David Leitch's The Fall Guy cast as stuntman Colt Seavers and director Jody Moreno, a pair with a complicated past relationship. After a horrific injury nearly ended his career, Colt is brought back to set to investigate the disappearance of Tom Ryder (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), a despicable, entitled movie star whom Colt has previously done stunt work for.

The Fall Guy has often been described as a love letter to stuntwork and the grueling, uncelebrated effort put into making some of cinema's most memorable moments. David Leitch's film is an action rom-com with an enormous heart and a deep love and appreciation for film culture, demonstrated by various references. The Fall Guy is a terrific experience for movie lovers, and it's been met with acclaim from critics and audiences alike, with an 83% Tomatometer and an even better 87% audience score.

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Who Did The Fall Guy's Stunts? Ryan Gosling's Stunt-Doubles & Stunt Team Explained

The Fall Guy's Ryan Gosling has been celebrating the stunt team that helped bring Colt Seavers and his adventures to the bg-screen.

18 Rocky

Rocky's Monologue From Rocky Balboa Is Quoted

Rocky Balboa

WHERE TO WATCH

Release Date
December 20, 2006
Runtime
102 Minutes

The first reference made in The Fall Guy is to 2006's Rocky Balboa. It's not the best Rocky movie, but it's ed for Rocky's gut-wrenching speech to his son. The phrase "But it ain't about how hard you hit. It's about how hard you can get hit and keep movin' forward" is repeated in the 2024 movie by Winston Duke's Dan Tucker, encouraging Colt to return to stunt work and "get back to rolling cars instead of parking them."

The quote is regarded as one of the best motivational speeches in the film, with a powerful performance from the great Sylvester Stallone. It's especially funny since Colt Seaver wasn't willing to return yet, and when Dan quoted Rocky, it really hit him and Colt looked at Dan and said, "You can’t quote Rocky like that on me," showing that he was especially moved by the reference.

17 Fast & Furious

The Fall Guy Quotes The Fast And The Furious

Release Date
June 22, 2001
Runtime
106 minutes
Director
Rob Cohen
Franchise(s)
Fast and Furious

The Fast and the Furious is another movie quoted by Dan, who says, early in the film: "I live my life a quarter mile at a time." This is a reference to Dominic Toretto's line from the original 2001 film. The Fall Guy also features an intense driving scene in a parking garage, which isn't a direct reference but bears some similarity to Tokyo Drift. At the end of the day, if The Fall Guy is going to pay homage to any movie, making it something like The Fast and the Furious makes a lot of sense.

If Colt existed in the real world, he would work in movies like The Fast and the Furious

That franchise is about major stunts and dangerous tasks for the stuntmen involved. The entire basis of Colt Seaver's world is to take a stuntman who does wild and dangerous stunts and put him in a real-life dangerous situation. If Colt existed in the real world, he would work in movies like The Fast and the Furious and would likely live by the same motto that Dom initially said and Dan quoted in this moment.

16 Memento

Ryder's Sticky Note Problem Is Compared To Christopher Nolan's Memento

Release Date
May 25, 2001
Runtime
113 minutes

One of the many quirks of Aaron Taylor-Johnson's Tom Ryder is that he uses sticky notes to remind himself of things. Hannah Waddingham's Gail Meyer, Tom Ryder's producer, refers to his sticky note usage getting out of hand, comparing it to Memento. This joke is played out even further when Colt enters Ryder's apartment, which is covered with an absurd amount of sticky notes.

Memento is a Christopher Nolan film where a man named Leonard Shelby, with short-term memory loss, intends to solve his wife's murder. However, thanks to his condition, he has to write things down on sticky notes or his arms so he won't forget. He even goes as far as to tattoo the clues on his body, and use the notes that are everywhere to lead him to the truth. it is very similar to what Tom has to do to get through basic life without any real reason other than his basic incompetence.

15 Miami Vice

Colt Wears A Miami Vice Jacket

Crockett and Tubbs in a promo image from Miami Vice

In The Fall Guy, Colt Seavers wears a jacket with the Miami Vice logo on the back. He states in the film that the TV series was his first job. Though the movies he works on in the film are fictional, Miami Vice was a real series in the 1980s, produced by Michael Mann, who later directed the film of the same name. Miami Vice was a hit series in its time, known for its influential impact on television and broader '80s culture.

This is an even bigger reference since Miami Vice aired from 1984 to 1989, with Don Johnson and Philip Michael Thomas in the lead roles. The Fall Guy aired from 1981 to 1986, with Lee Majors and Heather Thomas in the lead roles. This means that Miami Vice actually aired at the same time as The Fall Guy but premiered three years later, meaning Colt Seavers (in the TV version) was already working as a bounty hunter before Miami Vice ever existed as a TV show.

14 Dumbo

The Dancing Pink Elephants Scene From Dumbo Is Mentioned

Dumbo (1941)

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In one of his first stops in the search for Ryder, Colt visits a nightclub to speak with Ryder's dealer for information. Before the scene breaks into action, a reference is made to the classic animated film Dumbo and the scene with wacky dancing pink elephants. In the same scene, Colt's drink is spiked, and he starts tripping and imagining unicorns everywhere he goes for the next 20 or so minutes.

This is a fun scene because Colt Seaver has hallucinations of unicorns, which kind of sets the pink elephants' scene from Dumbo in a very different light from the original Disney animated kid's release. The entire scene also breaks down the difference between movies and cartoons. The dealer says that movies pretend to be real, but cartoons don't pretend to be anything but what they are, which leads to The Fall Guy creating one of the strangest unreal scenes in its entire running time.

