Site of the Week: The Stunt People

The Stunt People is an all-in-one independent action performer, filmmaker, and fan resource/news site. I have been following them for almost 5 years and they’re my recommendation for you to check out this week!

The Stunt People logo

This site, run by action artist Eric Jacobus, follows a group of martial artists, acrobats, stunt performers, and filmmakers who work out of the San Francisco Bay Area (California, USA). The members of this awesome collaboration call themselves “The Stunt People”. They have produced several independent feature films, and continue to develop new projects while releasing youtube videos and tutorials on a regular basis.

The Stunt People website features a well-kept and informative Forum, a News page for their projects, and a Store where you can purchase their films and memorabilia.

Eric Jacobus is the founder of this cool project. His expertise in the action film genre stems from producing/starring in several independent action films, and working closely with the San Francisco stunt community to help it expand. He has starred in six feature length films (and countless short films), and is known for his comedic on-screen persona and high-flying acrobatic maneuvers. Among his films are the cult classic Contour, and the critically-acclaimed Death Grip. You can also watch Eric perform as “Stryker” in the second season of the Mortal Kombat Legacy series, premiering later this year. (click image to watch the trailer)

Eric Jacobus aiming a gun as Stryker from the Mortal Kombat Legacy series

I first stumbled onto the site back when I lived in Scotland, and through the forum I spent several years making friends in independent action filmmaking circles all around the world. I scoured the forum in fascination as I learned important skills as a filmmaker and performer, and got useful feedback on my personal projects. The Stunt People forum inspired me greatly and was one of the main factors that helped me make my decision to move out to Los Angeles and pursue stunts full time.

The quality, attention to detail, and ingenuity that the Stunt People team puts into their work is admirable. As an action fan and fellow filmmaker, I am looking forward to working with them soon..

So when you get a minute, and if you want to learn new things while broadening your horizons and making new friends, definitely check out TheStuntPeople.com, their forums, and the pages below!!

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Website – TheStuntPeople.com
Forums – Forum.TheStuntPeople.com
Facebook – fb.com/TheStuntPeople
Twitter – @StuntPeople
Youtube – youtube.com/StuntPeople

Help the StuntPeople on their next project!

The Stunt People kickstarter project poster for Vader Strikes Back

The group recently released a video, (above) that received a lot of viral and media attention. Vader Strikes was a big hit, and they are now raising funds via KickStarter to produce a whole season! So if you have a minute, please hop on over to the kickstarter page and read all about it! Perhaps donate and/or share with your friends to help spread the word!

Until next time,

– Rustic

ps
Rustic Bodomov and Sam Lewis front flip in Broughty Ferry, Scotland

If you pause a video, you can see the “flip face phenomenon” which usually looks something like this.. (Broughty Ferry, Scotland circa 2010)

Zombie makeup and my first car hit.

Another quick post..so last weekend I worked on a pretty cool project for Rob Pinkston (coconut head from Ned’s Declassified). And I have to say, this was one of the best sets I’ve ever been on, and the best film crews I’ve seen in action. We filmed at CBS and this set was arguably the most-efficiently run (and the most fun) that I’ve  seen yet.

With the director and vfx supervisor.

I’ve always been a fan of Horror films, and Zombies hold a special place in my heart. My favorite zombie film is 28 Days Later, I love the music and the feeling of the story that movie shows you. As an action artist and a person who is always looking for a new challenge, I’ve been writing a couple of my own concepts down to explore the genre. (Hopefully the future will help me bring you guys my ideas in finished project form)

Anyways, I knew that one day I would finally get put in full zombie makeup, so when I got the call to work on this project I jumped right on board! There were no fights in this one, but my character does get hit by a car (and run over repeatedly). I really enjoyed acting the zombie part as well, I got to play the main zombie antagonist and it was cool actually having a script (no lines) as a zombie..it was fun getting in character!

The makeup artist is very good at what she does, and I think I ended up looking pretty scary.. 

I see you!

The most interesting part of sitting in makeup, was getting glue stick smeared over my eyebrows so the latex wouldn’t rip them out later. I also found a childish joy in peeling the latex off of my face and hands after the shoot (which reminded me of putting glue on my hands in middle school and waiting for it to dry before peeling it off).

Having a bunch of latex on your face does have some down sides, like when you can’t do anything that will make you break a sweat (otherwise you will suffer). The makeup did get a little hot, and I started worrying about parts of it falling off from the sweat (I was running and throwing myself at a windshield). Nothing did end up falling off, so my conclusion on the zombie makeup? I love it!! I can’t wait to work on a horror feature film in the future..

