The 10 Best Movies Directed by Stunt Performers

What are stunts but cinema’s unique brand of storytelling theatrics? Like the pageantry of the circus or a kinetic ballet, stuntmen and women have been performing supercharged kicks, flips and getting-thrown-through-the-airs since cameras started rolling, making them both incredibly prestigious and indistinguishable from filming your friend doing parkour behind some dumpsters.
With stunt coordinators using a lot of the same filmmaking tools as dramatic directors—an understanding of rhythm, timing and emotion—it’s no surprise that many have transitioned to directing more than just action sequences. Sometimes it’s because films used to be nothing but stunt reels. Sometimes it’s to do with East Asian films working more closely with stunt teams than their American counterparts. Sometimes it’s because we realized, damn, those stunts in The Matrix looked good, didn’t they?
As John Wick: Chapter 4 thunders onto our screens, here are the top 10 films directed by stunt performers, doubles or coordinators:
10. Extraction
Director: Sam Hargrave
In reaction to the claim that Marvel movies don’t feature any proper movie stars, the Russo brothers have on four occasions produced star vehicles for Avengers that inadvertently prove that Marvel movies don’t feature any proper movie stars. Still, uncomfortable stereotypes aside, this bare-knuckle action thriller is the best of the bunch, in no small part thanks to stunt-performer-turned-director Sam Hargraves’ relentless and exhausting approach to racking up a body count in the most gnarly and bludgeoning way. The dynamic, vibrating camerawork keeps you in a firm grip as bodies get ripped apart and slam onto car roofs all over the shop—you might want to get off this ride, but Extraction simply won’t let you.
9. Day Shift
Director: J.J. Perry
These days, it feels like we can’t get a minute’s peace without the damn vampire slayer union busting our balls! Just joking, all unions do invaluable work and deserve full support, which is what makes Day Shift’s Reagan-adjacent portrayal of its inflexible, bullish and overly bureaucratic slayer union a little queasy. There are of course things to commend in this film besides vampire hunter unions; director J.J. Perry adds hordes of ragdoll-physic acrobats that simply love to get flung around sets to the vampire action canon. There’s a bouncing energy to the action that threatens to give you whiplash, which does a lot to make up for the stale characterization and plotting. Thanks to Scott Adkins for turning up for the best action scene!
8. Atomic Blonde
Director: David Leitch
David Leitch’s other blockbusters suffer from a pervading smugness and character thinness that softens the genuinely well-executed action, but his strongest film—focusing on a deadly agent at the tail end of the Cold War in a divided Berlin—is fun in a way that doesn’t make you roll your eyes every two minutes. Since Fury Road, Charlize Theron entered her action pro phase with a formidable keenness, and combined with a gorgeous color palette and some slick camera blocking and editing (except when it does that annoying floaty thing), Atomic Blonde shows Leitch has confidently internalized all the lessons of his stunt work. Although why that West Berlin cinema was showing Stalker eight years after it was first released, we’ll never know…
7. Iron Monkey
Director: Yuen Woo-Ping
Poor Yuen Woo-Ping; between directing this and choreographing the action to The Grandmaster, he’s had some bad luck on his films receiving the Harvey Scissorhands treatment. Still, Weinstein can’t overshadow his intimidating stunt coordinating and directing career, spanning 50 years and overseeing countless incredible brawls in the process. He collaborates frequently with Donnie Yen, and directed him in this tale of a martial arts vigilante, adapted from the lives of folk heroes Wong Fei-hung and Wong Kei-ying. It’s quick, slick and (even though diehards might find it a bit too polished for their tastes), Yen is in fine form. The whole adventure shines with personality.