Empire UK

(Chris Devlin) #1
most complicated one by a long way.”
Empire asks what he’s enjoyed the most
about it. “I enjoy it when they’re over”
he half-jokes. “I sometimes wonder why
I put myself through the pain. All the
action stuff was stacked up to the end.
So one day we’ll do the big explosion
(actually the biggest yet captured on
film shot in Morocco). The next day it
was the collapsing building. The next
day it was a helicopter crashing. Every
day was huge.” At one point he admits
he and his team went to Sam Mendes
and voiced a concern that they wouldn’t
be able to pull it all off. Deadlines were
too tight. “Would you consider a CGI
option?” they asked.
“Sam looked at me aghast”
Corbould chuckles. “He said ‘Chris.
This is a Bond film. We do it for real.’ So
we did it for real. And we pulled it off.”

HRIS CORBOULD IS
the oldest of five siblings.
Each followed him into
the special effects business
(see sidebar page 101).
Empire confesses to having visions
of the Corbould kids blowing up the
playhouse together or gleefully
throwing firecrackers at each other.
“Nah” he says bemused by such
fancifulness. It’s not even like they came
from a particularly movie-obsessed
household. “I’d love to be romantic
and say we went to the cinema twice
a week but the interest really came
once we started working on them.”
It was actually his love of music
specifically The Who that pulled
him into the business. At 16 he took a
summer job as a special effects assistant
on a rock-opera movie his favourite band
was making Tommy. He loved every
minute quit school and began a vocation
that would lead via The Sweeney The
Professionals and The Benny Hill Show
to him becoming one of the world’s
leading practical effects men.
His passion for The Who has barely
dwindled something that tickles Sam
Mendes. Every time Corbould cuts
together presentations of his sequences
for the director he’ll make them his
backing music. “I did a pre-viz for the
end sequence on Skyfall” Corbould
says “the whole helicopter attack. And
I overlaid The Real Me over the top of
it... It’s a bit of a standing joke between
me and Sam.” You wonder if he harbours
a secret wish that they’ll make it onto
the Spectre soundtrack.
Corbould is very much the
archetypal Brit crewman: dependable
unflappable unpretentious and as you’d

expect practically minded. He doesn’t
do hyperbole doesn’t talk the talk just
gets straight down to the nuts and bolts
of things. He’s not a showman but boy
can he put on a good show. Need an
action sequence punched up to a whole
new level? He’s your man.
Like the time Mendes called him
while he was finishing up on The Dark
Knight Rises in Los Angeles. “Chris
I’ve got this big chase during an
Underground sequence” said the
director. “I need a real jaw-dropping
moment that will break it up. Can you
have a think?” Corbould’s cogs started
whirring then at 2am he woke up in
bed with the answer: “A Tube train.
Yeah. You’ve seen trains crashing before
but you’ve never seen an Underground
train crash through [a tunnel]. It would
be the last thing you would expect.”
Mendes loved it as did the Bond
producers. Then Corbould got back
to Blighty and one of his engineers
approached. Did he know how big
Tube trains are? How heavy? He soon
found out. “It’s something like 38 tons”
Corbould says. Per carriage. And the
stunt required two. “He said ‘We can’t
do it.’” Of course they did do it — “We
ended up building a lightweight version
of the Tube train” — and pulled off
Skyfall’s biggest stunt.
There’s a distinct rhythm to
Corbould’s anecdotes: the big idea
the bigger vision the declaration
of impossibility then the ultimate
triumph — without resorting to CGI.
Bond after all does it for real. As does
Nolan. But very rarely it’s Corbould
himself who announces it can’t be done.
Like the time Nolan prepping The
Dark Knight told him he wanted to
flip an entire articulated lorry trailer
and all. “I was nervous we were never
gonna pull that off.”
So Corbould did what any of us do
when faced with a big worrying work
project: he put it off hoped it would go
away. “Then it got to a stage where we
either had to do it or not.” So he voiced
his concerns. Nolan still wanted to do
it. Corbould suggested just flipping the
trailer over the cab. Nolan said that
wouldn’t look as good. Corbould asked
“Would you mind if we made it a shorter
truck?” Nolan said “I really likethis
truck Chris.” The phrase he uses to
describe Nolan is “quite insistent”.
So he cut a deal: he’d go away and
do a test and if he had any misgivings
they’d have to it with miniatures. So test
it they did out on a runway. “Massive
great spikes” shot down from the cab into
the ground forming a pivot as the

“The audience


get a thrill from


knowing how it


was achieved.”


CHRIS CORBOULD H

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