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Hey everyone.
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It's Aaron here from the Fandom Portals podcast.
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This week's episode, we feature stunt performer and coordinator Stephen Keffer.
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He is an amazing guest to listen to, guys.
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He's actually worked on lots of projects, everything from John Wick 2 all the way from the Walking Dead and anything in between.
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In this episode, we talk about his breadth of work.
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We also talk about how to keep safe on sets when you're performing stunts, and you can really hear his passion for the industry, guys.
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He's a martial artist by trade as well, and he also gives us some really great insights at the end of the podcast that inspires others to go ahead and follow their dream, because he turned his niche martial arts form into a career.
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So if you love this podcast, guys, we would love for you to share it with a friend, and we hope you enjoy this episode with Stephen Kepfer.
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Welcome to the Fandom Portals podcast, the podcast that explores how fandoms can help us learn and grow.
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I'm Aaron, a teacher and lifelong film fan, and each week we are on this podcast to explore the stories that we love, to learn more about ourselves and the world that shapes us.
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Today we're diving into the high-impact world of stunts with someone who has thrown punches, dodged bullets and leapt off buildings for their favorite characters.
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Joining us today is the incredible Stephen Kepfer, a veteran stunt performer, martial artist and fight choreographer.
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Stephen's worked on everything from American Horror Story, ray Donovan, to the Blacklist.
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With a resume full of action-packed titles and a passion for the craft, he's one of the people who's making magic truly physical.
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How are you going today, stephen?
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It's good to have you on the podcast.
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Hey, great to be here, man.
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I'm glad to be coming here to happen.
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Yeah, me too.
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Me too.
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First of all, I wanted to plug, and give you a chance to plug, your podcast, which is the Film Fights with Friends.
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That which is the Film Farts with Friends, that is a passion project of yours.
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Did you want to give us a little bit of a rundown on what that's all about?
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Well, sure, thanks, man.
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My partner, paul Veraci, who's also a stunt performer, started this, well, you know, over a year ago.
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Basically, the short story is I've been on.
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I had been on like over 50 podcasts in the last, you know not like, not last year, obviously, but 50 podcasts in the last, you know, not like not last year, obviously, but like over the last decade or so.
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And a longtime editor that I work with started a small studio here in New York with a sound engineer, rich Butler, and they were tired of working for everybody else.
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They started their own small studio and they were like Steve, you've been on so many podcasts, you need to have your own podcast, all right.
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So I was like, ok, so like I do everything.
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I said, hey, you've been on so many podcasts, you need to have your own podcast now, right.
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So I was like, okay, so like I do everything.
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I said, hey, paul, you want to do a podcast.
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So Paul was like, yeah, let's do it.
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And honestly, that's how it started and we wanted to you know, not do a quote, unquote stunt podcast.
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We wanted to do more of a filmmaking podcast.
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So we do talk about stunts a lot, obviously, but we have actors, directors, makeup artists you know anybody from any craft in the filmmaking business will come on our show.
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The central kernel is fight scenes.
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So every episode starts with a fight scene that the guest was involved with in some way, and then we organically go from there.
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We try to start with how the fight scene is written in the script and take it all the way through to the final cut what changed, what didn't, how'd you get there?
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And then you know then about our guest's career in the industry and like wherever.
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It's a pretty organic conversation.
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We don't do any pre-interviews or anything like that.
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We just let it fly, you know.
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So it's been fun.
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It's been fun, I think we're.
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This weekend we'll be recording episodes 37 and 38 yeah, I've been able to catch a couple of episodes and I like the fact that, on the YouTubes at least, you have like a table in the middle of you two guys and you change up the decor of the table for every guest that you have.
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I think that's really, really unique.
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It's really good we try to bring in.
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Like Paul, my partner is also hardcore into collectibles.
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He has a small business with another partner and I've always been, since I was a kid I was Star Wars figures, right, just collecting stuff.
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So I have, we both.
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Between the two of us, we almost always have something for the table that fits our guests, you know.
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So, like, for example, this weekend.
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By the time, I don't know when this drops, but this episode that we're recording this weekend won't drop until September.
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But we're doing a remake round table, right.
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So it's.
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We have two prior guests coming on.
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They're not telling us what their choices are, but it's their favorite remake and their least favorite remake, right?
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Oh, nice.
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So, and none of us know what the others are choosing, right?
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So I know for myself, I'm picking the thing as my favorite remake, and then one of my least favorite remakes will be peter jackson's king kong.
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But I was at the premiere for peter jackson's king kong, so I have all this cool stuff to put on the table.
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You know, like from from the premiere.
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So yeah, we try to, we try to customize it.
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You know, if I have a star wars thing, we, we try to customize it.
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You know, if I have a Star Wars thing, we have Star Wars.
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If we do, if we know we're doing.
