The Loooooonnnng Weekend! Permalink | No Comments Yet
Well, it’s been almost 5 days since we wrapped up the big shoot for the ‘Bureau’, and I think all of us are finally recovered from a hectic weekend that was both euphoric and exhausting at the same time.
The days leading up to Friday, April 7 were a whirlwind of activity as we all rushed to finish up last minute details before heading to Tucson. We were disappointed to learn that some of the folks we had lined up to assist with camera operation and lighting/grip had to drop out at the last minute. Because it was so close to the weekend, we didn’t have much luck cold-calling folks from the Arizona film production directory. Luckily, we were able to leverage some of Dick’s contacts to find a couple folks who were more than up for the task, and did a remarkable job on the set. Those new folks included Andre Cox who admirably handled the grip work, and Paul Stapleton Smith who kicked butt as our lead gaffer. We were so happy to find guys with as much experience as they were able to bring to the project at the last minute. Felipe Raposo, a budding film student in Tucson, stepped in to provide assistance with a lot of the miscellaneous tasks we needed to complete.
I went down to Tucson early Friday after picking up some props and a dolly. Once there, I worked with Andre and Dick on technical details relating to the camera, ensuring we could get successful transfers of the P2 memory card used by our Panasonic HVX-200 HD camera to the laptop I had brought. That turned out to be a pretty painful experience, as we were forced to run over the public library next door multiple times in order to utilize their free Wi-fi to download latest drivers from Avid and Panasonic.
Tony and Dave arrived with the grip truck later that day, and we were joined by Paul shortly thereafter. We decided to unload as much of the grip equipment that night so that we could hit the ground running on Saturday morning. Paul did an outstanding job in coordinating that activity, and role-modeled safety to the entire team in the process. After we got the grip truck unloaded around 8 or so, we let everyone go home for the evening, while Dave, Tony, and myself hit ‘Claim Jumper’ for a much-needed petrol recharge. Definitely hit the spot! After picking up a few last minute props at Target and checking into the hotel, we returned to the building to complete some set work, finally deciding to call it a day around 12:30.
Our lead actor, Kwane Vedrene, got into Tucson around 11:00 and had some difficulties checking into the hotel even though we left a key specifically for him and his room at the desk. Apparently, the front desk clerk thought he gave his name and last initial as ‘Kwane L’, instead of ‘Kwane V’ so told him there wasn’t a key waiting for him (even though the envelope sitting at the front desk specifically said ‘for Kwane V’). Guess she wasn’t too bright since how many ‘Kwane’s’ are gonna be staying there on a given night? Luckily, we got that resolved for him, and he was able to get checked in after a bit of a delay.
After we wrapped up our set construction activities after midnight, I realized I had made the mistake of leaving Tony’s truck in the garage of the library which unbeknownst to me closed at 6 pm, so we had to wait till the next day to retrieve it. Consequently, I crammed into the grip truck with Dave and Tony to head back to the hotel (about an 18 minute drive). It must have been a loooooong day for me ’cause once we got to the hotel, I realized I had left my suitcase back at the set location, so Tony had to drive me back there to pick it up. Finally, we got back to the hotel around 1:30 am, tired as hell, and knowing there was but a few hours of sleep to catch before the official start of shooting.
We awoke around 6:30, grabbed breakfast with Kwane at the hotel, and then proceeded to the building ready for a full day of film shooting. The call time wasn’t until 9:30 since we anticipated a couple people coming down from Phoenix that morning, so we used that time between 8-9:30 to work on rehearsal activity with Kwane, as well as last minute touch-ups to the set. Dick, Paul, and Andre arrived at 9:00 and made preparations for setting up the initial scenes in the office, getting the lighting prepped and all the fun stuff associated with that. Brian arrived shortly thereafter to get the audio stuff ready.
While Dave finalized aspects of the shot list and prepared for his forthcoming assistant director role, I worked with Dick and Kwane on blocking for the initial scenes. Several of the early scenes involved having the camera on a dolly track, so there was additional setup time involved with that. Tony meanwhile worked behind the scenes to coordinate aspects for some set changes needed in the adjoining room, and made sure to capture several of those great photographs you can catch on the other pages of the web site.
There was some concern as the morning progressed that we were starting to fall behind schedule since we hadn’t shot the first scene yet and it was moving closer to the noon-time hour. Once we got into a rhythm though, the whole team started to gel, and we started knocking out shots in excellent time. We broke around 1:30-2:00 to scarf down some Subway sandwiches, but quickly returned to the filming routines. We did make adjustments to the schedule as we moved on, primarily because we had a couple set location changes scheduled for the first day, and it became clear that it would be much easier to try to finish up the main office scenes that day, and move to the adjoining office and hallway scenes the following day.
Throughout the day on Saturday and Sunday, we were blessed with additional assistance provided by some of Dick’s friends who visited the set. Santiago visited us for a little while on Saturday, providing some input on the best way to align props for some of the complicated scenes. Additionally, Rogelio, proved to be a godsend with all the assistance he provided to our lighting crew, as well as supplementing Tony with the still camera shots.
