Knowing that man actually ran backwards on a spinning wheel while sword fighting is insane. Im so happy that the Emmys finally rolled out a Stunt Man award because these guys do some SERIOUS work for movies.
It's definitely quite a trick, and one of those "What the hell are we doing here?!" moments that could only happen in the film industry. I bet when he imagined the craziest things he'd have to do as a stuntman... running backwards while sword-fighting, dressed as a pirate, on a giant spinning-wheel, in the middle of a Dominican forest... would be a tough one to predict.
Lol insane hahaha you my guy have clearly never heard of buster keaton. These guys are so padded and safe and insured. Buster Keaton swings on a rope tied round his waist off of the Niagara Falls with no safety nets or nothing and grabs a stunt woman mid swing while she is mid fall of the waterfall. He also jumps of a ten story building onto another one and falls throughout the window canopies of each floor window. He really did that with no ropes or net and did it one take. That’s fucking insane. These guys are nothing close to real stuntmen. The more Hollywood the stuntman the less danger they are in.
One of the best parts of this series is seeing a dude who you don't recognise at the start of the video then you come to realise that he is responsible for some of your favorite cinematic moments. The pirates wheel, the spider-man faceplant, these are iconic moments that have a special place in my heart, and Mark is a part of them!
Stunt actors are criminally underrated and publicly unknown. Everyone remembers the stunts of movies and connect those moments with the characters/actors. Their actual work is designed to be hidden and understated, and the fact that films like John Wick are HIGHLIGHTING the stunt performers by straight giving them parts is awesome. The director of John Wick is literally a stunt performer/coordinator, and it makes the movies so much better.
To think that stuntment often have more screentime than actors in modern super hero movies is insane considering they get such little recognition. They deserve a much bigger voice in the industry for that reason and many others, so good on Corridor Crew for helping with that.
It has actually been that way for decades. Basically, any time there's a shot where you can't see the actor's face, it's almost always a stand-in or a double, and it's to reduce the amount of time an actor has to spend on set.
@@Durwood71 Hopefully it continues to move in the right direction. Something tells me these stuntman aren't compensated or treated nearly as well as the actors. This mainly boils down to recognizability, both face and name. Millions of people, myself included, are just now getting to know and appreciate these stuntmen because of Corridor. Maybe this will give them more leverage and a stronger voice. They certainly deserve it.
@@Durwood71 You may be right, I'm fairly ignorant on the topic. A quick Google search seems to say otherwise though. It may be better at the top, but your ordinary stuntman has a dangerous job in an industry known for taking advantage of people, especially young naive ones, and just chewing them up and spitting them out with little to no regard for their wellbeing and future. My point is, corridor is letting us get to know these stunt workers and raising their profile. This is a good trend since it raises their profile and might help assuage any issue that might. That's all I'm really trying to say.
Makes me wonder if in the Civil War fight scene he talked to the Spider-Man stunt double and gave him some tips. You know, "When _I_ played Spider-Man..."
I loved when he talked about his parents cheering for him on spiderman, imagine how worried parents must get when hearing their kid wants to do some dangerous job like that, but they were very positive about it, very nice parents
I bet getting to be there and see all the care and precautions taken to make it safe made them feel better about his choices. If you know nothing about the industry it does seem scarier - like they discussed here with stunt person vs daredevil. Not to take anything away from his parents, who sound supportive and cool, just I think once you know more about the process it's probably easier to support a loved one who has those passions/ambitions
I love all the guests in Corridor videos, but the ones that match the overly enthusiastic and FRIENDLY energy are the absolute best. Mark is one of these guests. As always, Gui is also an absolute bundle of joy.
I don't remember any stunt master being here and not be a really happy and enthusiast (and insightful), really gem to watch any of these. Arguably, poor CG colleagues, lacking sleep and sanity from all of the deadlines and remaking countless revisions are way more down although they too give their best :)
So glad you finally covered the big wheel fight in POTC2. That's one of my all-time favorite swordfight scenes. I'm honestly impressed at just *how much* of it was real/practical. I'd assumed there was more CGI involved.
I know! I would never have thought they did that practically. At most I might have guessed they rolled a real wheel with no people on it, for reference for the cgi or something.
Watching this particular interview has gained me even more respect for stunt workers. The best part is how normal and goofy he is and yet he is committed to such dangerous work at the highest professional level in Hollywood. Good show!!
@@amadeusmalonje6948 great. We should round up all the corridor crew heads and have our own couch session. Lol. Also, I know you don't make content but I subbed to your channel anyway.