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You know Christmas, we do the whole Charlie Brown.
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We put Christmas lights all over our table and stuff.
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We try to dress it up each episode, personalize it a bit.
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Yeah, that's good.
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We have that in common with the Star Wars figurines too.
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I definitely grew up with a couple of those.
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I don't know if any of them would be worth any money, though, because I played with them until they were dirty and yuck.
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I'm a nerd, you have her on a boat, buy one to keep in the box one to open up and play with.
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That's smart.
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I have this one right here.
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Hold on, I have this one.
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This one is an original.
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Empire Strikes Back the Cogtower pilot.
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But what makes it valuable is they say that Free revenge of the Jedi figure with six proofs of purchase.
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This is before the recall, when they were promoting Revenge of the Jedi.
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Oh, instead of Return of the Jedi.
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Yeah, exactly, yeah, wow.
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And I saved this one from when I was a kid.
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I bought this and never opened it, and now it's like branded and all protected.
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I was going to say it looks clean, as that's so good, totally.
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We're nerds like that.
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I think our podcast strikes a nice balance between technical know-how of filmmaking and also, you know, the nerd factor.
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And then every once in a while we'll do a Stephen Paul only episode where we kind of just dive into our nerd, our nerd selves more.
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It sounds good.
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All right, if you haven't followed it already, listeners, make sure you go and check out the Film Fights podcast.
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Steve, I want to wind it back a bit because you are very passionate about the stunts and in the stunt world and martial arts.
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I want to know what was your path into the stunt world like.
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Were there any movies or heroes that sort of inspired you to jump into the craft?
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yeah, 100 man, I mean like any kid born, and I was born in the late 60s, so by the time I started really paying attention it was the spielberg years, you know.
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It was like, and or at least the 80s, 70s and 80s movies.
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So Empire Strikes Back more than Star Wars itself, although Star Wars was certainly an epic moment for me.
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I, you know, I definitely remember going to see that with my father and we were actually on a road trip, you know, my dad, every year we'd do like this father-son trip somewhere.
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And then this movie came out, star Wars.
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We're like, oh, let's go check that out.
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You know it's like, oh my God.
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And back then I was like, you know, you had to wait, wait, wait, wait, another three years till the next one came out.
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And then when Empire came out, I was blown away.
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Still my favorite of all the IP, with the exception, I say, of like probably Rogue One is my number two now.
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But then, and then just that year, the next year came out Raiders of the Lost Ark, and that really really tapped into something about me as a 13-year-old boy and like my ideas of manhood and adventure and like all this kind of stuff.
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And then by then I kind of knew I wanted to be a filmmaker or somehow involved in film and like so at that time I was kind of day camp, you know, as a kid, but my parents were sending me to filmmaking camp.
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So already back then we were shooting every summer we would script to screen, shoot and edit something.
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As you know kids and they were I guess our counselors were the film students at, like, new York Institute of Technology here but so I really got into it.
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And then, you know, my father had a Super 8 camera so we would shoot stuff on film and actually edit it, you know, with scotch tape and scissors and make our own little films.
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So I wanted to be into it, for into this business forever basically.
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But I kind of didn't want to be a performer, I wanted to be the makeup guy.
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Like back then my library, my bedroom library, was like all the behind the scenes, the how-to, the makeup.
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And then I'd say the next movie that really was influential to me was American War from London.
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Oh, nice, john Landis.
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Like that movie blew me away.
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You know that movie blew me away.
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You know that movie blew me away and, you know, never went back.
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Man, you know, I ended up as a performer because of martial arts.
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Like, martial arts kind of brought me there, you know.
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But before I ever started performing stunts, I was already making documentaries and and other things, like from behind the cameras.
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And then, you know, one day a light bulb went out because a stunt coordinator I met said oh, you should really think about stunts.
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You've got all this skill and you've got all this skill.
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You should put it together.
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And that was 2014 or something like that.
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Yeah, yeah, so 2013, something like that I was gonna ask about your, your martial arts background, because I wanted to know if that sort of naturally sort of wove itself into your film career.
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And obviously you spoke then about some early mentors that helped you sort of break into the industry.
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Did you want to discuss how that sort of pathway and that avenue of martial arts has helped you along the way?
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Sure, I mean martial arts.
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My life, like a lot of people in this business, my life has been, all you know, my winding road of other careers and things that I've done before.
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I actually was able to make a living as a martial artist and then as a in the film industry.
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But I started martial arts when I was seven or eight.
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My mom put me in like karate daycare.
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You know.
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I was a lash key camp.
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Both my parents worked.
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And then my mom was a professor at Queens College she's a geneticist and a biology professor Ashkey camp both my parents worked.
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And then my mom was a professor at Queens College.
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She's a geneticist and a biology professor.
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So she would.
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They had a program at the college for faculty kids, you know you could put them in there.
