Showing posts with label Asbury Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asbury Park. Show all posts

Friday, February 3, 2012

(Un) Lucky Stiffs - Part 5 - Broadway Bobby,Sarge and Satan's Child

Back on Terra (somewhat) Firma, after surviving our encounter with Asbury Park (Greetings From Asbury Park), we proceeded with the mundane business of getting this puppy in the can.

We filmed a few days in an abandoned prison in New Jersey.  Low budget films are always in search of the elusive abandoned (fill-in-the-blank) location.  It means you will have the location all to yourself, and, if all works out, for a reasonable price.  After all, the place is no longer in use. How cool!

Yeah.  The thing is, if it's no longer in use, it also means a number of other things, like no one has cleaned it in some time, and getting power is something of a challenge, and when you ask someone there if something works, you are just as likely to be met with a shrug as a real answer.

When you take over a location that was most recently inhabited by rodents, there is little good to say for the place.  The prison location near Hoboken, NJ was no exception.

One of the amusing things about filming in the prison for a few days was that it held some insight into the personality of our set.  Anyone who has been on a film set knows that the First AD is front and center; they are the one calling for silence, the instruction to "lock it up" (no one allowed to come into frame),  the call to "settle" (stop walking, hold the work, and making other non-verbal sounds), calling the roll (briefly, roll sound, roll camera,) and the echoing of the director's instruction to "cut".

In our case, we had a rather quiet director in Matt, and somewhere near the end of our third and last day in the prison location, one of our contacts asked how I thought things were going.  I told him we were getting everything we needed, and it looked like we would wrap on time.

"But, are you happy with the footage you are getting?  Is this the way you envisioned it when you started directing this?"

My active set presence contrasted with Matt's quiet lead, and I realized that this guy thought that I was the director.  I explained how things worked, and he asked who the director was.  When I pointed to Matt, he seemed surprised, as a number of people, including JR, seemed more demonstrative.

One of those people was my 2nd 2nd AD, Chris Kelley (CK).  CK, who I had met in my NYU class, was a broad-shouldered Irish-American from Boston with a wicked sense of humor.  I used to pace the set back and forth with my cane, and CK once looked up and said "Prisoner requests permission to wish walkin' boss a happy birthday."  The 'walkin' boss' thing stuck.  (If you don't know the movie reference, look it up !)

If I was the prison walkin'  boss on set, Julie, my 2nd AD, was good cop.  She was cheerful and efficient.  The way I had my team work, she also did most of the paperwork (including generating production reports and call sheets, the latter being standard domain of the 2nd AD) and was my contact with the production office and talking with other departments.  That left CK as my guy on set, doing lock-up and managing the PAs.  CK became, depending on how you looked at it, my bad cop, or, in mob terms, my enforcer, but he was an enforcer with a humorously sarcastic edge.

CK could be heard reprimanding PAs who didn't respond quick enough on walkie with something like "this is yet another opportunity for you to reply, copy" or a telling a PA having some trouble with a lock-up "let's try the type of lock-up this time where you don't let anyone through."  He had a style that kept people on their toes with just the right touch of humor that most people, myself included, loved him.

It was fitting, then, that it was CK who dubbed one of our PAs "Satan's Child."  It was this film school graduate's first feature film, and he had a lot to learn.

Remember earlier I mentioned that Stacey had just that perfect combination of intelligence and enthusiasm?  Satan's Child was one-for-two, with the one being the latter.  He was the type of PA who would rush off on a mission (run) when you had only gotten through half of the description of what you needed, meaning he would get to the van and then have to come back.  He would take every trip off set as if he were an ambulance driver in a Hemingway novel, screeching as he pulled out  of his parking area, very much half-cocked.

It was on his return from one of those runs when he literally ran up to CK at lunch to see if there was anything else he could do for him and almost knocked CK's lunch out of his hands.  CK put his fingers as a cross, as in an exorcism, and shouted "away from me, Satan's Child!" and so the nickname was born.

One of Satan's Child's responsibilities often was transporting my first team actors, as he didn't mind doing repeated runs, enjoyed discussing the movie with them (think the PA in the movie Living in Oblivion on amphetamines) and took the job of getting them where we needed them on time very seriously.