The bike crash scene really made me realize the engineering behind stunts is important. They changed the door, walls being softened, changing how a table may break, etc. Love hearing about all the little intricacies behind a stunt besides just the actual stunt person falling or whatever. Also I started this comment before they mention engineering lol.
And even then, there are potential hazards just with hitting the ground or the unknowns of flying over a bike with all its pokey parts. As a kid, I had a bike accident and hit my face on the curb - eventually led to a root canal. So mad respect to anyone who walks away from a bike accident unhurt.
even more then you think, i've crashed into a couple of car doors on bikes, you don't go flying over the bars/door. the door strap breaks and you fold the door to the where the front wheel is. i left a little old lady sat in her car with her hand in the air when she opened the door on me. just a small bruise on my arm.
The window busting before it's hit just makes it look like you're hitting the door so hard it causes the window to flex and shatter. Totally a non issue - great stunt!
My brother and I would constantly sword fight pretending to be Jack after seeing Curse of the Black Pearl. Then we just somehow combined lightsabers in with the swordplay man what a time to be a kid in the 90s and 2000s.
Mark's energy and laughter are absolutely infectious! Thank you for bringing him on. I wonder if the stuntmen - with the huge part they play in Marvel movies - would ever get co-billing with the star?
Or at least a better pay cheque! Seems unfair for Johnny Depp to be getting millions for Jack Sparrow when I knew one of his stand-in/doubles for the later Pirates films, and between them and the stunt double Depp only came to set a handful of days to do his work to camera - close ups, fight/stunt set ups, etc - anything else was someone paid far less doing it for him! I don't know how much the stunt man (/men?) got, but my mate was on a fairly low wage. Better than the extras, but not the same as the 'proper' cast, despite working with them. I'm sure the stunt teams were better paid than that, but considering the work they do, it still feels unfair to me.
Agreed! Not to take away from skill & dedication of actors, but on so many movies the action is a huge part of what makes them look good, and is largely contributed by stunt personnel...? Who don't get ANYWHERE near the same recognition, kudos or pay. What I'd really love to see one day is people like Mark and Gui becoming as recognizable to the viewing public as the actors they're doubling for, and also getting a more equitable split of the pie. (Some actors get paid millions largely for name recognition, let's divert a bit of that to the hardworking stunties!) The problem though is that producers, directors & even actors are very invested in this myth/illusion that it's the same person onscreen throughout the film, so trying to increase public recognition of stunties is going to be fighting uphill? At least CC's content helps in that respect, for anybody who watches these!
The absolute BEST part of these breakdowns, VFX, Stuntmen or otherwise, is that it shows every single aspect of a movie is needed to be professional and are integral for the magic the viewers see on screen. Mark talking about how even after he got a second-degree burn and melted to the floor, he was amped to do another take to get the shot! That is the energy that is needed to make these movies so remarkable!
I've often be critical of the lack of recognition stuntmen/women get so it's so cool for them to get some love on the Reacts series. And it's always great to see Gui. I'm glad he's become a part of the crew. 💪🏽👍🏼
Despite the incredible projects and work they've done, all of your guests are so incredibly down to earth and they seem like really chill people to hang out with. I hope to see Mark again! Also, you should bring back your first stunt guest, Eric. I miss that dude!
Have you guys done Hardcore Henry yet? Pretty underated action flick shot in first person and for the most part shot continuously. Great for stuntmen and artist react. Keep up the great work.
This would be perfect honestly. I remember seeing some of the scenes and trying to wrap my head around how they planned every moment to transition into each VFX or stunt shot.
I LOVE when these passionate people come together so full of enthusiasm for their work, and they just beam with this positive energy. It's contagious! Plus, these episodes on the couch are so informative and educational, you can truly feel the passion for cinematography.
Mark was a great guest, a real joy to see his work. Always great to have Gui as well. So many episodes in, this and VFX artists react keep getting better. 💪
The way they can make it look like an Actor is doing a stunt instead of the stunt person amazes me everytime I see it! Thanks to Corridor though now I can tell just by the stunt if it was the actor or not. Most of the time.
Holy sht stunt people get to actually be the heroes of the movie in a sense that they make production possible and also that they get to be in that crazy situation and do all the moves.
Loooved Mark and Gui's energy here! Mark has got that child-like wonder to him, if that makes sense. Like the way he giggled about his parents on the Spider-man set, when he exchanged looks with Gui at 13:17 they both looked like goofy kids, and how he talked about Scarlett Johansson. This was such a fun episode!
One of my favourite guests! Always love the stunt and vfx people on this channel they do a great job getting me to appreciate the work and people behind the scenes.
the first pirates one was great because there's great storytelling into it. The characters were being fleshed out in a fight scene; their personalities are expressed. It's not just a fight scene.