13 Notting Hill

Colt Reminds Jody How Much She Loves Notting Hill

Release Date
May 28, 1999
Runtime
124 minutes
Director
Roger Michell

Amidst Colt's dangerous search for information about Ryder, he takes a break for a several-minute-long split-screen phone call with Jody, where she ponders how to finish the third act. Her film features a love story that mirrors her and Colt's, so she chats with him regarding the possibility of her characters getting back together when, really, she's referring to the two of them.

Colt reminds Jody that she loves the movie Notting Hill, which has a famously happy ending, encouraging her to believe in a positive outcome for their love. In Notting Hill, Julia Roberts plays Anna, a famous actress who meets a bookstore owner named Will (Hugh Grant). While they are from very different worlds, the two end up falling in love, and in the end, they find a way for their love to work despite all the differences and obstacles that stand in their way.

12 Love Actually

Colt Reminds Jody She Watches Love Actually Every Year

Release Date
November 14, 2003
Runtime
135 minutes
Director
Richard Curtis

In the same speech about Notting Hill, Colt also mentions that Jody watches Love Actually every year around the holiday season. This furthers his point, though she mentions that her last time watching the movie, after her split with Colt a year prior, she didn't connect as much with its ending. Love Actually is another famous rom-com with several interconnected stories of couples finding and losing love, all set during the holiday season.

It is an interesting comment by Jody, as she says that she can't connect as well with some happy endings depending on where she is in her life at the time.

Not all the stories had happy endings, as in some cases, a man cheats on his wife, and other stories see people just struggling to get along. Despite that, as a rom-com, there were some happy endings in the end. It is an interesting comment by Jody, as she says that she can't connect as well with some happy endings depending on where she is in her life at the time. It was also nice foreshadowing because if she wants to find happiness again, things will have to change.

11 Pretty Woman

Colt Mixes Up The Plot Of Notting Hill With Pretty Women

Pretty Woman

WHERE TO WATCH

Release Date
March 23, 1990
Runtime
119 minutes
Director
Garry Marshall

The joke of the Notting Hill scene is that Colt mixes up the movie's plot with another Julia Roberts classic, Pretty Woman. The 1990 release sees a wealthy businessman and a prostitute fall for each other, and Colt suggests that the relationship might not have worked out well, as the film's ending implies. Pretty Woman is considered one of the best rom-coms of all time and is one of the films that solidified Roberts as one of the biggest stars of the 1990s.

It was a funny moment that continues to show Jody's inability to believe in happy endings anymore, thanks to her real-life problems. She mentions that not only is Love, Actually ruined for her now, but so is the ending of Notting Hill. Colt seems confused because he doesn't consider Notting Hill to have a happy ending because Julia Roberts's character could end up working the streets again, which was very much not the plot of Notting Hill. He laughs it off by asking, "what do I know?"

10 The Fugitive

Dan Compares Colt's Situation To The Fugitive

The Fugitive
PG-13

WHERE TO WATCH

Release Date
August 6, 1993
Runtime
130 minutes
Director
Andrew Davis
Budget
$44 million

About mid-way through The Fall Guy, Colt and Dan return to Ryder's apartment to look around for the movie star's phone code. Shortly after they find it and the evidence they need, Dan suggests to Colt: "If this were 'The Fugitive' and you were Harrison Ford, wouldn't the bad guys be turning up right about now?" This refers to the 1993 action flick, where Ford plays a man on the run from the law after being wrongfully accused of killing his wife.

Harrison Ford and Ryan Gosling co-starred together in Denis Villeneuve's sci-fi masterpiece, Blade Runner 2049.

The moment of calling back to a classic thriller to show the tropes in a movie that will soon follow the same tropes is a little too on the nose, but for this film, it actually works. There is also a fun side to this Easter egg homage, as The Fall Guy star Ryan Gosling took the lead in the sequel to Blade Runner, while The Fugitive star Harrison Ford returned to reprise his role as Rick Deckard.

9 The Last Of The Mohicans

The Fall Guy Uses The Last Of The Mohicans "I Will Find You!" Quote

The Last of the Mohicans
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  • Headshot Of Daniel Day-Lewis In The Vertical’s 'She Came To Me' New York
    Daniel Day-Lewis
  • Headshot Of Madeleine Stowe
    Madeleine Stowe
  • Headshot Of Russel Means
    Russel Means
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Eric Schweig

The Last of the Mohicans is a 1992 historical drama directed by Michael Mann. Set during the French and Indian War, the film follows Hawkeye, a European-raised adoptive son of a Mohican man, as he navigates the complexities of colonial conflicts and personal relationships. Starring Daniel Day-Lewis, the movie intertwines themes of love, loyalty, and survival against the backdrop of early American frontier life.

Release Date
September 25, 1992
Director
Michael Mann

After The Fugitive quote, Colt and Dan realize they're about to be swarmed with enemies and quickly grab whatever weapons they can find. Both attempt to grab a hatchet, imagining themselves using it in combat like in The Last of the Mohicans, a historical adventure war film with some hatchet-throwing action. In the movie, Daniel Day-Lewis's character bellows, "No matter how long it takes, no matter how far, I will find you!" to his romantic interest, which is also quoted in The Fall Guy.

That is two different callbacks to the Daniel Day-Lewis movie. In The Last of the Mohicans, Day-Lewis stars as Nathaniel "Hawkeye" Poe, a British Army Major who is sent to New York during the French and Indian War. This is a historical romance novel that follows two frontier sisters, Alice and Cora, who try to find their way back to their home when they meet Hawkeye. In The Last of the Mohicans, Hawkeye and Cora fall in love, and that leads to this iconic quote.