Our actors were Jason and Lane as the younger robbers, and Bobby as Eddie, the older (though not much smarter) robber.  By this time, Stacey's abilities had gotten her promoted to assistant location manager, and, as with all her jobs, she was very good at it.  It also meant that I had other drivers to set.  This was fine with me - as long as I didn't get Satan's Child.

It was on one of these days that I was waiting for my ride, which was a little late.  Nothing bothers me more than late, even though "late" to pick me up was still early for my call time.  As I am pacing my apartment and on the phone with the production office, my doorman buzzes me and tells me there is a detective downstairs looking for me.  What could this be?  I ask him what this is about, but he says the detective can only speak with me.  I grab my set bag and head downstairs.

There, in my lobby, is Broadway Bobby Downs, a big smile on his face.  It's not that I didn't have a sense of humor, but I don't have one when I'm late, and this did not endear me to Bobby.  Even worse, when I get to the van, there is Satan's Child driving.  Save me.

Satan's Child is a young White kid with long hair and a do-rag.  I make the mistake of reminding him we are late, which is greeted with a response of "No fear, JB!" and a screeching turn around my corner, which quickly leads to a screeching halt behind a real police car, who has pulled over another car, presumably for a traffic violation.  Both officers were out of the car, and the way they had pulled up behind the other car, it was impossible for us to get around them.

I rest my forehead in my palm, knowing we are going to be even later.  Satan's Child (lets call him SC, for short, though we didn't sue that) has a metal band screaming on the radio (a rock-and-roll child myself, I prefer something more calming on my way to work) and is talking a mile-a-minute, as is Bobby.

SC looks over at me, and even though he isn't the most perceptive person in the world, he can see I am not happy.  He tries to reassure me that he will make up the time, and I don't look any happier.  Right then and there, he decides its time for action!  He starts honking his horn at the police, and, when they turn around, confused at what idiot is honking at police officers, they see SC behind the wheel of a mini-van  motioning with his hand for them to move and yelling out of the car that he has to get his boss (indicating me) to set.  Bobby, dressed in a pseudo-mob outfit, is urging SC on.

At this point, I'm thinking of how quickly I can get a hold of the production office from the police station where we are most certainly headed, and where do I begin to explain this to the officers.  I have to get the actors to set, but I am more than willing to leave SC in their good care.

To my surprise, the officers start laughing, and one of them pulls the car forward so that we can get by, and laughs as he waves us on.  I guess they figured anyone stupid enough to do something like that had to be legit.

Of course, I should not have been surprised at SC's lack of understanding of how to interact with an emergency vehicle.  One day we are filming on a long, winding country road in New Jersey, where we have permission to hold traffic during takes and rehearsals.  SC is at the furthest point.  Just as I call for us to lock it up, I hear fire engines.  Sure enough, I see fire engines headed in the direction of our shoot. I turn to CK and tell him to clear the road - obviously, you do not ask a fire engine on the way to a fire to wait for you while you do a take.  Well, this was obvious to most of us, but there was Satan's Child, his hands in the halt position, trying to stop the fire engines!

Before I can yell "Get him the hell out of the road!" CK is storming toward him, yelling all the way.  Satan's Child was confused, but the sight of CK rushing toward him screaming gave him a hint that something was wrong - and that we weren't rolling.  He moved aside, and the fire engines roared by, me with my hands in the air motioning "I'm sorry" as they did.

Later in the same day, Bill, our sound recordist, mentioned that he was getting the sound of cow's mooing.  SC actually asks CK if he should try to quiet them.  CK later told me that he was going to tell him to hold their mouths shut, but he was afraid he might really do it.

Cows were not our only animal problem.  During one part of the gang's getaway, they are chased by a  German shepherd, who catches up to one of them (Lane) and bites his arm.  All three of them are wearing Halloween costumes (it was part of their disguise for the robbery - get it!) so it was easy to pad his arm for the dog to grab.

Those who have worked with animals will tell you that in cases like this, you will often use two dogs that look alike, in case one is difficult, tired, etc.  We had a father/son combination. I forget the son's name, but the father was Sarge.  The scene involved the robbers running down the stairs, and then the dog chasing right behind them.  The timing was tricky enough, made even more tricky by the fact that dad and junior had completely different temperaments.  Sarge was like Ray Lewis of the Baltimore Ravens looking to take a quarterbacks head off; junior was like a ballet dancer out for a weekend jog.  With him, the scene would be my guys running down the stairs, followed by a long pause, followed by junior finally loping into frame.