I’d love to see some Stargate clips, there are quite a wide range of different types, looks and application of cgi, stunt work etc. A good idea would be to react to the difference between the practical Gould symbiotes vs the cg Gould Symbiote, I’d say the cgi one definitely looks worse, probably because it was 1997-1999 so obviously the practical would look better.
Yes! One memorable stunt moment for me is season 6's "The Descent", with the flooding ship, Carter and O'Neill stuck in a compartment with water rising, then Jonas swimming through very expertly
It would be a great if they used it as way to talk about the evolution of VFX, it was such a long running series that they could easily talk about the advancement of VFX over time.
Yeah, I think the vortex of the stargate is really the only thing to talk about. I love the franchise but there isn't really much in the way of groundbreaking visual effects. I'm not sure what they'd be talking about with the symbiotes. The real one looked like it was controlled by someone off to the side and the CGI ones are pretty basic. The show never really had the budget to really push the boundary of visual effects to the point they'd need to break anything down. The difference between what they did in season 1 compared tro season 10 is minimal. It's not really the kind of thing they talk about.
I love how you bring to light the "behind the scenes" people, giving credit and paying tribute to those who put in as much effort, often even more, than those who are millionaires for being in these films. It is truly heart warming.
I think the scene in Man From Snowy River where Jim rides a horse head-first down the mountain would be amazing to dissect. Apparently the actor had never ridden horses before but that scene just makes you hold your breath watching it!
It’s always so wholesome To hear these stuntmen talk about how much they care about their coworkers safety, even though they’re all total badasses and incredible performers.
These series alone have created a huge interest in the art of film making for me. I always enjoyed watching them but with all the amazing breakdowns yall do I couldn't help but be fascinated
I love that Gui is being the intro guy into the Stuntmen react. I like that he’s a regular now. And Mark wow, you helped shape part of my childhood. The Spider-Man scene where you smack into the wall is such a memorable moment from that film for me.
Feels good to see stunt men receive the glory they rightly deserve. They literally risk their lives and the main actors look cool. Of course not saying the main actors don't do anything, but these guys work hard as well
Another brilliant guest! Mark has great energy and an excellent cv hope he returns to the couch soon. As a Kiwi woman, Zoe Bell would be a guest I'd love to see. 😍
Mark seems like a really genuine humble guy. I always enjoy these, but sometimes the industry jargon can weigh it down a little. Mark seems like he'd be really fun to just have a beer with.
would love to see some reactions to the transporter movies... There's some good scenes in that movie... (thinking about the garage fight scene in the third movie is good one)
Three of the best fire stunts I've seen in a movie: Swamp Thing (the O.G movie) when Alex transforms to Swamp Thing, Maniac Cop 2 when Cordell breaks into the jail, and Freddy v Jason, when Jason attacks the party goers in the cornfield.
The guy on the left is amazed by the legend next to him. His reactions are fun to watch. The world knows this man's work. He is a genius in his field. Wow!
It always amazes me how often the answer to how do you make something happen in movies is to just do it. Actual rolling wheel, actual flamethrower. Maximum respect for the craft.
i just can't get enough of the quality of their videos here of course aside from their awesome contents. but the quality of their video production is just sooooo goood, the color is so punchy like I'm looking at a movie
21:00 One of my all-time favorite fire stunts is in John Carpenter's "Christine" -- when Christine blows up the gas station and then leasurly follows Buddy Repperton down the road, all the while, she's on fire! So good!
Absolutely amazing how much of the web-swinging in the first Spider-Man was REAL! Looks/feels different from the mostly-CGI Spider-Man in later movies. These tiny differences in the body movements and the apparent physics at the peaks of the swings,… I can’t pinpoint them, but when the Corridor Crew points out all those subtleties, it makes me so happy!
I just watched that water wheel scene again recently. All the work totally paid off! It's so memorable and successful and exactly the kind of thing you go to the movies to see.
I used to live in the area where they filmed that first swing in. I remember the cranes and the streets being shut down. Never got to see him swing but everytime I go back to visit, it brings me back.
Serious shout out to their ability to get informative and influential guests on this show. Dude is acting blase about being a huge reason why a movie, based on a fucking dark ride from the 50s, was massively popular and spawned a series. If those first fights had been shit in pirates we all would have laughed our asses off and called them worse than the animatronics in the parks!
I love watching these and seeing a person I don't know in the chair, then realizing that for years I've been watching them in my favorite movies as some of my favorite characters.
