Hawaii Five-0: Fight Scene Perfection

More from Mike Gordon on how two perfectionists manage to nail a spectacular fight sequence on the fly in episode 2.22 “Ua Hopu”!

Alex O’Loughlin and Mark Dacascos only had an hour to prep their breath-stealing scene the day before it was shot. It took two and a half hours to film, according to director Larry Teng, with changes being introduced at the last minute.

It’s a testament to the professionalism of our actors and their stunt doubles for making a staged tussle look so easy and, above all, realistic.

Outtakes Online: Wo Fat, McG rumble in the jungle

By Mike Gordon | Honolulu Pulse
That rumble in the jungle between Wo Fat and Steve McGarrett on Monday’s episode of “Hawaii Five-0” was even more amazing when you consider the lack of rehearsal time involved.

According to Mark Dacascos, who plays the evil Wo Fat, he and Alex O’Loughlin — McGarrett — only had an hour the day before they shot.

Dacascos arrived from Los Angeles on a Sunday afternoon, went from the airport to a wardrobe fitting, stopped by his favorite vegetarian grocery for something to eat, hit his hotel room to wash his face and brush his teeth and then was back on the set to rehearse the fight with O’Loughlin and the show’s stunt team. Monday morning his ride to the set arrived at 5:12.

“So we shoot that whole day and with no fight rehearsal between Alex and I because he has scenes and I have scenes,” Dacascos told me. “And then on Tuesday, we do all this dialog stuff and then 20 minutes before the sun goes down, after all that, then we shoot the fight scene.”

But the stunt team wanted to change a few things, even as the light started to fade, he said. No matter. O’Loughlin stepped up.

“Alex didn’t have any rehearsal with the new moves,” Dacascos said. “He did it on camera. “You know, for me being a perfectionist and being a martial artist, that stuff used to drive me crazy. Now I just say, you know what I am going to do my best and they are going to do what they can with it. Almost every show is like that.”

AS A LIFELONG martial artist, the 48-year-old Dacascos can pretty much handle any fight. He is supremely fit, agile and flexible. Still, he likes to know what he’s getting into when it’s time to throw a few kicks, punchs, elbow jabs, flying take-downs and the like.

“Is it fun to do the action sequences?” he said. “Absolutely. Is it frustrating that you feel like you don’t have enough time? Absolutely. But maybe that helps give you that energy — all that baggage you bring into a fight. It could possibly help. It gives you an edge if you are pissed off about a lot of things.”

The 35-year-old O’Loughlin looked fit in his first episode back after temporarily leaving the show in March. He had to take a break to seek supervised treatment for his use of prescription pain medication due to a shoulder injury.

The Monday episode was greeted with enthusiasm by fans but the action wasn’t enough to lift the show to ratings supremacy, according to Nielsen numbers released by CBS.

“Five-0” drew 9.39 million viewers. The ABC show “Castle” won the hour with 12.36 million viewers. NBC’s “Smash” drew 5.73 million.
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Mike Gordon covers film and television in Hawaii for the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Email him at mgordon@staradvertiser.com and follow him on Twitter. Read his weekly “Outtakes” column Sundays in the Star-Advertiser.

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Hawaii Five-0: Mark Dacascos Gives Wo Fat His Best

With just hours to go until CBS airs Steve McGarrett’s epic showdown with archenemy Wo Fat, Mike Gordon gives us the opportunity to get to know the man we love to hate a little better!

View the scans in the gallery

Fighting spirit

Mark Dacascos brings a lifetime of martial arts training to his “Hawaii Five-0″ fight sequences

By Mike Gordon | Honolulu Star-Advertiser

When it comes to expressing himself, actor Mark Dacascos can get the point across with his feet. The martial arts expert has used them with dramatic effect since he was a boy, but never with as large a following as he has now, playing the ruthless terrorist Wo Fat in “Hawaii Five-0.”

Wo Fat at his worst is Dacascos at his best.

In this season’s most intense fight scene so far, Dacascos delivered some serious hurt on the character played by Terry O’Quinn. The action in the October episode — “Ka Hakaka Maika‘i” (“The Good Fight”) — lasted more than a minute as Wo Fat kicked O’Quinn’s Lt. Cmdr. Joe White five times, including a roundhouse smack that sent the Navy SEAL crashing through a table.

Then it was almost lights out for White as Wo Fat strangled him with a phone cord. At the last moment, White escaped by hitting the terrorist in the face with a wooden knife block.

Crafting believable violence like that takes hard work and planning. But Dacascos, who was born in Hawaii and raised in a martial arts family, is a master of the fight scene. When his Wo Fat gets down and dirty — as he does in tonight’s new episode of “Five-0″ — rest assured it’s Dacascos raining the blows and taking them as well.

“For the most part, when it comes to fighting, I like doing it myself,” said Dacascos, sitting at a picnic table in Kapiolani Park. “Kicking, punching and all that stuff, I don’t have any problem doing. I don’t mind taking punches.”

The fight between Dacascos and O’Quinn, which took about four hours to shoot, was not without risk. Typically, the more complicated the fight, the more risk involved, Dacascos said.

“To make a fight look real, you want to come as close as you safely can to each other with your strikes,” he said. “So any time you do a fight, every single take, there is more of a chance of getting hit. Terry definitely risked getting hurt himself and definitely risked getting me hurt.”

To prepare, every move was choreographed during a two-hour rehearsal as the actors tried to imagine the action from each character’s point of view.

“You start playing with moves until things have a certain rhythm and a feel that you are happy with,” Dacascos said.

“Kicks, punches, knees, elbows. You try everything. What works, what is safe, what looks good. Then when you have everything blocked out, A to Z, you try to figure out if we are going to remember it and will we have enough time to shoot it.”