Needless to say, junior spent a lot of time watching dad from the sidelines.

On our final take before lunch, Sarge nailed it.  He wound up on Lane's arm, Matt called cut, and we would all soon be off to lunch.  All, that would be, except Lane, who still had Sarge in his arm, refusing to let go.  Though the padding prevented Sarge from breaking the skin, having an enraged beast clutched to your arm is no fun.  To his credit, Lane was good about it, joking while expecting that Sarge would let go soon.  The trainer repeatedly ordered Sarge to release with "Aus!  Aus!" ( many dogs are trained in German - it had nothing to do with them being German shepherds).

Finally, the dog released.  The trainer tried to convince me of how well-trained Sarge was, releasing on command.  From what I could tell, he only finally let go after a few minutes because his jaws got tired.

Never been a big fan of working with animals.

Things went on this way for a while, with the location and art department issues still looming over our heads.  I was forced to change the schedule so often to keep up that Stacey, now location assistant, once shredded a soda can with her bare hands as I sadly informed her that she had to go back to her location contacts again to change things.  At that moment, although she was too professional to admit it, I'm sure she wished the soda can was my throat.

With all of this, I did want to take an opportunity to show a few pictures of Broadway Bobby Downs. Bobby drove me nuts by staying "in character" as the villainous Eddie Minucci, even when we weren't shooting, but he was one of those actors who lived to do this, even though making a living at it was far from easy for him.  I mentioned that this blog, in part, was to pay tribute to a lot of forgotten soldiers of the low budget wars, and the pictures below will give you an idea of the costumes, and serve as a small tribute to the late Bobby Downs.









Wednesday, February 1, 2012

(Un)Lucky Stiffs - Part 4 - Greetings From Asbury Park

When I was in high school, the Jersey shore was a trip from the Bronx to Seaside Heights with fake ID and big dreams.

When I got to college and started working at the radio station, the Jersey shore was a trip to Asbury Park and a hope that in some random night at the Stone Pony, Bruce would walk in and jam with the band.  I mean, we heard that it did happen; why couldn't it happen when we were there?

At some point during the filming of Lucky Stiffs, Asbury Park became my Niagara Falls.  In case you're too young to remember:



(Yes, Abbot and Costello did it as well, multiple times.  Old vaudville routines, like 'Who's on First', made the rounds, and even when they came to movies, since audiences could only see movies in theaters - no  DVDs, no Netflix, no cable, no television -  the idea was you could do the same routine with a slight twist and it would be new for audiences.  Television changed all of that)

Our main location was a warehouse in Brooklyn that got multiple uses.  It was the home of our art department, some main sets, and where we would shoot generic material when we didn't have a set (the location problem) or needed a cover set for weather.

We didn't want to burn our cover sets, as even into early October - we weren't going later than that, remember - we could run into bad weather.

The script required us to shoot one day - actually, about six hours - in Asbury Park.  We had to see the boardwalk and some other attractions.  Glenn, our location manager, with the assistance of NJ Film Commission's David Schooner, had gotten all the clearances for us.

Of course, the scene was about a beautiful, sunny, day so we needed the weather to cooperate.  In those days, you couldn't go to weather.com (didn't exist) to check out hour-by-hour forecasts.  Film companies would often pay a service to a company that would get their information directly from the National Weather Service, and when correct, they could tell you the forecast within a hour or so in any given area.  Farmers used similar services.  For a city boy like me who never needed such services, this seemed like a marvel of modern science.  (Now, of course, you can do it on your phone in a few clicks and we all take it for granted.)

Moving an entire crew with full equipment one-and-a-half hours for crew, and longer for equipment (commercial vehicles could not take the Garden State Parkway)  to a location requires a good deal of planning, and we had that.  We had checkpoints and maps (no GPS - geez, I sound like Stan now) and written directions and times to check in.  As per usual, some of us would go ahead first, Stacey and myself being among them.

That was the plan.

On the first day we planned to shoot Asbury Park, there was about a 50 percent chance of rain.  As I said earlier, I was leery of burning our cover set, and didn't have a lot of location alternatives that I could easily move .  That also meant the art department would have to stop everything and have our cover set.