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Here is probably the most striking picture I’ve seen from set..

Ominous Zombie fire..

Part 2 of the awesome weekend involved me running full speed at a car and throwing myself at the windshield…I can’t say any more until the video comes out, but I can’t wait to see it and show you guys!

Now I have to go and scrub the green make-up off of my bath tub!

Until next time,

Rustic

ps.. if you share this post on Twitter, Tumblr, etc.. please add the tag –  #thedeadleys !

DICE video game awards 2013 (getting beat up by an Assassin’s Creed Assassin)

This will be a quick post..

So right before Christmas I worked on a project for the youtube channel and video mogul, Machinima. Here’s the video, I played one of the revolutionary soldiers in the Assassin’s Creed part (one of my shots is me getting flipped over from a hatchet uppercut, at 3:41)

This short film was used as the introduction to the 2013 D.I.C.E. video game awards, and aired on February 8, 2013. I got referred to the project by my friend Matt Shadden, and we filmed in the eerily UK-looking hills of the Big Sky movie ranch in Simi Valley. We shot our scene in one day, and this was honestly one of the most fun projects I’ve worked on yet. I loved the authentic British soldier costumes (I’m thinking they were also used in Mel Gibson’s, The Patriot), I loved the cast and crew, and made a lot of friends along the way!

The stunt coordinator on this project was Ho-Sung Pak..IMDB him, he’s an awesome martial artist, actor, producer and stuntman. Ho-Sung was one of the original teenage mutant ninja turtles in the TV series (Michelangelo). Also among his many credits is the video game character Liu Kang (Mortal Kombat and MK2), and an amazing film with Jackie Chan. In this clip from Drunken Master 2, he is the guy fighting Jackie while wearing a black suit.

Anyways, I hope you enjoyed the clip! Watch out for my 2013 reel coming in the next couple of weeks, with some surprises 🙂

Have a great day,

-Rustic

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ps

Here are some pictures from the day..

with Ho-Sung
Ho-Sung is awesome.

with the guys
..and so is everyone I worked with!

pps

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Namco Mobile Commercial

Feb 2, 2013 —

Let me tell you about a very cool project I worked on last year! For starters, here is the finished product..

In February 2012, my friends and I started training Kali Escrima with a really cool guy named Kimo Keoke. We would have training sessions once or twice a week in his backyard, and our martial art backgrounds allowed us to start picking this new style up relatively quickly. After training there for several weeks, an opportunity presented itself. Kimo was to coordinate stunts on a commercial which was looking for a lead actor who could also do his own Parkour/Freerunning and stunts. I was recommended, and sent my 2011 reel off to the director..

Tim Hendrix (the director) loved what he saw and asked me to play the role of the protagonist. He sent me the script, along with a video storyboard he created. I was immediately interested in working on this project, the whole endeavour projected excitement onto me, and reminded me of the videos I used to make for Kouro Media when I lived in Scotland. Also, I had just booked my first lead role, AND I would get to do my own stunts? Sign me up!

The first meeting I went to was between the director (Tim), stunt coordinator (Kimo), and myself. We checked out the planned locations at the south campus of the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA. Afterwards, Kimo and I went around and felt out the possible movement achievable within the space. We created a handful of stunts which would fit in with the storyboards, that we would later show to production. After the meeting was over and everyone was happy, I found I had a couple of days to prepare.. Wardrobe called me that evening and got my sizes, and I went for a training session at the Tempest Freerunning Academy.


Wardrobe brief was “geeky”

Morning, day 1. Spirits were high and everyone was excited to get to work. I warmed up with Kimo in a corner and we started choreographing the final sequence. The first shot of the day was to be the last shot of the action sequence, where I run up a wall to grab the “pill”, flip, and destroy one of the ghosts. I did about 10-15 variations of wallflips with different “finishing moves”, and once the director chose his favorite, we were set.

Run.

Takeoff..

Flip.

Flip..

Ready.

Pose!

I don’t think I will ever forget those first 2 hours. I think I did somewhere in the region of 50-60 sprints/wallflips/finishing move combos in an hour and a half window. I remember the wardrobe lady (Amber Wrigley) would come up to me and help me hang my shirt up between takes, as we only had 2 and I was getting pretty sweaty in the intense atmosphere.. I also remember misjudging where the wall stud was. I kept thinking the beam holding up the drywall was in one place, but once I saw the wall start to cave more and more on each take, I changed my footing. The outcome was inevitable either way, and I ended up putting my foot through the wall. I’m sure the footage is still floating around somewhere, but we found out the hard way that the wall beam was of a new design, and only one inch wide.