The finished fight was punishing and perfect, said “Five-0″ executive producer Peter Lenkov, who was there during filming.

“It was an all-out brawl,” he said. “The end result, despite our actors and stunt folks walking away bruised, was an epic, raw and very real fight, one we use as the bar now when planning any upcoming fight sequences.”

DESPITE his murderous alter ego, the 48-year-old Dacascos is an easygoing family man. He wears a necklace with photos of his three children, all of whom were born at Wahiawa General Hospital.

He started martial arts when he was 4, taught and inspired by his parents. Dacascos lived in Hawaii until he was 6, attending Ala Wai Elementary School before moving to the mainland.

His first tournament was at age 7. When he was 9, he won the peewee division at an international tournament in Long Beach by using a roundhouse kick to his opponent’s ribs. It was a seminal moment for Dacascos.

“He cried because he was hurt,” he said. “I cried because I hurt him.”

Growing up, Dacascos focused on wun hop kuen do, a style of martial arts developed by his father, Al Dacascos, that incorporates kung fu, aikido, judo, jujitsu and forms of karate. The younger Dacascos would train six days a week, sometimes for as much eight hours at a time.

“For me it wasn’t about winning trophies,” he said. “I didn’t save one martial arts trophy, and I had hundreds. I was just happy to train.”

He retired from competition at 18 but never stopped training. Even now he works out three times a week, mostly doing muay Thai routines. It has left Dacascos as flexible as a high school cheerleader, strong as a gymnast and as ripped as a bodybuilder.

“I train not just for my acting, but for myself,” he said.

He discovered acting at Portland State University, where he majored in Chinese and drama.

After starting out in 1986 with a part on the daytime soap “General Hospital,” Dacascos built his film and TV career with action parts that tapped his martial arts skills: “Only the Strong,” “The Crow: Stairway to Heaven,” “Brotherhood of the Wolf,” “Crying Freeman” and “Cradle 2 the Grave.”

But that’s changed in recent years. He’s become known for TV shows that have nothing to do with martial arts, starring as the Chairman on the Food Network’s “Iron Chef America” cooking competition, and as a celebrity contestant on ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars,” which drew up to 20 million viewers a week.

In fact, at the time “Five-0″ sought him for the show’s inaugural season, Dacascos had not thrown a punch or kick on camera in several years, he said.

Lenkov, who oversees every facet of “Five-0,” had worked with Dacascos when the executive producer wrote scripts for “The Crow: Stairway to Heaven.” He never considered anyone else for the part of Wo Fat. He liked everything about Dacascos, even the way he wore a suit.

“He doesn’t need to say much to get his point across,” Lenkov said. “He is actually a very difficult character to write because you don’t want to overwrite his dialogue, but give him just enough to be the most powerful man in the room.”

WHEN Dacascos brings his villain to life tonight, he’ll square off with Steve McGarrett — played by Alex O’Loughlin — in a battle the show’s stunt coordinator, Jeff Cadiente, called “epic.” The crew used four cameras to capture the fight.

“It’s our biggest yet,” Cadiente said.

No one will even hint at the action involved except to note that Wo Fat is taking aim at McGarrett’s head.

And that Dacascos asked his stunt double to do the kicking. The moves he was being asked to do reminded him of a scene he had shot a few years ago in China while working on a TV series about the late Bruce Lee.

The director there wanted Dacascos to get closer with his kick and hit harder. So he did. One take and it was over.

Dacascos had knocked the guy unconscious.

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Peter Lenkov Names Fan Base Among Season’s Highlights

Our favorite Executive Producer, Peter Lenkov, looks back on Season 2 of Hawaii Five-0 with XFINITY TV!

The highlights: a “mind blowing cliffhanger” in the finale, the “incredible core fan base”, his pride in his cast and crew and his favorite episode…

Take us inside your approach to the finale, and what you wanted to accomplish.
My approach was very simple: Outdo what we did last year. Take the audience on the ride of their life… and end up on a mind blowing cliffhanger. And all I can say on the eve of shooting the finale: Mission Accomplished.

Did anything disappoint you about this season? Anything you wish you could have done, but didn’t have the time, forethought or resources?
Not sure I can put my finger on anything disappointing. We worked very hard this year to build on the momentum of last season… tell better stories, explore the islands, get to know our characters better. And I think every challenge we threw at our cast and crew they met with incredible results. I’d love for us to continue to grow our audience. We have an incredible core fan base, hardcore 5-0 fanatics, and I hope they can help spread the word to those who haven’t seen the show yet.

What should fans look forward to next season? And if you haven’t gotten that far yet…what would your dream season be?
We’re continuing to expand our family in big ways. One is the addition of Michelle Borth joining us full time for season 3. We’re also planning some big stories, fun mind boggling mysteries, trips to other islands … and have already sat down with our stunt team to discuss some cool action for next year.

What were the high points of the season?
Fan reaction is top of the list. The following we have has really made the job fun. It’s exciting to see the feedback in real time and on Tuesday mornings… and it seems by that reaction that we’ve done our job this year. As far as high points, I think the season as a whole, I truly think we got better with each episode. I’m so proud of our cast and crew.

Do you have a favorite episode, line, or scene from this season? If so, what?
I love ‘em all. I truly do. If I didn’t, I couldn’t do this job right. But if I had to pick, I mean, if McGarrett had me in the rendition room cuffed to the chair and I was forced to answer, I’d probably say the end of episode 210 — seeing our family come together to save McGarrett, then ride off into the sunset on that chopper, I literally had tears in my eyes. Again, it made me feel as if we all had done a great job developing these characters. I felt these people truly did care for one another… that they were Ohana [extended family], and that nothing would tear them apart. Kudos to our actors — they make us care.