCH FOR AMERICA ITSELF.

time to read

13 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

WHO'LL START THE RAIN?

RAINMAKER FOUNDER AND CEO AUGUSTUS DORICKO WANTS TO HELP DROUGHT-PRONE AREAS BY USING DRONES TO NUDGE CLOUDS INTO PRODUCING SNOW AND RAIN. HE'S GENERATING A STORM OF CONTROVERSY IN THE PROCESS.

time to read

16 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

DEATH TO BORING CORPORATE GATHERINGS!

WANT A STRONG RETURN ON YOUR EVENT BUDGET? START FOCUSING ON VIBES.

time to read

2 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

HOW ONE BIG IDEA CAN CHANGE EVERYTHING

SANDISK'S INNOVATION CULTURE IS MAKING AI MORE COST AND ENERGY EFFICIENT

time to read

2 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

REAL INTEL ABOUT AI

NO, YOU'RE NOT HALLUCINATING: THIS ISSUE IS packed with fresh reporting about AI.

time to read

2 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

CELEBRATING DIRT WHILE CHALLENGING TABOOS

DIRT IS GOOD FINDS NEW MEANING IN STAINS TO DRIVE BRAND ENGAGEMENT

time to read

2 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

Untainted Love

Hinge is winning the dating game. Can it stay on top?

time to read

8 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

CENTURIES OLD, FUTURE FOCUSED

LLOYDS BANKING GROUP'S BRAND REINVENTION PROVES THAT LEGACY CAN BE A LAUNCHPAD

time to read

2 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Fast Company

Fast Company

AI 20

These 20 technologists, entrepreneurs, corporate leaders, and creative thinkers are pushing artificial intelligence in unexpected directions.

time to read

20 mins

Winter 2025 - 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size

Holiday offer front
Holiday offer back