Was Murder Mystery 2 Jennifer Aniston Stunt Really Filmed On Eiffel Tower? - Netflix Tudum

  • Deep Dive

     How ‘Murder Mystery 2’ Pulled Off That Dizzying Eiffel Tower Stunt

    Jennifer Aniston's stunt double made history.
    April 3, 2023

🤐 SPOILER ALERT 🤐

The first time stunt performer Kelly Phelan saw the Eiffel Tower, she was hanging from the top of it. As Jennifer Aniston’s stunt double in Murder Mystery 2, Phelan pulls off a sequence for the history books, ascending and descending from 1,000 feet in the air down the side of the Paris landmark

The stunt in question takes place toward the end of the long-awaited sequel, which brings back newly minted detectives Nick and Audrey Spitz (Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston) for another high-stakes crime-solving spree. The couple’s investigation into the kidnapping of the Maharajah (Adeel Akhtar) from his lavish island wedding leads them to Paris and the famed Jules Verne restaurant on the second floor of the Eiffel Tower, where they aim to confront the culprit and rescue their friend. Things don’t go quite as planned, though, and Audrey finds herself whizzing up and down the sides of the monument as she tries to stop villain Connor Miller (Mark Strong) from making off with a $70 million payout. 

Enter Phelan, who pulled off that death-defying stunt in real life. There is a glorious tradition of stunts in cinema going back to the medium’s very beginnings, from silent-film heroine Pearl White’s derring-do in the legendary serial The Perils of Pauline, to Michelle Yeoh threatening to upstage Jackie Chan with her motorcycle skills in Supercop, to Zoë Bell slashing her way through Kill Bill while doubling for Uma Thurman. Phelan made her own mark in Murder Mystery 2, becoming the first woman in film history to drop from that height. (For reference, even Jackie Chan, who mastered a dizzying Eiffel Tower fight of his own in Rush Hour 3, didn’t use the full height of the tower.) Phelan may also be the last — probably on this structure, and maybe ever. Due to the Eiffel Tower’s advanced age — at 134 years old, it’s earned a rest — it’s unlikely this type of stunt will be performed on it again. And given the rise of digital effects, there’s no guarantee anyone will ever do something similar anywhere else.

“It’s an experience that I would have never put on my bucket list because I truly didn’t think it would ever be done,” Phelan told Netflix. “I’ve done a lot of high-wire work, but never on a world-famous monument.”

So how did she get there? Ahead, the fearless crew of Murder Mystery 2 explain how they pulled off the seemingly impossible. 

Director Jeremy Garelick
Scott Yamano/Netflix

From script to Seine

“When I read [the script by James Vanderbilt] I got really specific with studying the Eiffel Tower,” director Jeremy Garelick tells Tudum. “How does this make sense? What are the physics here? How can you do this?”

To find out, Garelick worked with three storyboard artists to create visuals for what the sequence would eventually look like on-screen. Then came the physics part: how to get two human bodies to move up and down on the monument at high speed, and have cameras set up to capture it. 

“There’s a lot of moving parts that go into this,” second unit director J.J. Perry told Netflix. “It’s not just the wire work itself; it’s the building, the camera, getting everything up and running.  You’re doing all of this in two languages and we’re on three levels.  We’re up 1,000 feet on the third floor, we’re in the intermediate level at 700 feet, and then there’s another level that’s at 500 feet.”

Turns out, the tower’s own engineering held the answer. “Basically the Eiffel Tower is a big stick of truss that points straight up in the air,” Perry said. “So, if we took another couple of sticks of truss and hung it off the side, we could just go straight up and down. Jennifer Aniston’s character double Kelly [Phelan] and Mark Strong’s double John [Medalin] are on a winch system. It ascends them at 28 feet per second, and then it drops them at 28 feet per second.  The camera counters them. That’s how it’s done.”

Eiffel Tower replica on the set of Murder Mystery 2
Scott Yamano/Netflix

“The Beast”

Since access to the actual tower was limited, Aniston and Sandler shot their scenes on an enormous replica of the top level inside Paris’ Cité du Cinema studio. Nicknamed “The Beast,” the set was designed by production designer Perry Blake, who used 65 tons of steel to create a believable dupe for the monument. “It's probably about the same size as the real Eiffel Tower at the top,” Blake told Netflix, adding that he studied the original drawings and plans to nail the details, right down to a century’s worth of paint jobs. 

