
Interview
with Phil Tann
Stunt
Coordinator for Wild Wild West
Stunt
Rev: What
is your training and background?
Phil Tann: I've
been a stuntman for 20 years. I have worked all over
the world. I started in Great Britain, and worked in
and around Europe with the British, French, and Asian
movie people for 10 years. When you work in Europe,
you pretty much work with everybody. Then I moved to
the U.S. and have been working over here for about
10 years. I am a fight coordinator, a stunt coordinator,
an actor, and a 2nd Unit director. I also 1st Unit
direct. I have done over 200 movies in last 20 years. |
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SR: What about your martial arts
experience?
Phil: National
champ Tae Kwon Do. I was national contender for Moi Thai
boxing. I do
Wing Chu, which is the fighting style made popular by Bruce
Lee. Boxing, Kick Boxing, grappling, Ju-Jitsu -- just about
a little bit of everything. I also trained with Benny the
Jet.
SR: We understand that Robert Conrad
who played TV's James West was concerned that Wild Wild
West's fights would not be up to the standard set by the
original shows. What did you do to make sure the fights
would be as good or better than the original?
Phil: With
the action we tried to combine a bit of Will Smith's style
with Jackie Chan action
and Matrix style aerial wire work. Put those together,
and you have a really interesting style that's funny, kick-butt
street, and futuristic.
SR: Did
you find Will Smith easy to work with?
Phil: One
of the easiest stars to work with, and he's one of
the nicest stars I've ever worked with. Will has
a wonderful attitude, and he's a very generous man.
He's a really nice all around guy. He works harder
than any other star I've seen. Almost every day he
would work a twelve hour day and even though he didn't
have to, he would stay two hours longer to work on
a fight scene. He really wanted to do it.
SR: Did
Will do his own stunts?
Phil: Yes.
I would say almost all of them. Most actors only
do about 2% of their stunts
while their stunt doubles do 98% of the work. With Will
it was the other way around. Will did 98% of his stunts.
There were only a couple small stunts that we didn't
need to have him do, so we just used the double.
Will really
worked hard. Audiences today are tired of actors who
just sit around and do nothing. They see a stunt
and say to
themselves: "That was a double." In Wild
Wild West, you can tell when there's a stunt that
the actor is really doing it. |
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SR: What is your favorite scene in
Wild Wild West?
Phil: My
favorite scene I think is the end fight sequence. There
is another scene where Will
and Kevin are ratcheted together. Their characters are
supposed to be wearing super-magnets around their necks.
They get drug through mud and water which was very funny.
There is a lot of wire work that Leavittation did. Lane
Leavitt put Will Smith in the wire rigs which made it very
special, not like Matrix, were the audience knew
that the actors' stunt doubles were in the air.
SR: How has Hong Kong influenced
Hollywood?
Phil: In a positive sense: utilizing
the comedic and extreme stunts of Jackie Chan and Jet Lee.
The problem with Hong Kong though, is that they usually
lack a strong story line. American movies, on the other
hand, usually have good stories but lack the intense action
of Hong Kong. In Hong Kong, actors must do their
own stunts. We're making the stunts safe for American actors.
American audiences are bored. We need to make something
that they will be glad pay $8.50 to see. Combine the Hong
Kong style of action with the American Story line and you
have magic on the screen.
SR: What
is the next big action style that will impact the stunt
industry? For example: there
were movies like Connan, then Commando,
and then True Lies.
Phil: The
Matrix style of
action. Like Super Man with a big martial arts style. Super
heroic. For example a Bat Man type movie with lots of aerial
kick-butt action. Lead actors flying and fighting in the
air, and using cool weapons, like in Star Wars.
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