Filmmakers of the high-speed “Fast & Furious” franchise were ordered Friday to pay a $1 million positive after a stuntman broke his skull while filming the ninth installment.
Joe Watts reported falling 25 feet head-first onto the concrete ground during a staged fight scene while filming “F9: The Fast Saga” in July 2019 at Warner Bros. studio in Hertfordshire, UK, reports the BBC.
FF9 Pictures admitted health and safety failings in court and accepted the positive.
The Post reached out to Universal Pictures, which distributed the 2021 film, for comment.
The UK judge presiding over the case said on Friday that Watts, 35, was “fortunate to be alive” after Health and Safety Executive (HSE) prosecutors detailed how his safety line became detached as he performed a stunt that differed from the one which had been rehearsed several times.
Watts was initially imagined to be thrown over a performer’s right shoulder, nonetheless, in a last-minute change, the stunt actor was told he can be thrown over the actor’s left shoulder.
The stuntman missed the crash mats that had been set out for him, and he suffered brain damage, the court was told.
The security line had reportedly not been checked between takes.
District Judge Talwinder Buttar slammed the choice to alter the stunt “on the last minute,” stating that the mats must have also been adjusted.
The HSE said the filmmaking team had “no system for double checking that the link (to Watts’ vest) had been properly engaged and tightened.”
Prosecutors argued that FF9 Pictures, a subsidiary of Universal Pictures, “didn’t extend the crash matting needed to mitigate the results of an unintended fall following changes to the set and the sequence of the stunt.”
“Mr. Watts’ injuries were life-changing, and he could have easily been killed,” HSE inspector Roxanne Barker said. “In stunt work, it isn’t about stopping a fall but minimizing the danger of an injury,”
Prior to the incident, Watts had served as a stuntman for several high-profile projects, including “Game of Thrones,” “Star Wars: The Last Jedi,” and “Kingsman: The Golden Circle.”
“Fast and Furious 9: The Fast Saga” stars Vin Diesel, Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Chris “Ludacris” Bridges and John Cena in addition to Nathalie Emmanuel, Jordana Brewster, Sung Kang, Helen Mirren, Kurt Russell and Charlize Theron.
Initially delayed as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, “F9” was the world’s biggest release after movie theaters shut their doors in 2020.
The film opened in June 2021 to lukewarm reviews, with The Post’s Johnny Oleksinski calling it a “laughable parody.”
Nevertheless, moviegoers managed to propel it to a $70 million domestic debut, a pandemic-era record for North America on the time.