Ryan Gosling Reveals the One “Fall Guy” Stunt His Daughters ‘Specifically’ Asked Him Not to Do (Exclusive)

Ryan Gosling Reveals the One “Fall Guy” Stunt His Daughters ‘Specifically’ Asked Him Not to Do (Exclusive)

In the action-packed ‘The Fall Guy,’ reveals Ryan Gosling, “My kids didn’t want me to be set on fire”

<p>Kopaloff/Getty; Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures</p> (Left-right:) Ryan Gosling at the April 30 Los Angeles premiere of "The Fall Guy"; Ben Jenkin filming "The Fall Guy"

Kopaloff/Getty; Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures

(Left-right:) Ryan Gosling at the April 30 Los Angeles premiere of "The Fall Guy"; Ben Jenkin filming "The Fall Guy"

Ryan Gosling wanted to get in on the action in his new movie, The Fall Guy. His daughters, however, had demands.

“My kids didn't want me to be set on fire,” the actor-producer, 43, tells PEOPLE exclusively. Esmeralda Amada, 9, and Amada Lee, 8, who he shares with longtime partner Eva Mendes, 50, “asked specifically” that he avoid any pyrotechnics.

“Even though I said, ‘Well, it's actually, technically the safer thing to do because there's a lot of protective stuff involved,’” recalls Gosling of the trick — which entails fire-resistant clothing and special protection gel — his daughters nevertheless “were like, ‘No. No fire.’ So I didn't do it.”

Related: Ryan Gosling and Lookalikes Wow with Fiery Stunt on The Fall Guy Red Carpet

Ben Jenkin, one of several doubles who helped Gosling bring the character of stuntman Colt Seavers to life, did the stunt instead. His fire burn, as it’s called, was completed a total of eight times. 

<p>Kopaloff/Getty; Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures</p>

Kopaloff/Getty; Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures

The Fall Guy (in theaters Friday, May 3), loosely based on Lee Majors’ 1980s TV series of the same name, was conceived as an homage to the filmmaking community, particularly those who make spectacle possible: the stunt professionals who Gosling calls the “unsung heroes” of the biz.

Ryan Gosling on the set of "The Fall Guy" (Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures)
Ryan Gosling on the set of "The Fall Guy" (Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures)

At the March 13 SXSW premiere of the David Leitch-directed movie, Gosling told PEOPLE it was “important” that he do “a few” of his own stunts — despite a fear of heights. While the actor "would have been happy to say I did none of my own stunts in this movie," he wanted to get closer to the work his movie was honoring. “It helped me to understand exactly on some small level what [stunt professionals] do every day.”

Related: Eva Mendes Never Pictured Her Life at 50 — and Now She's 'Happy It's Turning Out the Way It Is' (Exclusive)

<p>Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures</p> Ben Jenkin on the set of "The Fall Guy"

Eric Laciste/Universal Pictures

Ben Jenkin on the set of "The Fall Guy"

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That’s how the Barbie star found himself dropping backwards 12 stories off a building while held up with wires, The Fall Guy’s opening scene. “This was orchestrated so that it would happen after a long, very involved take that starts outside, comes inside, up the elevators about 12 stories. When I got [to the ledge] I was like, ‘I think I'm going to need to put on sunglasses for no reason, so that the audience doesn't see how afraid I am.’ ”

Emily Blunt, Gosling’s costar, confirms that it was really him falling from that height take after take. “It was very scary watching you do that,” she tells him. “Everyone went silent. Then when he first did it, we all started cheering.”

The Oppenheimer star, 41, adds with a laugh, “After you'd done it the first time, people didn't cheer afterwards, and I felt bad. I was like, ‘Come on, he's still doing it!’ ”

“I just blacked out,” admits Gosling. “I just don't remember any of it.”

Assisted by parkour prodigy Jenkin, driving double Logan Holladay, high fall expert Troy Brown, martial artist Justin Eaton, stunt coordinator Keir Beck and second unit director Chris O’Hara — who on The Fall Guy earned the industry’s first-ever credit of stunt designer — Gosling participated in several flips, fights and other falls. The stunt team also helped rehearse the action sequences and ensure safety for cast members Winston Duke, Hannah Waddingham, Stephanie Hsu, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and more. 

In March, Gosling and Blunt presented a tribute montage to stunt performers at the 2024 Academy Awards. Ahead of the movie's release, the team also presented Holladay, 34, with a Guinness World Record for the most cannon rolls in a car, a stunt he pulled off for the movie.

Related: Ryan Gosling Fills in as 'Stunt Double' for Instagram's Dude with Sign — See the Funny Photo

<p>Dave Benett/Getty</p> (Left-right:) Ryan Gosling, Logan Holladay, Ben Jenkin and Emily Blunt on April 22

Dave Benett/Getty

(Left-right:) Ryan Gosling, Logan Holladay, Ben Jenkin and Emily Blunt on April 22

“You can't separate the history of film from the history of action and stunts,” Gosling tells PEOPLE. “Action is designed in the same way that makeup is designed in a film or costumes or anything else, and they risk more than anyone else in those departments. They risk everything and they get no credit for it, really.”

He adds, “It was more than time for a film like this, but it's also more than time to recognize what they contribute and what they risk to create these moments for us.”

The Fall Guy is in theaters Friday, May 3.

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