I think it is time that someone brings these guys to the front row and into the limelight and makes a full movie starring these stunt professionals as leading characters, acting, doing their own stunts in a full feature movie!!! Come on Corridor Crew!!! You have the connections, you have the resources! Do this!!!
Great episode! One of the best movies I have watched involving fire was Backdraft. The scene I am Specifically speaking if is in the finally where the characters are trapped in the warehouse, with fire all around them and literal 55gal drum are exploding and laughing into the air. Great movie, and really great stunt coordination.
You can never get a better fire stunt than the one in the original The Thing (aka The Thing from Another World) It is an absolutely insane scene (albeit incredibly dangerous.)
Once Upon a Time in Mexico. The whole sequence exiting the top floor while chained together until Salma’s double flips over the power line onto the top of the bus. It’s so fun!
Knowing that man actually ran backwards on a spinning wheel while sword fighting is insane. Im so happy that the Emmys finally rolled out a Stunt Man award because these guys do some SERIOUS work for movies.
hope the oscars do the same too . this man mark is so cool and humble . even when he is on fire
It's definitely quite a trick, and one of those "What the hell are we doing here?!" moments that could only happen in the film industry. I bet when he imagined the craziest things he'd have to do as a stuntman... running backwards while sword-fighting, dressed as a pirate, on a giant spinning-wheel, in the middle of a Dominican forest... would be a tough one to predict.
@@AWSVids Meh, just another Thursday. 😅
Lol insane hahaha you my guy have clearly never heard of buster keaton. These guys are so padded and safe and insured. Buster Keaton swings on a rope tied round his waist off of the Niagara Falls with no safety nets or nothing and grabs a stunt woman mid swing while she is mid fall of the waterfall. He also jumps of a ten story building onto another one and falls throughout the window canopies of each floor window. He really did that with no ropes or net and did it one take. That’s fucking insane. These guys are nothing close to real stuntmen. The more Hollywood the stuntman the less danger they are in.
@@bornagainwierdo what is this paragraph long troll haha
One of the best parts of this series is seeing a dude who you don't recognise at the start of the video then you come to realise that he is responsible for some of your favorite cinematic moments. The pirates wheel, the spider-man faceplant, these are iconic moments that have a special place in my heart, and Mark is a part of them!
it's like after watching this video I would rather run to get a selfie with Mark rather than with Paul Rudd 🤣
Perfectly put
Stunt actors are criminally underrated and publicly unknown. Everyone remembers the stunts of movies and connect those moments with the characters/actors. Their actual work is designed to be hidden and understated, and the fact that films like John Wick are HIGHLIGHTING the stunt performers by straight giving them parts is awesome. The director of John Wick is literally a stunt performer/coordinator, and it makes the movies so much better.
*man they underplay their contribution to these iconic films*
*stuntmen are underrated..*
*There should be awards for stunts*
@@ShaggyRogers1 Any Movie, with Keanu Reeves, HIGHLIGHTS how bad of an Actor, he is.
To think that stuntment often have more screentime than actors in modern super hero movies is insane considering they get such little recognition. They deserve a much bigger voice in the industry for that reason and many others, so good on Corridor Crew for helping with that.
It has actually been that way for decades. Basically, any time there's a shot where you can't see the actor's face, it's almost always a stand-in or a double, and it's to reduce the amount of time an actor has to spend on set.
I wholly agree but can Paul Rudd say he got kicked in the nuts by ScarJo 😀
@@Durwood71 Hopefully it continues to move in the right direction. Something tells me these stuntman aren't compensated or treated nearly as well as the actors. This mainly boils down to recognizability, both face and name.
Millions of people, myself included, are just now getting to know and appreciate these stuntmen because of Corridor. Maybe this will give them more leverage and a stronger voice. They certainly deserve it.
@@someguy8443 I'm fairly certain that stuntmen are highly respected within the industry and are well compensated for their work.
@@Durwood71 You may be right, I'm fairly ignorant on the topic. A quick Google search seems to say otherwise though. It may be better at the top, but your ordinary stuntman has a dangerous job in an industry known for taking advantage of people, especially young naive ones, and just chewing them up and spitting them out with little to no regard for their wellbeing and future.
My point is, corridor is letting us get to know these stunt workers and raising their profile. This is a good trend since it raises their profile and might help assuage any issue that might. That's all I'm really trying to say.
I love how gui is a regular on the stuntmen ones now, the progression from the first ones is so awesome
Fr. Dude went from guest to host, and he doesn't even work for Corridor!