“Our painters really had to get in there and make layers of paint,” he said. “Also, over the years there’s different kinds of junk that’s been put on it. Air conditioning systems, electrical systems, newfangled sparkly lights, old lights —  all this stuff, which has never really been taken down. We wanted to make sure that it had that texture, the layers of the different people who have come through and made it more modern as it’s gone along.”

Kelly Phellan as Audrey’s stunt double
Marie Etchegoyen/Netflix

Practice makes perfect

Just as one simply does not walk into Mordor, you just don’t rappel down the Eiffel Tower without a little practice. Stunt coordinator Justin Yu worked with Phelan and John Medalin, Mark Strong’s stunt double, to break down the different parts of the stunt in a rehearsal space. “Calculation and preparation are the keys to any huge stunt,”  he tells Tudum. “Above all, though, is trust. Safety is paramount with my team. Due to the difficulty and multiple moving parts of this stunt, we placed special attention on preparation.”

They did hang tests, and the two doubles worked with their respective actors to perfect the stunt choreography for a seamless transition. 

Jennifer Aniston’s Stunt Double in Murder Mystery 2 Made Movie History"I thought Tom Cruise would do this."

“Kelly was a crucial factor in how the stunt was eventually performed,” Yu says. “Her collegiate-level gymnastics background makes her one of the most skilled and fearless stuntwomen in the industry, and her commitment was key to making Jennifer look as good as possible.”

The concern was mutual. Leading up to the big day, Phelan got a series of supportive texts from Aniston, cheering her on. “Jen and her whole team have been my biggest fans, and it’s a group of just strong, empowered women,” she said. “It was so uplifting. She was texting me like, ‘Thank you so much. You’re making this movie so much better by your bravery and your hard work.’ It’s just all around been an incredible experience.”

Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz
Scott Yamano/Netflix

Dressing the part

Once you’ve nailed the logistics of flying through the air, there’s the small issue of how to keep your clothes on in the process. Audrey’s dressed to impress when she and Nick show up at the Jules Verne, so Phelan had to perform the stunt in a cocktail dress and Christian Louboutin heels. 

Costume designer Debra McGuire worked with Phelan and Yu to make sure that she’d be safe and comfortable in whatever Aniston was wearing in character. “That little postage stamp of a lace dress was Yves Saint Laurent,” McGuire tells Tudum.  The production sourced two of the designer frocks for Aniston, says McGuire, but needed a minimum of a dozen dresses due to the strenuous nature of the stunt work; the rest were replicas, created in-house with less expensive, but hardly more functional materials. “So that’s how I’m able to work in the world of budget,” she jokes, referring to the impromptu knockoff factory set up by the wardrobe department. “We found a fabric that matched almost perfectly. And so we made those [10] dresses. […] It’s a miracle that [Phelan] was able to do the work in that dress. That’s what the pros do.”

Yu echoes his admiration, praising Phelan’s “fortitude” in performing the wearing nothing but a harness under a very skimpy dress — after all, the nights in Paris can get pretty cold in early spring, especially 1,000 feet off the ground.

Jennifer Aniston as Audrey Spitz and Adam Sandler as Nick Spitz
Scott Yamano/Netflix

Challenge accepted

Turns out the biggest challenge facing the crew wasn’t the height, or even gravity. It was the weather. “Due to high winds, we had to evacuate the tower during our rehearsal week,” Yu recalls. “There were moments when the peak of the tower swayed and the elevator lines crossed.”

The team was reconsidering a workaround when the winds finally died down, and things got back on track. “The weather cleared up, the skies opened up, and it was fun,” Phelan said. “It was a really fun day. I’ll remember it, and I’ll show my baby Penelope someday and my grandkids.”

The Cast of Murder Mystery 2 Had a Killer Good Time Pulling Off These Stunts"We could've died that whole time on the fake Eiffel Tower."
Additional reporting by Liz Lee.

