
Hollywood catches up to director Gina Prince-Bythewood
Gina Prince-Bythewood knows what good fighting looks like. The “Love & Basketball” director has been an athlete her entire life, but she also just loves action movies. So when she started dreaming up the template for a bare-knuckle clash between Charlize Theron and KiKi Layne in the new Netflix film “The Old Guard,” her bar was high: the bathroom fight from “Mission: Impossible—Fallout.”
“It’s a perfect fight scene. I wanted ours to be as dope as that,” Prince-Bythewood said. “We wanted the audience to feel like they were in the fight, to feel the slams into the wall.”
For her, that meant not cheating by having “flyaway walls” in the aircraft that would make it easier to move the camera around or relying too heavily on stunt doubles who she’d have to cut away from.
The pressure was enormous. It was the first scene she shot on her first ever big budget action pic that was over 10 times the budget of her last film. She only had five days to do it, where the “Mission: Impossible” team had a month. And it was an historic moment: Before “The Old Guard,” a Black woman had never directed a comic book film. She was acutely aware of the milestone.