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So I went into karate, not asking for it, but that's just where she put me, planted the seed, you know.
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And then by the time I was in high school I started on my own training and I did that for a couple of years, gathered no expertise, you know, like seven-year-old kid, seven eight-year-old kid.
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But by the time I got to high school and I could choose for myself what I wanted to do, I went back to martial arts Been ever since.
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So back then it was Taekwondo and that was like great Olympic Taekwondo.
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That was Taekwondo.
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That was when Taekwondo was in the Olympics.
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So I did that for many years and then, you know, I got my black belt and I was teaching that for a while.
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Then I moved over to Sanshao, which is Chinese kickboxing, like Sandah Sanshao it's basically like MMA without the wrestling, it's just kick out, punching and throwing, and I did that for many years.
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And then I met my Samba coach in 1989 and it's been Samba ever since.
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And then in 2003, I opened my own school.
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So I've been running my own school.
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And then in 2000, like 2005, I quit my day job to do that, to take the leap and do that full time, you know, to see if it worked.
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And it worked, you know that's so good.
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Yeah, and I was studying Samba.
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For those who don't know, it's a russian style, it's basically like john wick they try to emulate as a sambo guy.
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In fact his character is supposed to be a sambo guy and that's how I got to work on those movies.
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But you know, before I actually got into the industry officially, seven was my first real job and it was on the tv show human weapon, which was where they would travel around the world and do all the different martial arts and stuff.
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And I was an advisor on the sambo episode.
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Right, they found me because of my youtube channel.
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So, like you know, in 2005 I started, I started putting up sambo instructionals on youtube and then they found me and then a couple years later I I get a call from Chad Stahelski, who is people who know he's the director, you know, the co-founder of 8711 and the director, the first John Wick and he I got a call and basically invited me to work on the movie as a consultant.
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Come by the rehearsals.
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We need, we wanted to, we want to see how a Sambo person would do certain things.
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I wasn't even in the screen actress guild yet, so it was like all just come on by and hang out and and see how you like it.
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But when I asked him how he found me, he said he was always subscribed, sharing youtube channel man.
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I was like, oh, this is awesome, you know.
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So for everybody out there, your social media is really important, you know like I don't consider youtube social media, but at the time it was kind of social media ish.
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You know we didn't really have like what we have now back then.
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But yeah, it's be careful, what you put out there it could, it could help you, it could hurt you, yeah I definitely agree, yeah yeah, in my case it helped big time yeah, I think it's a really great way for like exposure, obviously in the early days for you with your your work on on john wick.
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You mentioned that that was probably one of the first sort of film sets that you worked on.
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Is that correct?
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And if if so, like what was that experience like when you went there?
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You went on as a sambo coach.
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What was the day-to-day like for you is what I'm sort of asking sure?
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well, I, when I when I worked on 2, john Wick 2, I was never on set.
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I was always just in rehearsals and working with the Scott team behind the scenes.
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I was never even on the set.
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So I mean, it was cool.
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I got to work with JJ Perry, who was the supervising stunt coordinator, and obviously meet Keanu Reeves and work with the whole team, jackson Spidell and Eric Brown and all these guys who, like people who pay attention, now know who they are, but maybe back then they didn't know who they were Then and I wasn't union yet, right, so I wasn't on the set.
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But then shortly after that I got into the union and then Chad called me and said hey, you want to work on three, and so my role on three was predominantly also not on set, although I did spend a couple days on set as the Sambo coach in the theater the training scene in the theater, with Angelica Eastman in that scene, when Keanu comes back to the theater and all the kids are training Sambo and all the girls are training ballet, which, of course, now is the segue to ballerina.
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Right, that's the timeline there.
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So, but for about two months, before that ever happened, I was working with with 8711 on casting all those Sambo kids.
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So we were holding the auditions at my, at my gym.
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At my gym and because I'm in touch with that community here in the United States, I was able to invite all the Russian kids and Russian coaches and all that stuff to come audition for that scene.
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And then I was also working with Wardrobe and you know, basically providing them samples of what authentic uniforms would look like and then also providing them with footage of my training in Russia and different Eastern European countries so they can get a sample of what an authentic sort of, you know, like you ever see, the movie Warrior, right, with Tom Hardy, right.
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So you had the super high-tech gym, and then you had the dingy-tech gym, and then you had the, the dingy gym, you know, and so the, the Savo training facility in the theater, was supposed to be closer to the gym, the type of gym, not the high-tech, super tech soviet, you know, like rocky floor, you know like kind of thing.
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So it was like I had video of training in places like that.
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So I provided that to them, worked with casting, worked with word, I was working with everything.
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And then finally I was on set for the for two days.
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That scene was two days shooting and on set my job was to basically what they call special ability coordinator.