All About Murder Mystery 2

  • What To Watch
    Let’s Have a Jennifer Aniston Film Festival
    Queue up some quality time with the Murder Mystery 2 star.
    By Dalene Rovenstine
    March 5
  • News
    Adam Sandler and Jennifer Aniston are back for a new investigation.
    By Anne Cohen
    April 3, 2023
  • Passport
    The new sequel brings Nick and Audrey Spitz to the City of Love.
    By John DiLillo
    April 3, 2023
  • Explainer
    Nick and Audrey Spitz crack another case. 
    By John DiLillo
    March 31, 2023
  • Behind the Scenes
    The famously casual dresser goes a little more formal in Murder Mystery 2.
    By John DiLillo
    March 31, 2023
  • Let's Talk
    The ‘Murder Mystery 2’ stars spend two minutes with Tudum to discuss their new globe-trotting mystery.
    By John DiLillo
    March 31, 2023
  • Red Carpet
    The cast reveal which co-star they think would get away with murder.
    By Phillipe Thao
    March 29, 2023

Shop Murder Mystery 2

GO TO NETFLIX SHOP

Discover More Deep Dive

  • Deep Dive
    The new action drama from Park Chan-wook and Kim Sang-man rises up this fall.
    By John DiLillo
    12:00 am
  • Deep Dive
    From DVDs to marquees.
    By Tara Bitran
    Sept. 6
  • Deep Dive
    The new film from Green Room director Jeremy Saulnier stars Aaron Pierre.
    By John DiLillo
    Sept. 6
  • Deep Dive
    A deadly conspiracy leads to a tense showdown.
    By John DiLillo
    Sept. 6
  • Deep Dive
    The series tells the story of a historic aviation and diplomatic crisis.
    By Ingrid Ostby
    Sept. 5
  • Deep Dive
    Sunny day real estate.
    By Rebecca Johnson
    Sept. 4
  • Deep Dive
    Noodles, Volume 7, and Legends will be on your plate in no time. 
    By Cole Delbyck
    Sept. 4
  • Deep Dive
    Get your hashtags ready.
    By Cole Delbyck
    Sept. 4

Discover More Action

  • News
    “It’s an Edo-period tale of revenge — ‘Kill Bill’ meets ‘Yentl.’”
    By Tara Bitran
    Yesterday 5:15 pm
  • News
    Start adding these to your queue.
    By Tudum Staff
    Sept. 7
  • Play more than 80 mobile games with no ads, no extra fees, and no in-app purchases.
    By Tudum Staff
    Sept. 5
  • New on Netflix
    Stream The Perfect Couple, His Three Daughters, Selling Sunset, and more.
    By Erin Corbett
    Sept. 3
  • What To Watch
    Under Paris is just skimming the surface.
    By Isabel Mc Cann
    Aug. 29
  • News
    The Pogues will be back in fall 2024. Watch the teaser now.
    By Tara Bitran
    Aug. 29
  • News
    Watch the teaser trailer as we await Judgment Day.
    By Stephan Lee
    Aug. 29
  • Deep Dive
    “Can we change our fate?” Mattson Tomlin asks.
    By Stephan Lee
    Aug. 29

Related Videos

  • What To Watch
    From ‘Murder Mystery 2’ to ‘Hustle’, get your Sandler fix.
    Aug. 25, 2023
    1:51
  • Behind the Scenes
    "I thought Tom Cruise would do this."
    April 9, 2023
    0:45
  • Behind the Scenes
    "We could've died that whole time on the fake Eiffel Tower."
    April 4, 2023
    1:31
  • Sneak Peek
    Ordinary couple, extraordinary adventure.
    March 8, 2023
    1:10
  • Previously On
    Time to sharpen your detective skills.
    Feb. 24, 2023
    3:47

Latest News

Popular Now

  • News
    Here’s who scored an exclusive invite to the six-episode adaptation.
    By Tara Bitran and Ariana Romero
    Yesterday 4:53 pm
  • News
    The heartwarming doc hits Netflix on Sept. 27.
    By Amanda Richards and John DiLillo
    Sept. 5
  • Status Update
    Find out where all the couples and singles stand after the reunion.
    By Cole Delbyck
    Aug. 27
  • What To Watch
    Cancel all your plans, because these shows will have your attention from start to finish.
    By Allison Picurro
    Aug. 8