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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 22 2009, 7:10 PM EST (current) | agentnics | 287 words added, 273 words deleted, 6 photos added, 6 photos deleted |
| Dec 21 2008, 7:49 PM EST | ncismcgee | 1 word added, 1 word deleted |
| 1) This is what we call a sweeps stunt. The Nov. 6 episode of NCIS (CBS, 8 p.m.) begins with Gibbs (Mark Harmon, pictured) trapped in a submerged car with an unconscious young woman, and Tony (Michael Weatherly) diving into the water to save them. Of course, how Gibbs and the girl came to be sitting on the floor of the Washington Channel is a mystery that unfolds throughout the episode. But we were able to get NCIS stunt coordinator Diamond Farnsworth to tell us how the actors shot the memorable scene. In an 18-foot deep tank. Sucking air out of hookah lines. Read on…2)There were 32 pages of storyboards for the stunt. ''On a [difficulty] scale of 1 to 10, I would have to give this stunt a good 8,'' Farnsworth says. ''Being underwater is like dealing with fire. You never know what could happen.''3) The actors don't look too worried. Harmon's a former lifeguard; Weatherly (right) swims and snorkels.4) | The actors spent a full eight-hour day in the tank. Rather than come to the surface after each shot for direction (what they're getting here), they stayed below for 30 minutes at a time. ''We used hand signals,'' Farnsworth says. ''Turn your finger — rolling. Point to Mark — action.' 5)Each actor had two safety divers assigned to him. Here, one of Harmon's helps him into the car. The actor breathes through a hookah line, a 25-foot hose that runs from an oxygen tank to a regulator, which is placed into his mouth.6)As Harmon enters the car, he'll switch his hookah line to one of the six installed in the vehicle. When it's time for the camera to roll, he'll take the line out of his mouth and stow it underneath his leg. ''You sit on it so you know where it is at all times,'' Farnsworth says.7)What's harder than holding your breath for 30 seconds? Having to act while holding your breath for 30 seconds. Harmon tries to revive his passenger (Cameron Goodman). The black hose at the top of the photo is one of the floating hookah lines for Weatherly to use while filming his rescue attempt. 8)Gibbs'8) Gibbs' steering wheel breaks and pins him inside the car. Even Farnsworth, who spent a day in the driver's seat testing the stunt and filming long shots as Harmon's double, admits it was an eerie feeling. ''You get in the car, the steering wheel comes across your lap, you take your mask off, you take the regulator out of your mouth, and the doors are shut. It'd be like somebody puttin' you in a coffin.'' |
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| 3) The actors don't look too worried. Harmon's a former lifeguard; Weatherly (right) swims and snorkels. | |
| 4) The actors spent a full eight-hour day in the tank. Rather than come to the surface after each shot for direction (what they're getting here), they stayed below for 30 minutes at a time. ''We used hand signals,'' Farnsworth says. ''Turn your finger — rolling. Point to Mark — action.' | |
| | 12)''Michael12) ''Michael really impressed me,'' Farnsworth says. ''He had to swim down to the car, pull the windshield out, pull each of the people out.... I bet he slept very good that night.'' |
| 6) As Harmon enters the car, he'll switch his hookah line to one of the six installed in the vehicle. When it's time for the camera to roll, he'll take the line out of his mouth and stow it underneath his leg. ''You sit on it so you know where it is at all times,'' Farnsworth says. | 13)''He's13) ''He's happy,'' Farnsworth says of Harmon. ''I think it's almost over.'' |
| 7) What's harder than holding your breath for 30 seconds? Having to act while holding your breath for 30 seconds. Harmon tries to revive his passenger (Cameron Goodman). The black hose at the top of the photo is one of the floating hookah lines for Weatherly to use while filming his rescue attempt. | |