For those who look forward to Summer Blockbusters as much as I do, The Fall Guy was the perfect way to kick off the season. And not only because it’s a fun romp with a charming cast, or that it features one of TAG Heuer’s coolest new-ish releases, but more so because it draws attention to movie making with an emphasis on the stunt teams who are responsible for a lot of the love that we have for movies. For years folks have been pushing for The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to add Oscar categories to honor stunt teams and performers. David Leitch, director of The Fall Guy and former stuntman, is adding his voice to the cause with this new movie that acts as a love letter to stunt performers.
Colt Seavers (Ryan Gosling) and Jody Moreno (Emily Blunt) are our main characters, representing the sometimes underappreciated members within a film crew – Colt, the stunt double of the famed Tom Ryder (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), and Jody, the camerawoman looking to one day make it as a director. The two also begin the movie amid a passionate and new romantic relationship, until a life-threatening back injury, the result of a stunt gone wrong, takes Colt out of commission. During his time away from a movie set, Colt pushes Jody away and loses a lot of his self-confidence. Until, that is, he’s approached by Tom Ryder’s agent, Gail Meyer (Hannah Waddingham), who calls Colt back to do Tom’s stunts on a new movie that Jody is directing. But things go awry when Tom gets involved with shady characters and goes missing. Colt is now the only man who can potentially save Tom and his love’s big break movie.
Colt is the perfectly imperfect hero. He never has the right thing to say, is afraid to do his stunts, is more afraid to approach Jody, and clearly doesn’t have a clue when it comes to solving the mystery of Tom Ryder’s whereabouts. Throughout the movie Colt wears his TAG Heuer Carrera in reverse panda configuration. You could make the argument that this might be the perfect type of watch for a stuntman. Lots of his stunts require near perfect timing, and many of his stunts deal with crashing, racing, and jumping from cars. And with TAG Heuer’s history in racing, it might seem like the perfect fit. And some of you might argue that the only reason the watch is there is because Ryan Gosling is a TAG Heuer brand ambassador, and to that I say, “well, duh.” But, I implore you to have fun with it.
Like many of you, I am skeptical of brand ambassadors and product placement. I know that we live in a world where marketing within a creative piece of entertainment is the norm, yet when it happens, I typically like for it to be more covert, and less “Daniel-Craig-telling-Eva Green-he’s-wearing-an Omega-not-a Rolex.” When things like this happen, I can’t help but be lifted out of the movie. However, with comedy the equation changes. The Fall Guy is not quite satire or parody, but it does point out some aspects of the movie business, through comedy, that are more manufactured. They do this by engaging in the joke they’re making.