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So special ability performers are they're above background but they're below stunts, so they're like people in the scene for those listening.
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There are people in the scene for those listening.
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There are people in the scene that have a skill that you want in the scene.
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So like if you know, like when James Bond walks into a training facility and you got guys throwing each other and beating each other up and training hand-to-hand combat in the background, those would be special ability people.
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Like there are people that are maybe trying to get into the union as stunt performers or they just have a skill that we need in the scene.
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So and somebody has to tell them what to do.
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So that was me right.
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So I was the one kind of directing what was happening with all those Sambo people in that scene.
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It was really, really fun.
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You know it was.
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It was a ton of fun, got to meet, like it was.
00:16:55.594 --> 00:16:57.804
It was actually Actually, I didn't know I was going to do that.
00:16:57.865 --> 00:17:06.571
So I show up on set just thinking I'm going to hang out and get to be a coach in the scene and then I hear on the walkie talkie Chad is like I need Sambo Steve on set.
00:17:06.571 --> 00:17:07.826
I need Sambo Steve on set.
00:17:07.826 --> 00:17:09.767
Like Sambo Steve is my name, yep.
00:17:09.767 --> 00:17:22.605
So I go on set and he brings me over to introduce me to the director of photography, dan Laston, and then he's like Steve, this is Dan, dan is Steve.
00:17:22.605 --> 00:17:23.791
He's like okay, so we need something going on over here.
00:17:23.791 --> 00:17:24.556
We need something going on over here.
00:17:24.556 --> 00:17:27.003
This is how we're going to shoot it, this is where the cameras are Okay.
00:17:27.144 --> 00:17:33.382
And then Chad grabs a PA, gives the PA to me and says you just do it, you just make it happen.
00:17:33.382 --> 00:17:34.624
Like that was it.
00:17:34.624 --> 00:17:36.486
He just put me in charge in front of everybody.
00:17:36.486 --> 00:17:40.351
So for me, as a new person in the industry, that was actually really important.
00:17:40.351 --> 00:17:42.273
Right One, I was nervous.
00:17:42.273 --> 00:17:43.576
I was nervous as heck.
00:17:43.576 --> 00:17:50.368
Now, on a big you know this is a big movie production, biggest set I'd ever been on, and a lot of people are watching.
00:17:50.368 --> 00:17:53.102
You know this rookie, how is he going to handle that pressure?
00:17:53.382 --> 00:17:57.147
So it was it was fun but nerve wracking and but it did help me level up.
00:17:57.147 --> 00:18:01.074
You know, in the business People saw that I don't crack under pressure.
00:18:01.653 --> 00:18:02.355
Yeah, that's really good.
00:18:02.355 --> 00:18:17.962
What an opportunity and what an experience as well from Chad Stileski to work on such a like a blockbuster movie as well, but also to be thrown in and, you know, put your passion and your training to work in something that was really going to be and really combine those two elements.
00:18:17.962 --> 00:18:24.893
You know film and then also martial arts to lead that sort of team and it obviously did well for you as well Through your discussion.
00:18:25.053 --> 00:18:26.214
In Stombo specifically.
00:18:26.214 --> 00:18:28.691
Right, like, how often does that come along?
00:18:28.691 --> 00:18:39.041
Like you know, people, like everybody in the stunt business, gets in, sort of gets in the door for something, and then they just have to start learning everything else that they don't know, right?
00:18:39.041 --> 00:18:42.145
So, like, how many other Sambo movies are there going to be?
00:18:42.145 --> 00:18:45.710
So I got lucky, like that's that I got in because of fighting at Sambo.
00:18:45.710 --> 00:18:48.673
But then it's like, okay, well, now I have to learn how to drive.
00:18:48.673 --> 00:18:49.914
Now I have to learn how to do this.
00:18:49.974 --> 00:19:04.007
Now I have to let you you have to go back to drawing board because you can't make a career off of doing a very niche thing.
00:19:04.007 --> 00:19:07.337
So I was very lucky, yeah, and I think those movies as well the John Wick franchise really reinvigorated the action franchise for the modern era as well.
00:19:07.337 --> 00:19:12.852
They started as a very sort of arthouse, underrated sort of experience, but now they're definitely a staple, as you said.
00:19:12.852 --> 00:19:15.989
You know, the Ballerina series has started to come out as well.
00:19:15.989 --> 00:19:21.349
Through your discussion there, you talked about a lot of different sort of roles in the, the stunt profession.
00:19:21.349 --> 00:19:24.196
Myself I'm a little bit of a rookie in the in the stunt field.
00:19:24.196 --> 00:19:28.290
I know about stunt doubles, I know stunt coordinators and, obviously, stunt performers.
00:19:28.290 --> 00:19:39.342
What are, what are some of those roles that occur on set for people that are into stunts, and which ones have you preferred to perform through your career?