Something shifted in Hollywood and audiences noticed. The best-received action movies of the last three years all leaned heavily on practical effects. This is not a coincidence.
The evidence:
- Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) started the trend. Real cars, real explosions, real stunts. Source: behind-the-scenes documentary.
- Top Gun: Maverick (2022) — Tom Cruise in actual fighter jets. $1.49 billion worldwide. Source: Box Office Mojo.
- Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning — real motorcycle cliff jump, real train stunt. Audiences can tell when it is real.
- Furiosa (2024) — George Miller continued the practical approach. The Octoboss chase sequence used 200+ stunt performers.
- Sinners (2025) — Ryan Coogler's vampire western used practical makeup effects for the transformations instead of CGI. The result is visceral and unsettling in a way digital effects are not.
Why practical hits different:
- Your brain subconsciously registers real physics. When a stunt looks slightly wrong — too fast, too clean, too smooth — your brain checks out.
- Actors perform better reacting to real things. Compare Viggo Mortensen fighting actual Uruk-hai prosthetics vs. MCU actors punching air in front of green screens.
- Practical effects age better. The original Alien still looks terrifying. 2005 CGI looks like a video game.
The hybrid approach works best: Dune Part Two used practical sets, real sand, real costumes, then enhanced with digital effects. The sandworm riding sequences blend both seamlessly. This is the model.
Sources: Behind-the-scenes documentaries, VFX breakdown videos, Box Office Mojo for financial data
The original Jurassic Park from 1993 looks better than most CGI movies made last year. Stan Winston's animatronic T-Rex has weight and texture that digital rendering still cannot match.