@@TheRandomSpectator yeah I love that
@@TheRandomSpectator He's a partner though, he works WITH them
@@KenSahaja Yeah, especially when the Corridor Crew makes a VFX video with stunts involved. Gui is their go to guy.
@@KenSahaja Aaah, ok. That makes sense. I don't follow Corridor too closely.
Mark being Spider-Man and Ant Man makes the joke in the Quantumania trailer even better
Makes me wonder if in the Civil War fight scene he talked to the Spider-Man stunt double and gave him some tips. You know, "When _I_ played Spider-Man..."
Thank You Spider-Man!!
You know I am something of a Spiderman myself.
Oh snap yeah lol nice
@@stevenbergom3415 Stunt-Spider: "Yeah? Well ya don't anymore, old man."
CIVIL WAR
I loved when he talked about his parents cheering for him on spiderman, imagine how worried parents must get when hearing their kid wants to do some dangerous job like that, but they were very positive about it, very nice parents
I bet getting to be there and see all the care and precautions taken to make it safe made them feel better about his choices. If you know nothing about the industry it does seem scarier - like they discussed here with stunt person vs daredevil.
Not to take anything away from his parents, who sound supportive and cool, just I think once you know more about the process it's probably easier to support a loved one who has those passions/ambitions
i mean yea, they watched him make history
@@VexxyDaProtogen Know how to make a "Ship Story", into an overrated "Shit Story"? CAST JOHNNY DEPP!!!!!
Also, they did grow up with him in gymnastics, so it's not like they've never visited the emergency room with him at some point! 😆😅
I love all the guests in Corridor videos, but the ones that match the overly enthusiastic and FRIENDLY energy are the absolute best. Mark is one of these guests. As always, Gui is also an absolute bundle of joy.
Gui is like an unofficial co-host now lol
I don't remember any stunt master being here and not be a really happy and enthusiast (and insightful), really gem to watch any of these. Arguably, poor CG colleagues, lacking sleep and sanity from all of the deadlines and remaking countless revisions are way more down although they too give their best :)
So glad you finally covered the big wheel fight in POTC2. That's one of my all-time favorite swordfight scenes. I'm honestly impressed at just *how much* of it was real/practical. I'd assumed there was more CGI involved.
I know! I would never have thought they did that practically. At most I might have guessed they rolled a real wheel with no people on it, for reference for the cgi or something.
Watching this particular interview has gained me even more respect for stunt workers. The best part is how normal and goofy he is and yet he is committed to such dangerous work at the highest professional level in Hollywood. Good show!!
You're from Malawi?
@@amadeusmalonje6948 yeah, you recognised the flag? Nice!!
@@TheAkdzyn I'm from Malawi as well 😂
@@amadeusmalonje6948 great. We should round up all the corridor crew heads and have our own couch session. Lol. Also, I know you don't make content but I subbed to your channel anyway.
@@TheAkdzyn awesome! And thanks my man😎
The bike crash scene really made me realize the engineering behind stunts is important. They changed the door, walls being softened, changing how a table may break, etc. Love hearing about all the little intricacies behind a stunt besides just the actual stunt person falling or whatever. Also I started this comment before they mention engineering lol.
And even then, there are potential hazards just with hitting the ground or the unknowns of flying over a bike with all its pokey parts. As a kid, I had a bike accident and hit my face on the curb - eventually led to a root canal. So mad respect to anyone who walks away from a bike accident unhurt.
Engineering in the film industry is really fun.
even more then you think, i've crashed into a couple of car doors on bikes, you don't go flying over the bars/door. the door strap breaks and you fold the door to the where the front wheel is. i left a little old lady sat in her car with her hand in the air when she opened the door on me. just a small bruise on my arm.
The window busting before it's hit just makes it look like you're hitting the door so hard it causes the window to flex and shatter. Totally a non issue - great stunt!
Exactly my thought. Hit an open car door with a sledgehammer and I'm confident the glass would shatter.
He's one of the most sincerely and genuinely hilarious guests you've had on the show and I hope we get to see him again!
My brother and I would constantly sword fight pretending to be Jack after seeing Curse of the Black Pearl. Then we just somehow combined lightsabers in with the swordplay man what a time to be a kid in the 90s and 2000s.
Theres a video called Pirates of the caribbean with lightsabers i strongly suggest you check it out
@@fabriziopinna that sounds incredible edit.....IT IS INCREDIBLE OMG
I think this was my favorite episode of Stuntmen React, Mark had great chemistry with you guys. I hope you can bring him back.
9:10 Gui matching Matt's motions while having that look on his face... something about it just makes me break down into giggles! :D
He's like "Yup, been in that situation."
