My wife and I were fortunate enough to be invited as extras  for the film “The Legend of Hell’s Gate: An American Conspiracy” in Granbury  Sunday.
 It was an eye-opening experience to say the  least.
 First, one sometimes hears about the arrogance of those in  the movie business. I can’t speak about others, but this group of people, from  the producers, directors, cast, crew, extras – everyone – was extremely nice at  all times. They treated everyone with friendliness, courtesy and  professionalism. It didn’t matter that we were there only for one day, it didn’t  matter that we weren’t professional actors, just a couple of locals that were  invited to join. It made an extremely long day much more bearable.
 We arrived at 8 a.m. and waited and waited and waited.  Finally we were sent to wardrobe where we waited and waited and waited. Once it  was our turn, it only took a few minutes as those handing out costumes knew  where everything was and what was needed.
 From there, we headed to the set. There were minutes of  filming followed by hours of waiting for our next scene. It wasn’t that the crew  was disorganized, it was that it took so much time to set up shots – lights,  reflectors, the director’s instructions, a rehearsal or two, adjustments –  getting everything just right.
 Then there would be more than one take and everyone went  back to the start and did it all again – perhaps three or four times. A lot like  taking photos for the newspaper – an insurance shot to make sure they got the  right angles and the best action.
 But perhaps the most amazing thing about the day was the  fact that the scenes were not shot in the same sequence they would likely be  shown on the screen. A piece here, another there, then go back and do another  scene. It changes one’s perspective on what it takes to make a movie and the  reason they are so expensive.
 Tanner Beard, who wrote the script, has a role in and  directs the movie, never raised his voice and never lost his cool while all  around him there appeared to be chaos as assistant directors called for this  scene or that or went to prepare for the next one.
 Next will come the editing. The music, sound and putting  the pieces into a cohesive and complete motion picture. That will take several  months.
 It was interesting, it was in many ways a lot of fun, but  it was a 10-plus hour day. My wife and I had been on our feet almost all day –  we hurt, we had trouble walking and we still had to return home. As for the cast  and crew, they only had to drive to the local motels – but they had to plan for  the following day and there would be another 14-hour day, and another and  another.
 It gives a whole new perspective to actors and crew members  who spend their lives making movies. I came away with a whole new respect for  those who entertain us. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

thanks for sharing...did your lady take a picture of you and you of her and someone of the both of you in costume? will you post them...PLEASE?????
ReplyDeleteI agree, the amazing thing is how they storyboard all of it so they can then group similar scenes for consecutive filming, even if out of sequence. Those storyboard artists are quite remarkable. The directors are incredible, because they have the 'vision' in their heads and 'somehow' it (usually) translates to the screen as they saw it... As you say, for entertainment.
ReplyDelete