Harry Potter's paralysed stunt double found making new documentary
"cathartic"
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[November 17, 2023]
By Sarah Mills
LONDON (Reuters) - The life and work of stuntman David Holmes who was
left paralysed after an accident in 2009 on the set of Harry Potter has
been turned into a documentary, which he said was "cathartic" to make
but cannot yet watch. "David Holmes: The Boy Who Lived", which premiered
in London on Thursday, features archive footage of Holmes working as
actor Daniel Radcliffe's stunt double as well as scenes of his life
today and interviews with his former colleagues and friends, including
Radcliffe. "It's been really nice for my boys to get together and talk
about it. We are living in a society where men don't really talk. So I'm
really chuffed," Holmes said. A skilled gymnast, Holmes was a teenager
when he was chosen to work on the Potter franchise. But a rehearsal for
a stunt in which Holmes was pulled back on a harness during a fight
scene in "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part One" went wrong and
he broke his neck.
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"It just happened so quickly. It
didn't look real. We just thought, this can't be happening," said
Marc Mailley, a fellow stunt artist who was there at the time. "You
can either be a victim or a survivor. I choose to be a survivor,"
said Holmes, whose challenging medical journey is seen in the new
film. Directed by former Harry Potter crew member Dan Hartley, the
film is executive produced by Daniel Radcliffe. "He's one of my best
friends," Holmes said, explaining how proud he is of Radcliffe, who
has continued acting and is starring in on Broadway in the musical
"Merrily We Roll Along".
Holmes hopes his raw documentary might start conversations about
stunt performers' work and what it is like to be disabled.
"I am lucky and fortunate enough to be able to live with a broken
neck and project past my injury. There are a million people that
feel lost and forgotten about in society," he said.
(Reporting by Sarah Mills; Editing by Richard Chang)
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