Mark's energy and laughter are absolutely infectious! Thank you for bringing him on. I wonder if the stuntmen - with the huge part they play in Marvel movies - would ever get co-billing with the star?
Or at least a better pay cheque! Seems unfair for Johnny Depp to be getting millions for Jack Sparrow when I knew one of his stand-in/doubles for the later Pirates films, and between them and the stunt double Depp only came to set a handful of days to do his work to camera - close ups, fight/stunt set ups, etc - anything else was someone paid far less doing it for him!
I don't know how much the stunt man (/men?) got, but my mate was on a fairly low wage. Better than the extras, but not the same as the 'proper' cast, despite working with them. I'm sure the stunt teams were better paid than that, but considering the work they do, it still feels unfair to me.
Agreed! Not to take away from skill & dedication of actors, but on so many movies the action is a huge part of what makes them look good, and is largely contributed by stunt personnel...? Who don't get ANYWHERE near the same recognition, kudos or pay.
What I'd really love to see one day is people like Mark and Gui becoming as recognizable to the viewing public as the actors they're doubling for, and also getting a more equitable split of the pie. (Some actors get paid millions largely for name recognition, let's divert a bit of that to the hardworking stunties!) The problem though is that producers, directors & even actors are very invested in this myth/illusion that it's the same person onscreen throughout the film, so trying to increase public recognition of stunties is going to be fighting uphill? At least CC's content helps in that respect, for anybody who watches these!
I love that gui is just part of the crew now and not just a guest
The absolute BEST part of these breakdowns, VFX, Stuntmen or otherwise, is that it shows every single aspect of a movie is needed to be professional and are integral for the magic the viewers see on screen. Mark talking about how even after he got a second-degree burn and melted to the floor, he was amped to do another take to get the shot! That is the energy that is needed to make these movies so remarkable!
If you did stunts for Spider-Man than you are an immediate legend in my eyes.
I've often be critical of the lack of recognition stuntmen/women get so it's so cool for them to get some love on the Reacts series. And it's always great to see Gui. I'm glad he's become a part of the crew. 💪🏽👍🏼
This is genuinely one of the best Stuntmen React videos you guys have ever produced 👏👏👏
Gui, you are so clearly humbled by Mark and your honesty, your reverence of him, is beautiful.
Man this series is my favorite part about Saturday
Despite the incredible projects and work they've done, all of your guests are so incredibly down to earth and they seem like really chill people to hang out with. I hope to see Mark again! Also, you should bring back your first stunt guest, Eric. I miss that dude!
Have you guys done Hardcore Henry yet? Pretty underated action flick shot in first person and for the most part shot continuously. Great for stuntmen and artist react. Keep up the great work.
FUCK YES THIS
This would be perfect honestly. I remember seeing some of the scenes and trying to wrap my head around how they planned every moment to transition into each VFX or stunt shot.
THIS
It would be a amazing video but better if they could get some of the crew which they can't rn due to the war
I think they've had someone in one episode who did stunts on Hardcore Henry but it wasn't a lot so I'd definitely like to see more about it.
I LOVE when these passionate people come together so full of enthusiasm for their work, and they just beam with this positive energy. It's contagious! Plus, these episodes on the couch are so informative and educational, you can truly feel the passion for cinematography.
recently rewatched the dead man's chest, absolutely crazy how they did it
I'm so grateful for these shows existing. Always so informative and I learn new things every single episode.
Mark was a great guest! I loved his energy, and damn dude what a resume
This guy looks so natural and super sympathic
We need more stuntman videos, these are by far favorite.
Mark was a great guest, a real joy to see his work. Always great to have Gui as well. So many episodes in, this and VFX artists react keep getting better. 💪
Love the stuntman episodes because exactly what Nikko described, that there is so much engineering involved
I'm so happy Gui has been appearing in a bunch of these shows; I think he has great chemistry with the Corridor Crew!
The way they can make it look like an Actor is doing a stunt instead of the stunt person amazes me everytime I see it! Thanks to Corridor though now I can tell just by the stunt if it was the actor or not. Most of the time.
Holy sht stunt people get to actually be the heroes of the movie in a sense that they make production possible and also that they get to be in that crazy situation and do all the moves.
LOVE when Gui's on the show!
Same I wish they brought gui and the guy from the first stuntmen together! If they have I want more !
Dude, its so awesome and heartwarming to see the guests get genuinely excited.
Loooved Mark and Gui's energy here! Mark has got that child-like wonder to him, if that makes sense. Like the way he giggled about his parents on the Spider-man set, when he exchanged looks with Gui at 13:17 they both looked like goofy kids, and how he talked about Scarlett Johansson. This was such a fun episode!