As Saturday wore on, I felt more and more like this was going to be an amazing film. The shots Dick was able to choreograph were remarkable, and the lighting set up such the perfect mood for the dramatic scenes. Kwane continued to amaze all of us with his tremendous ability to bring the character of ‘Roger’ to life, even though it was such a physically and emotionally draining part. I can’t wait till folks see how great the ‘door’ scenes with the accompanying shadows turn out. Better than even I visualized when originally penning the first draft of the script. The camera seemed to do an admirable job in capturing the essence of the story cinematically. Even with the downtime required to offload the solid state memory card from the HD camera, we were able to schedule it in such a way that minimal impact was felt to the production. The 4 Gig card we had could hold 10 minutes of HD footage before requiring a purge to the laptop (a process which took between 4-7 minutes to complete).
The afternoon progressed smoothly as we continued to crank through all of the main office scenes. A few of us during the breaks, ventured downstairs to the basement of the building to see the creepy vault originally discovered by Tony, Dave, and myself during a visit to the building a few weeks prior. It was definitely a very odd setting, with no lights seemingly available, and only a flashlight to guide us. Seeing as there used to be a bank in the building many years before, it was natural to find one of those big steel door vaults securing the bank’s valuables. However, what was strange was within the vault, we found children’s toys, a plate on the floor with a half eaten roll, a velvet painting on the floor, and a few other strange incidentals. Was as if someone had been locked in there some period ago. Definitely gave everyone the heeby-jeebies! At least it provided a brief reprieve from the grueling set activites for some of us.
We broke for dinner (Papa John’s pizza) around 8:30-9:00, before moving the set-up downstairs to film the elevator scenes. By that time, everyone was getting a bit tired and cranky, so we tried to move through those scenes as expediently as possible. If I recall correctly, we called it a day around 10:00-10:30 and made some plans for the next day’s shoot. The Tucson film office had informed us that the annual city ‘pub crawl’ was happening that evening just a few blocks away from where the shoot was being done (on Congress). At the beginning of the day, I had hopes that we’d all get to go over there to relax and enjoy a few beers along with the music. Alas, not a one of us had the energy to make it over to the ‘pub crawl’. Oh, well, maybe next year!
For that night, some of us moved over to the Hilton where we had additional hotel rooms waiting. I had a feeling none of us would have trouble sleeping that night after an exhausting (but rewarding) day of shooting.
We made it back to the set at 8 in the morning, prepared for another full day of filmmaking. One of our actors, Wayne, reminded me that although I had remembered the donuts and pastries, I had made the monumental mistake of not bringing coffee to the set that morning…..aaaaaaghhh! How could I make such a transgression?
Luckily Tony saved the day by grabbing coffee for everyone at a nearby diner. Disaster barely averted!
The previous day’s experience had definitely allowed us to get into a groove much earlier on in the day. We immediately began working on the shots for the adjoining office (after the guys got the door swapped from the original office into the adjoining office since we had to re-use that particular prop). Again, Dick and our lighting crew did an amazing job in getting a perfect (gloomy, dark, and smoky) atmosphere created in that office. And the shots of Kwane moving through the office and the accompanying shadows are delicious to say the least (Good job, Dick!).
It was beginning to move into the lunch hour, so we wrapped up everything on the 4th floor, and moved our operations to the 2nd floor in preparation for the long hallway shots. We brought in lunch from a local diner, and again ate it hastily so we could progress to the next phase.
Andre had the great idea of using green-screens at the end of both hallways to allow us to provide an infinite hallway scene. Unfortunately, after the extensive set-up was completed for that, to our disappointment, we discovered we had too much green spill reflected in the painted bricks all down the hallway. Would have been a nightmare to remove in post. So the guys worked to replace the green-screen with black material which would still give an impression at some level of an infinitely long and dark space.
It was approaching 2:00 pm, and we knew we had a number of hallway shots still left, and not a whole lot of time. At this point, I definitely started worrying that we might not finish shooting that day. But in times of pressure, I can proudly say this bunch of professionals (meaning everyone associated) executed flawlessly. While several folks worked upstairs to break down the office sets, the other half started cranking through hallway shots, one after the other, while never sacrificing quality. The film we were getting looked amazing. And the scenes with the camera on the dolly in the hallway turned out better than anyone expected. Dick came up with a lighting twist for one of the scenes of Kwane standing in the hallway which should look spectacular.
We wrapped up all the photography around 7:15, and while weary, we all felt a huge sense of accomplishment. We knew there was still several hours of packing the grip truck still left, but the adrenaline from such a successful weekend gave us the energy to get it done.
And with that, the filming piece of the project came to an end. We still have voice-over and editing, but we reached a major milestone on that warm April evening in Tucson. We actually made a movie!
Thanks to everyone who gave up so much of their time and energy to making this weekend a reality. It is appreciated more than you will know!
And now, the editing adventure begins!
Cheers for now,
Peter