• 3 days ago
He was Brad Pitt's stunt double on "Fight Club." Now he's his director in "Bullet Train." Brad Pitt and David Leitch on their relationship coming full circle ...
Transcript
00:00I remember the first meeting because we went for rehearsal on Fight Club for, I guess,
00:05fight training.
00:06Yeah, it was fight training.
00:07It was just fight training.
00:08Just kind of get us in, like, where we could look like we could throw a punch or take a
00:12punch.
00:13Yeah, yeah.
00:14Yeah.
00:15So, Mr. Dave Leitch here was hired as my stunt double, and now he's the director.
00:23Now he's my boss.
00:24It's a long journey.
00:25It really is.
00:26It's a long journey.
00:27He was such a, like, he worked so well in Fight Club.
00:30There are scenes where it's Dave, and even I'm going, wow, I look pretty good there.
00:36And we carried on.
00:38We did a few more films all the way up to Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
00:40We did some Troy, and then you went on to Stunt Coordinator first with John Wick.
00:49We did, like, Stunt Coordinated, second unit directed, and then the first movie was John
00:54Wick.
00:57And Brad was doing movies.
00:58I don't know if you knew any of them, but there we go.
00:59I'm just kidding.
01:00We were doing a few movies.
01:01But it was funny, like, the movie, our fates took us in different places, and then they
01:05ended up bringing us back together.
01:07John Wick.
01:08Don't even do it.
01:09You might not swim, but you can't push me.
01:11You stabbed me?
01:12Yeah!
01:13You better watch out.
01:14You better throw it up.
01:15You better get this gun down.
01:16You better stop.
01:17You better stop.
01:18I'm here.
01:19We're ruining your life the way you're ruining mine.
01:21Dude, I don't even know you.
01:24I get this call that there's this script and Leitch is directing, and it just, like, it
01:30was such a beautiful symmetry, full circle kind of, like, kismet to it all.
01:35So you said yes right away to this movie?
01:37No.
01:38No.
01:39Gotta read the script first.
01:41Make sure I fit.
01:42But I did.
01:43I was, like, I got into, like, page 30, and I was laughing out loud, and I went, ah.
01:48You know, you gotta understand, this was, like, in that period of lockdown when we were
01:51really, like, in the doldrums for everyone, and to read this thing was just, like, a breath
01:56of fresh air.
01:57There's a gun.
02:10I read that in this movie, you did 95% of your stunts by yourself.
02:14Is that what they're saying?
02:15That's what they're saying.
02:16Really?
02:17Yeah.
02:18But you did.
02:19I mean, you did.
02:21What was it?
02:22Sort of, like, 97.5.
02:23I don't know.
02:24He would know.
02:25But you, like, he's always been great in fight scenes, and a lot of the times when I was
02:29your double, the big job of a stunt double is oftentimes to do the choreography, learn
02:35the choreography, train the actor to do as much as you can, and, like, when I was working
02:39with Brad as a stunt performer, there was, I mean, you did a lot of the fighting action.
02:44We would just, and again, like, 90, and then you'd pull back and, like, oh, this one's
02:48going to hurt, and then you'd pull back and, like, that guy.
02:51Right.
02:52Put that guy in.
02:53Right.
02:54Or, like, heights.
02:55Like, I remember you had to do the cable drop from Troy, right?
02:56Yeah, yeah, yeah.
02:57Yeah, because I didn't want to do the heights.
02:58Yeah.
02:59I was like, oh, I don't feel so good.
03:00David, did you choreograph the action scene in this movie?
03:03I had a great team.
03:06His team with his signature.
03:07Yeah.
03:08So, yes.
03:09So, it's a really close-knit team that they vibe on each other, and they're great at it.
03:12Really good, I got to say.
03:13I mean, first, all the choreography, I was just, like, bang on it because it was so funny
03:17as well.
03:18You know, Dave and I both have, like, great respect for Jackie Chan.
03:23We just, we had a lot of conversations about him, and this kind of felt, would you say,
03:27was in his slipstream?
03:28Yeah, totally, totally.
03:29I mean, that was sort of a huge inspiration, I think.
03:33The physical comedy we wanted to create with Ladybug was Buster Keaton, Jackie-esque, right?
03:38And Jackie, in that world, is, like, the master.
03:41Like, I mean, he makes things so funny with these crazy fight scenes, you know?
03:45You played a stuntman in Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
03:49Now, you star in a movie directed by your older stuntman, so what does that movie represent
03:55for you, and how does it fit in your whole career?
03:58Oh, it is, it is, it's kind of cool.
04:00I mean, I've always had a great love and respect for the stuntmen.
04:04Like, they are, like, if they do their job right, they don't get noticed, you know?
04:10It's only if they cock it up, right?
04:11In a way.
04:12It's like, it's like, it's like a pilot or something, you know?
04:15Those kind of jobs.
04:16Or a referee, or...
04:18And so, I mean, they're like the quiet brilliance of the team, and the real, you know, there's
04:24more, there's the real muscle.
04:27And so, I don't know, different, I've had to do different things in my life, but, as
04:33far as stunts and fights, but this one, to me, is my favorite, because it's, again, it's
04:38just infused with comedy.
04:41It's built around the character, instead of just a punch-up, and it really, like, they're
04:46funny, they're funny.

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