One of my favourite guests! Always love the stunt and vfx people on this channel they do a great job getting me to appreciate the work and people behind the scenes.
the first pirates one was great because there's great storytelling into it. The characters were being fleshed out in a fight scene; their personalities are expressed. It's not just a fight scene.
I’d love to see some Stargate clips, there are quite a wide range of different types, looks and application of cgi, stunt work etc. A good idea would be to react to the difference between the practical Gould symbiotes vs the cg Gould Symbiote, I’d say the cgi one definitely looks worse, probably because it was 1997-1999 so obviously the practical would look better.
Agreed, SG-1 was so good we definitelly need to see stuff from it.
Yes! One memorable stunt moment for me is season 6's "The Descent", with the flooding ship, Carter and O'Neill stuck in a compartment with water rising, then Jonas swimming through very expertly
I think they /did/ do a review of how they got the Stargate opening effect! It was super cool, very 'OG star trek' transporter effect.
It would be a great if they used it as way to talk about the evolution of VFX, it was such a long running series that they could easily talk about the advancement of VFX over time.
Yeah, I think the vortex of the stargate is really the only thing to talk about. I love the franchise but there isn't really much in the way of groundbreaking visual effects. I'm not sure what they'd be talking about with the symbiotes. The real one looked like it was controlled by someone off to the side and the CGI ones are pretty basic. The show never really had the budget to really push the boundary of visual effects to the point they'd need to break anything down. The difference between what they did in season 1 compared tro season 10 is minimal. It's not really the kind of thing they talk about.
I love how you bring to light the "behind the scenes" people, giving credit and paying tribute to those who put in as much effort, often even more, than those who are millionaires for being in these films. It is truly heart warming.
Man Pirates trilogy is such a masterclass of adventure cinema.
Gore Verbinski indeed create a classic trilogy. The CGI for Davy Jones and the practical action scenes made these movies look timeless.
I think the scene in Man From Snowy River where Jim rides a horse head-first down the mountain would be amazing to dissect. Apparently the actor had never ridden horses before but that scene just makes you hold your breath watching it!
7:39 potential spoiler??
God I love seeing info on suits. They're just so cool to see how much detail is packed into things you don't really notice
It’s always so wholesome To hear these stuntmen talk about how much they care about their coworkers safety, even though they’re all total badasses and incredible performers.
Mark got a great personality and he was the stunt double for Spider-Man back in the day and Paul Rudd's Spider-Man
Paul Rudd's Ant Man ?
@@har1292 no Spider-Man
@@trevorghalt1881 when did paul rudd play spider man ?
@@har1292 in antman quantumania trailer they call him spider-man as a joke
Absolutely loved this guy. Please bring him back MANY times.
Bring this couch cast back again! Mark is so enjoyable to listen to!
12:22 thats a damn good question, glad Gui asked that
These series alone have created a huge interest in the art of film making for me. I always enjoyed watching them but with all the amazing breakdowns yall do I couldn't help but be fascinated
I love that Gui is being the intro guy into the Stuntmen react. I like that he’s a regular now. And Mark wow, you helped shape part of my childhood. The Spider-Man scene where you smack into the wall is such a memorable moment from that film for me.
Watching the stunt details can be better than some of the movies. I always enjoyed the fire scene from "The thing from another world"
Mark is a legend and so humble and friendly!
The ending fight scene of "Baby Assassins" is a good example of a nice, stylistic fight on a low budget - might be interesting to look at.
Feels good to see stunt men receive the glory they rightly deserve. They literally risk their lives and the main actors look cool. Of course not saying the main actors don't do anything, but these guys work hard as well
Another brilliant guest! Mark has great energy and an excellent cv hope he returns to the couch soon. As a Kiwi woman, Zoe Bell would be a guest I'd love to see. 😍
Thanks for all your insights, Mark! Great seeing you on the couch with Gui and Niko!
Love the stunt episodes! Great stuff, guys.
Always good to see Gui and having a new guest like Mark
13:43 must've been a real honor for Scarlet Johansen to be surrounded by 4 great stuntmen
Mark was a delight to listen to and very funny! I hope to see him featured again some time.
@Corridorcrew you need to watch "Superman vs Hulk" Part 1-4 😆👍🏻
Oh Yes!!!!!
That's for "Animators React"
whaz that?
@@lisalarco3433 just search "Superman vs Hulk" on TH-cam
Loved having Mark and Gui on! I love their insight on all of their stunts from marvel and pirates movies! And they are so funny!
