“He seemed to respect me as a director”: Bullet Train Director Was Amazed by Brad Pitt’s Humility Despite Not Being Credited for $86M John Wick by Chad Stahelski

brad pitt and keanu reeves as john wick
Featured Video

Every great Hollywood director seems to have a favorite: Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, Quentin Tarantino and Samuel L. Jackson, Greta Gerwig and Saoirse Ronan, Tim Burton and Johnny Depp, and the list continues. But no pair comes close to the incredible story of Brad Pitt and director David Leitch who once upon a time started in the industry as Pitt’s stunt double, instead of as an infamous director-actor collaborator. Now, with 25 years in the bag, the Pitt-Leitch duo that now supersedes the Pitt-Fincher partnership has become as infamous as the news of Leo DiCaprio replacing Rob De Niro as Scorsese’s muse.

Advertisement
David Leitch and Brad Pitt
David Leitch and Brad Pitt

Also read: Bullet Train Review: Fun But Not Fast Enough

David Leitch Credits Brad Pitt’s Professionalism as an Actor

When Brad Pitt still served as a muse to the esteemed and twisted mind of director, David Fincher, an unlikely friendship blossomed on the sets of one of history’s most incredulous films of all time, Fight Club. Almost like art imitating life, the friendship that the audience witnessed in Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (sans the fading glory) began to grow between Fincher’s leading man and his stunt double, David Leitch. Through the decade that followed, the pair would go on to collaborate as actor-double in films like Ocean’s Eleven (2001) and Mr. and Mrs. Smith (2005).

Advertisement
Bullet Train (2022)
Bullet Train (2022)

Also read: Despite a Promising Story and Insane Action Sequences, Brad Pitt’s Bullet Train Becomes Lowest Earner of Summer Box Office Weekends

When Leitch finally graduated from his spot in front of the lens to one behind it, the duo’s first film together in their new-found actor-director partnership, Bullet Train, was a colorful melée of overlapping plots, anime-style cinematography, and a non-stop barrage of hilarious fight sequences from start to finish. Recalling their time on set, the director claims:

“When [Pitt] came on this, he seemed to respect me already as a director. Obviously, we worked a little on ‘Deadpool 2.’ We fell into this great friend rapport that we had in the years we spent together. But I was just blown away by him embracing me as the director and leaning into my ideas.”

David Leitch behind the scenes of Bullet Train
David Leitch behind the scenes of Bullet Train

Adapted from the black humor thriller novel by Kōtarō Isaka titled Maria Beetle, the film served as the first full-length feature film collaboration between David Leitch and Brad Pitt after the duo previously worked on a two-second cameo scene from Pitt in Ryan Reynolds’ Deadpool 2 as Vanisher. The favor was hilariously returned in Bullet Train when Reynolds appeared at the very end as Carver, the one responsible for Pitt’s character, Ladybug, landing in hot water in the first place.

Advertisement

David Leitch’s Hollywood Arc: Stunt Double to Director

At the time Fight Club had come out, David Leitch already established himself as quite the master stunt coordinator. Excelling in the traditional Hong Kong action film style sequences, Leitch had also trained alongside Wing Chun legend, Bruce Lee’s training partner, Dan Inosanto, who later inspired Leitch to incorporate an American fighting technique into the Hong Kong action sequences, giving rise to the infamous “gun-fu” form of stunt that one can witness in the John Wick installments.

Chad Stahelski, David Leitch, Keanu Reeves (director, stunt coordinator, lead actor)
Chad Stahelski, David Leitch, and Keanu Reeves at the John Wick premiere

Also read: “We were all going crazy and questioning our choices”: Brad Pitt Admits Bullet Train Was a Fresh Air of Relief For Him During a Tough Time

The limited space that Leitch later got to work with in his 2022 film, Bullet Train, worked perfectly in his favor as the director finally got to incorporate choppy and condensed stunts with “lots of quick jabs and kicks,” according to an interview with Insider. Now, Leitch finally gets to enjoy his new lookout from the directorial chair as the talented director sets off in search of more challenging projects to pick up in the near future.

Advertisement

Bullet Train is available for streaming on Netflix.

Source: Insider

Advertisement
Avatar

Written by Diya Majumdar

Articles Published: 1488

With a degree in Literature from Miranda House, Diya Majumdar now has nearly 1500 published articles on FandomWire. Her passion and profession both include dissecting the world of cinema while being a liberally opinionated person with an overbearing love for Monet, Edvard Munch, and Van Gogh. Other skills include being the proud owner of an obsessive collection of Spotify playlists.