Without slowing, the motorcycle rider snatched the sunglasses from McNeilâs face, causing a wide-eyed double-take.
The man on the motorcycle was Monte Perlin, a Hollywood stuntman with a career extending back to the mid-â80s. Perlin, who specializes in motorbike stunts, doubled for Arnold Schwarzenegger in âTerminator 3: Rise of the Machines.â
The shade-snatching happens on screen in âStars, Stunts, Action,â a six-episode TV show available on Tubi TV, a free streaming service (which means youâll have to watch ads). Each episode is a brisk, breezy 22 minutes, with an occasional dash of juvenile humor. McNeil is one of four co-hosts.
Clip of Michelle Pfeiffer’s Catwoman whipping dummies in one take garners praise 23 Feb 2021 / 18:48 H.
Michelle Pfeiffer will always be the OG Catwoman and this recent video throwback certainly proves the point.
The actress portrayed the mad and sultry Selina Kyle aka Catwoman in Tim Burton’s 1992
Batman Returns.
In a clip shared on Twitter by Mikey Walsh, Pfeiffer can be seen whipping the heads of four mannequins before skipping away gleefully in ONE TAKE.
Michelle Phieffer as Catwoman, whipping the heads off 4 Mannequins, & skipping away, all in one take.. cause you can’t defeat a bad bitch pic.twitter.com/gaNCjrLT99 Mikey Walsh (@thatbloodyMikey)
New footage of Michelle Pfeiffer’s cat woman nailing whip stunt in a single take emerges
WATCH: Batman Returns Michelle Pfeiffer Nails an Impressive Catwoman Stunt in a Single Take https://t.co/IbbPCrRhbdpic.twitter.com/5uuvZ7CFFq Comic Book Resources (@CBR) February 19, 2021
Behind-the-scenes footage from Batman Returns shows Michelle Pfeiffer demonstrating tremendous whip skills as she completed her iconic mannequin head strike attack from the 1992 blockbuster in just a single take.
Footage of Pfeiffer pulling off the stunt in a single take and then receiving roaring applause from the crew when the scene finished has been making the rounds. She was trained in whip combat by Anthony DeLongis, famed whipper and stunt coordinator who also trained Harrison Ford for Indiana Jones.
PM Entertainment and the Art of Rip-offs With Razzmatazz
Tom Jolliffe takes a look back at 90’s video action specialists PM Entertainment and a penchant for enjoyable knock offs…
I’ve oft shared my fondness for the work of PM Entertainment, headed by Joseph Merhi and Richard Pepin. Their company were prolific through the 90’s in producing straight to cable/video movies (predominantly action) that seemed to inject a scale to the carnage that belied their meagre budgets. Even as low as the budgets may have been, eventually there came a time when the business wasn’t sustainable and they folded in 2002 (much to the chagrin of some devoted fans).