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Entertainment

Gritty, realistic action scenes pay off in The Equalizer

The Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines - To realize the action of Columbia Pictures’ new action-thriller The Equalizer, the conversations began between director Antoine Fuqua, lead actor Denzel Washington and Keith Woulard, one of the film’s stunt coordinators. “There’s a tendency in shooting action to shake the camera and move things around — the audience can’t tell what’s happening,” says Fuqua. That’s just what they didn’t want to do. “My goal was to take acting and make it action,” he says.

Fuqua’s inspiration for the way he would shoot the action scenes with McCall, Washington’s character, was inspired by his interaction with real-life boxers. “I happen to have a very good friend who’s a great boxer — Sugar Ray Leonard,” he notes. “He’ll tell stories, and you’ll realize how smart a boxer can be. Sometimes, they’ll touch you — hey, how you doin’ today? — and that’s their way of checking you out, seeing if you’re in shape, if they think you’re a threat. Or they’re watching you a certain way, to see how you move, how your body language is, what your strengths and weaknesses are. They can pick you apart. McCall is trained that way, too — he notices these things and uses them to his advantage. We had to show that.”

It was also important to Fuqua that the scenes be realistic. “We asked ourselves, ‘Can it really happen?’ Can you really physically do these things? What happens to a human being who is capable of doing that? And it turns out for most people, ordinary people, it’s not possible — you get into a car accident, your heart beats faster, you panic. For people like McCall, though, it’s just the opposite. Their heart rate slows down. The breathing slows down. Everything around them slows down. Their pupils open up to let in more light. It’s all really happening as they assess a room in seconds. And then, when they have it all figured out, they go into action.”

For Woulard, as a stunt coordinator, the process began by breaking down the script into its individual set pieces. “We talked to Denzel and Antoine about what they wanted to do,” he says. “In this particular case, Denzel didn’t want to do a lot of martial arts-type of fighting — he wanted straight, street, slick, creative fighting. And Antoine, of course, agreed.” Woulard brought his own experience in the military, including Special Forces, in creating the fights for the film.

For this particular film, it was imperative that the stunt team work closely with Washington and create action that the actor could perform himself. “We set up all of the action facing us. You see Denzel maybe 95 percent of the time,” Woulard notes. “So, about a month before we started shooting, I started training him — and we trained every day.”

One thing that sets Robert McCall apart is that he does not use a gun — he uses his environment, whatever is at hand, against his opponents. “There could be an ashtray on the table, a letter opener on the desk,” Woulard continues.

In that way, the specific action of The Equalizer doesn’t end with the stunts — it cuts across all aspects of filmmaking, including photography and production design.

The Equalizer, now showing in theaters nationwide, is distributed by Columbia Pictures, local office of Sony Pictures Releasing International.

vuukle comment

ACTION

ANTOINE FUQUA

COLUMBIA PICTURES

DENZEL

DENZEL AND ANTOINE

DENZEL WASHINGTON AND KEITH WOULARD

FOR WOULARD

FUQUA

SONY PICTURES RELEASING INTERNATIONAL

WOULARD

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