Mark seems like a really genuine humble guy. I always enjoy these, but sometimes the industry jargon can weigh it down a little. Mark seems like he'd be really fun to just have a beer with.
This was by far one of my favourite episodes, Mark is great!
would love to see some reactions to the transporter movies... There's some good scenes in that movie... (thinking about the garage fight scene in the third movie is good one)
These stunt people are all charismatic as hell. Love it when they're on.
You guys should react to dance choreography in movies
Three of the best fire stunts I've seen in a movie: Swamp Thing (the O.G movie) when Alex transforms to Swamp Thing, Maniac Cop 2 when Cordell breaks into the jail, and Freddy v Jason, when Jason attacks the party goers in the cornfield.
The guy on the left is amazed by the legend next to him. His reactions are fun to watch. The world knows this man's work. He is a genius in his field. Wow!
It always amazes me how often the answer to how do you make something happen in movies is to just do it. Actual rolling wheel, actual flamethrower. Maximum respect for the craft.
Watched the full version over on the site… And this is probably my favourite one of these yet! great guy, great stunts, great insight...
Another top tier video. Love seeing Gui in these episodes so much!
i just can't get enough of the quality of their videos here of course aside from their awesome contents. but the quality of their video production is just sooooo goood, the color is so punchy like I'm looking at a movie
You guys don´t get enough credit and should get way more attention and awards ! Thx to all the men and women giving us awesome moments in the movies
21:00 One of my all-time favorite fire stunts is in John Carpenter's "Christine" -- when Christine blows up the gas station and then leasurly follows Buddy Repperton down the road, all the while, she's on fire! So good!
Love these stunt videos every weekend, my comfort series for the past 3 years
I love these stunt men reacts videos! Mark does incredible work, as does GUI! Artists in their own right.
Absolutely amazing how much of the web-swinging in the first Spider-Man was REAL! Looks/feels different from the mostly-CGI Spider-Man in later movies. These tiny differences in the body movements and the apparent physics at the peaks of the swings,… I can’t pinpoint them, but when the Corridor Crew points out all those subtleties, it makes me so happy!
Man, that sword fight on the pirates sequel is my favorite in all of cinema. Great stuff!
GUI is so awesome! Seems like such a great guy!
The coolest fire stunt for me is the one in "The Thing From Another World"; apparently the first full-body burn, and such an amazing looking sequence.
Mark's "unstuck" sound effect at 18:50 is so good/accurate, loved him on the show pls come back!
I just watched that water wheel scene again recently. All the work totally paid off! It's so memorable and successful and exactly the kind of thing you go to the movies to see.
I used to live in the area where they filmed that first swing in. I remember the cranes and the streets being shut down. Never got to see him swing but everytime I go back to visit, it brings me back.
Serious shout out to their ability to get informative and influential guests on this show. Dude is acting blase about being a huge reason why a movie, based on a fucking dark ride from the 50s, was massively popular and spawned a series. If those first fights had been shit in pirates we all would have laughed our asses off and called them worse than the animatronics in the parks!
I love watching these and seeing a person I don't know in the chair, then realizing that for years I've been watching them in my favorite movies as some of my favorite characters.
I think it is time that someone brings these guys to the front row and into the limelight and makes a full movie starring these stunt professionals as leading characters, acting, doing their own stunts in a full feature movie!!! Come on Corridor Crew!!! You have the connections, you have the resources! Do this!!!
so glad Gui is a permenant host for stuntmen react now, my fav guest on the show by far
Great episode! One of the best movies I have watched involving fire was Backdraft. The scene I am Specifically speaking if is in the finally where the characters are trapped in the warehouse, with fire all around them and literal 55gal drum are exploding and laughing into the air. Great movie, and really great stunt coordination.
You can never get a better fire stunt than the one in the original The Thing (aka The Thing from Another World) It is an absolutely insane scene (albeit incredibly dangerous.)
Really enjoy these behind the scenes with stunt people!!! The unsung heroes of so many great films. Y’all are amazing at what you do! 🎉
This is by far one of my favorite guests.
I love how much practical effects Sam raimi implemented in Spider-Man made it feel so real! 9:40
Eric, Gui and Mark are like the big 3. Would be so cool to see them on the same react.
Once Upon a Time in Mexico. The whole sequence exiting the top floor while chained together until Salma’s double flips over the power line onto the top of the bus. It’s so fun!
Mark was great to listen to. So much experience, and he's also hilarious
Guys, you should do a whole episode dedicated to EVERYTHING, EVERYWHERE, ALL AT ONCE. It has crazy vfx and amazing stunts!! Please do it, please! 🙏