One Of The Umbrella Academy’s Most Explosive Scenes Was More Real Than You Think
By Valerie Ettenhofer/Jan. 28, 2022 11:44 am EST
Most behind-the-scenes stories about explosions involve complex pyrotechnics, or even CGI. But how many can say one of their best set stories involves an exploding field of corn? Well, “The Umbrella Academy” director Stephen Surjik can.
If you’ve caught the second season of Netflix’s “The Umbrella Academy,” you might remember the scene in question. In the third episode of the season, Vanya (Elliot Page) is chased through a corn field near Dallas. Vanya has recently been transported back to the 1960s, where the series’ former antagonist promptly got bonked on the head and developed amnesia. Now Vanya, unaware of the Hargreeve family’s superpowers, is working as a live-in nanny for a farm-owning family. In the middle of the night, Vanya is chased down by some dastardly dudes called “the Swedes.” This is where the exploding corn comes in.
Super-Corn Saves The Day
Netflix
Whatever they planted, it worked. When Surjik returned three weeks after the new corn was seeded, the new crop was so massive, the director had to re-light the entire sequence. Surjik told Comics Beat:
“I was thinking, the corn is going to get up to three and half, four feet – like very tall grass. No. We go there and it was eight and nine feet! It was insane! It was so high, that it was dark inside when you walked through the rows…”
In fact, the new field was so massive, Surjik actually got lost in it. Though the director says the experience was nerve-wracking, he also says, “I knew then that production had done just a killer job at growing that corn for us.” The result of the great “The Umbrella Academy” corn-growing experiment is an impressive drone shot that reveals the extent of Vanya’s hidden powers. The superhero show’s crew bent down the stalks by hand in a deliberate pattern to create the crop circle-like field, even studying “the effects of actual craters” to determine “the way it would break and the way it would layer the foliage over into a pattern,” per Surjik. The team behind “The Umbrella Academy” clearly worked hard to bring this shot — and plenty of others in its striking second season — to life, and it shows.
One Of The Umbrella Academy’s Most Explosive Scenes Was More Real Than You Think
By Valerie Ettenhofer/Jan. 28, 2022 11:44 am EST
Most behind-the-scenes stories about explosions involve complex pyrotechnics, or even CGI. But how many can say one of their best set stories involves an exploding field of corn? Well, “The Umbrella Academy” director Stephen Surjik can.
If you’ve caught the second season of Netflix’s “The Umbrella Academy,” you might remember the scene in question. In the third episode of the season, Vanya (Elliot Page) is chased through a corn field near Dallas. Vanya has recently been transported back to the 1960s, where the series’ former antagonist promptly got bonked on the head and developed amnesia. Now Vanya, unaware of the Hargreeve family’s superpowers, is working as a live-in nanny for a farm-owning family. In the middle of the night, Vanya is chased down by some dastardly dudes called “the Swedes.” This is where the exploding corn comes in.
If you’ve caught the second season of Netflix’s “The Umbrella Academy,” you might remember the scene in question. In the third episode of the season, Vanya (Elliot Page) is chased through a corn field near Dallas. Vanya has recently been transported back to the 1960s, where the series’ former antagonist promptly got bonked on the head and developed amnesia. Now Vanya, unaware of the Hargreeve family’s superpowers, is working as a live-in nanny for a farm-owning family. In the middle of the night, Vanya is chased down by some dastardly dudes called “the Swedes.” This is where the exploding corn comes in.
Umbrella Academy’s (Corn) Field Of Dreams
“All of the corn they used in that gigantic shot where we went up into the air and did the twenty acres of corn, that was all real,” Surjik said, referencing the long shot of the fight’s aftermath, featuring a totally leveled corn field. “We did that by hand, and all of the corn in that area was grown specifically for the purposes of this episode; this scene.”
Super-Corn Saves The Day
Netflix
Whatever they planted, it worked. When Surjik returned three weeks after the new corn was seeded, the new crop was so massive, the director had to re-light the entire sequence. Surjik told Comics Beat:
“I was thinking, the corn is going to get up to three and half, four feet – like very tall grass. No. We go there and it was eight and nine feet! It was insane! It was so high, that it was dark inside when you walked through the rows…”
In fact, the new field was so massive, Surjik actually got lost in it. Though the director says the experience was nerve-wracking, he also says, “I knew then that production had done just a killer job at growing that corn for us.” The result of the great “The Umbrella Academy” corn-growing experiment is an impressive drone shot that reveals the extent of Vanya’s hidden powers. The superhero show’s crew bent down the stalks by hand in a deliberate pattern to create the crop circle-like field, even studying “the effects of actual craters” to determine “the way it would break and the way it would layer the foliage over into a pattern,” per Surjik. The team behind “The Umbrella Academy” clearly worked hard to bring this shot — and plenty of others in its striking second season — to life, and it shows.
In fact, the new field was so massive, Surjik actually got lost in it. Though the director says the experience was nerve-wracking, he also says, “I knew then that production had done just a killer job at growing that corn for us.”
“I was thinking, the corn is going to get up to three and half, four feet – like very tall grass. No. We go there and it was eight and nine feet! It was insane! It was so high, that it was dark inside when you walked through the rows…”
The result of the great “The Umbrella Academy” corn-growing experiment is an impressive drone shot that reveals the extent of Vanya’s hidden powers. The superhero show’s crew bent down the stalks by hand in a deliberate pattern to create the crop circle-like field, even studying “the effects of actual craters” to determine “the way it would break and the way it would layer the foliage over into a pattern,” per Surjik. The team behind “The Umbrella Academy” clearly worked hard to bring this shot — and plenty of others in its striking second season — to life, and it shows.