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When Hollywood grants you access on Twitter the details can be amazingly entertaining

We all know that Twitter can mostly be a roiling fetid pit of despair and dysphoria. It’s what makes the place so much fun. But occasionally, there are those moments when you get to see the way this forum can be used as a tool for good. Or, for entertainment.

One good part of Twitter is that unique access to the players in industries can be found. While many are familiar with journalists being available (like sending potato gifs to Brian Stelter), the players in Hollywood can also be a good source of insight. Look beyond the celebrities, and you can sometimes get a peek at how the sausage gets made.

One recent example is due to a few of the artisans from the industry discussing how some amazing photography took place in the filming of Tom Cruise in “Mission Impossible: Fallout.” Cruise is often hailed as an actor for performing many of his own stunts, but the crew that has to film him frequently are just as outlandish. Screenwriter Cheo Coker was impressed.

Then fellow scriptwriter Christopher McQuarrie, who wrote the Cruise film, provided some amazing details.

The really great thing is how this tweet sparked more questions, and McQuarrie was most accommodating in lending more insight toward those he has never met.

An inexperienced cameraman was shooting in true guerrilla fashion while plummeting at 200mph. And it gets better.

Over 100 jumps, just to get the shot. Moreover, in order to match the natural lighting, they had only two minutes in which to shoot within a 3-minute window each day. So they could only execute one jump per day. That is over three months’ worth of skydiving in order to capture what was less than one minute of screen time.

And to cap off the impressiveness, there is actual footage of them filming one of the jumps. Note in the actual scene above there are no edits until the lightning flash.

Just staggering filmmaking and all the more impressive that they did this in the era of an overreliance on CGI.

This demands respect.

Yes, next time I start bitching about my internet slowing down or such, I’ll be considering this guy’s workday and then promptly shut the hell up!

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