Déjà abordé mais un nouvel article qui décrit comment les scènes de combat F-14 ont été réalisées
Si j'ai bien compris ils ont pris des l-39 et après les effets spéciaux on rajouté soit une peau de F-14 ou de Su-57
Ceci explique donc pourquoi les scènes donnaient une impression de réalité
Scott: The part that Randy Howell and I flew was the scene where Maverick and Rooster steal the F-14 at the end out of enemy territory. Randy and I flew that entire... From that moment all the way till the end where they crash land the F-14 on the aircraft carrier. Clearly, we didn't crash land an F-14 on an aircraft carrier, but all of the fighting through the canyons with the big granite walls, out over the ocean where Hangman, the actor Glen Powell, comes and saves the day, Randy and I did all of that flying.
So we would show up in the morning, they would give us the storyboard to show us what 'image' they wanted to capture, and then we would determine with the cinematographer, Kevin LaRosa, or the aviation stunt coordinator, how we would get that shot and how we would make that come to life. And then we would go film it. So some days I was Maverick, some days I was the bad guy, and it just depended on what we were filming that day.
Tyler: And you were doing this with L-39 camera ships or should I say surrogates?
Scott: Yeah, surrogates is a great term. So we flew L-39 airplanes that are owned by the Patriots Jet Team — great 2-place trainers. All the flying was real, I can assure you, because it was really dynamic flying, but just like a video game, they basically just put a skin over the airplane to make it a Tomcat or an Su-57.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/w ... -commander