Foot-through-wall attack!

Super secret Foot-Through-Wall attack!

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No matter, noone was hurt and the shoot went on!

Running.

RUN!

The remainder of the first day was dedicated to filming the rest of the action sequence, with me scaling walls, sprinting down random hallways, leaping up and down sets of stairs, and playing around in an elevator. (We could only use the elevator for a 30min window and ended up blasting through that part)..we wrapped around 2pm on the first day, and I drove to my girlfriend’s house to relax and wait for day 2.

Kimo doing elevator pushups.

Kimo’s elevator pushups

The 2 day shoot took place in Pasadena, and the 40 minute drive I had to make each morning at 7 am was mostly uneventful, except for the highway tire blow-out (I used to drive a 99 Volvo convertible with shot shocks and a roof that didn’t work).. So, on the second morning of the shoot, as I was getting on the 210 (I drove from Santa Clarita), I felt a sudden shaking take over the car. A glance at my passenger mirror showed me flying chunks of rubber coming from my car. I made my way off of the highway and parked. This was at 7am on a Sunday morning, and I am still extremely grateful for the gentleman who answered his doorbell and let me borrow a jack to switch out the stripped rim for a spare. Anyways..the second day of the shoot was dedicated to filming all of the acting scenes. We were set up in a makeshift hallway, and the day was carried through with interesting conversations from the production, other actors, and various people all around.

Kimo and me.

Kimo and me!

We got all of the shots we needed, wrapped on time, and everyone said their goodbyes to newly found friends and colleagues. The excitement from those 2 days in Pasadena still stays with me, it was definitely one of the funnest projects I’ve worked on to this day. I found everyone’s work ethic, skill level, and sincerity to be outstanding, and I couldn’t wait to see the final project! Unfortunately there were some complications with post-production, but Tim Hendrix pulled through and edited the finished product you see at the top of this page 🙂

Final shot of the action.

Final shot of the action sequence

This past year, I was lucky enough to get to work with Kimo Keoke several more times, and on another project with Tim Hendrix. The second project with Tim and Kimo was the music video for Koan Sound’s “80s Fitness”, which you can see here.

Anyways, thanks for reading and I hope you have a great day!

Namaste,
Rustic

Back to training and the “Cable Deadman”

Jan 13, 2013

So yesterday my heels were feeling all heel-ed up (badum-tssss) enough to drive down to Topanga Canyon for a training session with the team! Since I haven’t had a camera now for the longest time, we haven’t been able to make any videos..but I just found out my new phone processes videos in full-HD, and looks great! So there will hopefully be more videos to come at regular intervals again..

Anyway, I arrived at 9am to a FREEZING group of stunt people. We warmed up with a quick jog up one of the hills in the area, pulled out some mats, and got straight to practicing some prat falls. James, Milly and I started with front/back falls with reactions, but quickly moved on to slightly more complex moves. As soon as Mike arrived, Tony (who always leads class) pulled out some of his rigging moves and had the “Cable Deadman” set up in no time. I strapped myself into a jerk vest and awaited my fate..

The Cable Deadman (or “Anchored Wire Jerk”) is a stunt which works on the principle of gravity…well, which ones don’t? hahah. Anyway, the stunt performer wears a “jerk vest” which is hooked via a non-stretchy-yet-in-some-cases-stretchy line to an anchor, in our case a big tree trunk. The brave soul travels/runs forward at speed, and is violently jerked backwards and down upon reaching the end of the line. This is often used play off the illusion of crashing into something or being knocked down by someone. Definitely not a move for beginners, as I found out it has the potential for some strong whiplash. The cable deadman has been around for a while, it is one of the oldest stunt gags/rigs to have been developed for the first films, and I’m sure it was used in theatre way back to ancient times as well..

I ended up doing 3 takes, and my verdict is that the next time I’m doing this, I definitely want to get paid..hahah. My main notes to my future self is to stretch and warm up my neck, and figure out how to not jerk my head as much.

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Anyways, thanks for watching! I’m hoping to have some more videos to put up soon..

For a limited time, you can find a Download Link to the video here if interested.. – https://vimeo.com/57349372

Have a great day! Namaste.

-Rustic

ps.
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