Vic Armstrong
Birthday:
5 October 1946, Farnham Common, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Birth Name:
Victor Monroe Armstrong
Height:
183 cm
Vic Armstrong was born on October 5, 1946 in Farnham Common, Buckinghamshire, England as Victor Monroe Armstrong. He is known for his work on Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984), Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) and I Am Legend (2007). He is married to Wendy Leech. They have three children.
Being a stuntman isn't about being crazy. It's the exact opposite of that. Stunt work is control, calmness, rational thinking, good reflexes...Show more »
Being a stuntman isn't about being crazy. It's the exact opposite of that. Stunt work is control, calmness, rational thinking, good reflexes, athletic ability and good attitude. And a lot of hard work. [Belfast Newsletter, 19 October 2002] Show less «
[on doing the stunt in which a rider and his horse fall together:] "It's the hardest thing in the business. The poor old cowboys! It takes h...Show more »
[on doing the stunt in which a rider and his horse fall together:] "It's the hardest thing in the business. The poor old cowboys! It takes huge technical ability to time a horse fall. You've got to be on the right leg and on the right stride, so that when you give your horse the signal, he throws himself through the air. Then you've got to hold him all the way to the ground, for the safety of the animal as well, so he doesn't try to get out of it and break a leg. More often than not he turns over, and more often than not he's on top of you. [London Sunday Times, 20 October 2002] Show less «
[re a stunt in Superman II (1980) where he flies from a swimming pool up through the roof of Grand Central Station:] "We did this by buildin...Show more »
[re a stunt in Superman II (1980) where he flies from a swimming pool up through the roof of Grand Central Station:] "We did this by building the set upside down with the ceiling over a pit in the studio floor and placed the camera upside down, and I dove from the roof of the studio through the ceiling piece into my catch rig. I only had three feet to turn from a vertical dive onto my back once I had gone through the ceiling piece before I hit the catch rig." Show less «
[on meeting Richard Todd:] Like owners do, he'd come down and look at the horses on a Sunday. I can still smell the aftershave. It's amazing...Show more »
[on meeting Richard Todd:] Like owners do, he'd come down and look at the horses on a Sunday. I can still smell the aftershave. It's amazing. I didn't know what aftershave was then. I thought, 'Wow, how glamorous.' [London Sunday Times, 20 October 2002] Show less «
[on being hired by Jimmy Lodge to stunt in Arabesque (1966):] Jimmy doubled for Gregory Peck. I doubled for this other fellow, and we did th...Show more »
[on being hired by Jimmy Lodge to stunt in Arabesque (1966):] Jimmy doubled for Gregory Peck. I doubled for this other fellow, and we did this chase with helicopters following us and I thought, 'Wow, this is fantastic.' Twenty pounds a day! Phenomenal! [October 20, 2002; £20 equaled $56 in 1965] Show less «
I'd never seen such money in my life, so I decided that this is what I wanted to do. ... To begin in the stunt business you have to have one...Show more »
I'd never seen such money in my life, so I decided that this is what I wanted to do. ... To begin in the stunt business you have to have one skill. It doesn't matter what it is; mine was horse-riding; but you have to be a specialist in one thing. You might be a good high-diver, a good driver, a gymnast -- that's what you'll get hired for. Invariably, people can pick up those other skills along the way. [Belfast Newsletter, October 19, 2002] Show less «
[on directing the second unit for Tomorrow Never Dies (1997):] We did the major sequences [the traditional] way -- including the boat, ski a...Show more »
[on directing the second unit for Tomorrow Never Dies (1997):] We did the major sequences [the traditional] way -- including the boat, ski and helicopter sequences. It's by far the most economical way of doing it, otherwise there's so much time wasted and energy wasted -- especially if you've got the actors there for a limited time. But there were times when we would go off and shoot whole sequences and then put the actors into them. In those situations, [the director's] first unit became the good old insert unit! ... The thing about Bond films is that the spectacular footage is all real stuff. On The World Is Not Enough (1999), we used digital effects very sparingly. I think that's the hallmark of the franchise: it is dangerous and people do the stunts. It is truly man against man, or man against nature, and I think it shows. It takes a hell of a long time to shoot those kinds of scenes, which is why I had a second unit that was running the whole time I was. [American Cinematographer, December 1999] Show less «