I laid out a perfect plan, involving all of the drivers checking in with me at a precise time at the office.  I was there an hour before call time (probably looking at 4AM or so) on the phone with the weather service.  JR, Rody, Matt, and probably Stacey and my 2nd AD, Julie, were there as well.

As decision time got closer, it was still a tough call.  Matt and I talked about how much sunshine he really needed, and could we get by if it was clear part of the time, and maybe we shot in looking away from the water or something for a bit.  It wasn't optimum , but there were slight alternatives.  The guy at the weather service gave me hope.

Matt asked me what I thought.  I said considering everything, I thought we needed to give it a shot.  We were behind on locations, and if we kept pushing Asbury Park back, who knew when the weather would work for us, not to mention at some point we would wind up on nights and turnaround would be a problem.

Calls went out and calls came in.  We were on our way.  This was one of those times when someone had to make a decision, and I even remember saying bravely when some of the others were ready to back out that it was my decision, and I would take the responsibility (look in the dictionary under "hubris").

As we headed south on the Garden State Parkway, all signs were positive.  First, there was a slight mist, but as we got about 20 minutes or so from the exit, the sun came out.

I am reminded of that moment in The Perfect Storm when they are in the eye of the storm, and the sun comes out, and everything seems so beautiful.

Then, the skies opened up.

The rain was so hard that I remember saying that maybe this meant it was one of those downpours that comes and goes.  JR and I start talking about how it might look if it's sunny out and the boardwalk is wet, and he says we can make it work, and, in fact, the reflection off the shiny boardwalk might look nice.

Hey, this might all work out.

A little while later, we are standing around in holding, from our vantage point right by the water, looking out at the power of the sea.



Ok, maybe it wasn't that bad, but it was a downpour.  We called the weather service, and they said maybe it would be down to a drizzle by afternoon.  Thanks.

A note about those weather services we paid.  At one point on another shoot I was doing, we were doing a night exterior shoot out in Long Island.  We call ahead to the service, and they said "no chance of rain."  Great.  We get there, and the winds are swirling.  We set up the light stands, but don't raise the heads, out of safety concerns.  I finally get the guy from the weather service on the line (cell reception was bad in these areas in those days).

"Oh, yeah, there's a lot of wind.  You folks are catching the remnants of a hurricane that swept offshore."

"A hurricane?"

"It's not a hurricane now.  It's been downgraded."

"Why didn't you tell me about this?"

"The rain is all offshore.  You only asked me about rain.  You folks shouldn't get any precip (I'm supposed to feel better because he uses cool terms like 'precip').

I only asked about rain?  I didn't ask about tornadoes, either; it's just the type of thing I assumed you'd mention.  "What about the winds?"

"Should be about 40 to 60 miles an hour."

"I can't put light stands up in the air with wind like that."

"Light stands?   You better secure those things.  That sounds dangerous!"

Really?  Thanks for the advice.  Last time I ever paid for a weather service.

Back in Asbury Park, I take JR aside.  I probably sounded a lot like Uzo from a previous post.  Could we cheat some of the shots where we see the characters and the ocean in the background without us being in the rain?  Where, he asks?  With the wind and the rain, even if we found cover, we would get  pelted, not to mention production sound would be useless.

JR and I were talking privately.  Finally, friend that he was, he put his hand on my shoulder, smiled and said,"JB, unless it stops completely, we're screwed."  It's the sort of gallows humor JR and I often shared, but this time, I felt my neck in the noose.  I was the one who said we should come down here, and now we were going to lose a day.

Jeff, our trusted gaffer and meteorologist, looked out at the clouds and said the rain wasn't going anywhere.  I thought that maybe we just didn't have a good enough vantage point.  Without putting on any rain gear, I stormed out of holding, passed Madame Marie's, expecting no good fortune there and headed to the boardwalk.  I perched myself along the boardwalk, looking out at the ocean, getting soaked.  It didn't matter at this point.

Momentarily, I hear footsteps; it was Julie, my loyal 2nd AD.  She was much shorter than me, 5'2" at most, and, at that moment, smarter than me, as she had rain gear.  I shook my head, leaned on the rail, and looked out to the ocean.  She did the same.  Somewhere, someone has a picture of two crazy ADs  looking out at the ocean and getting drenched.

We didn't shoot that day, and as we headed back, there was talk of shooting Asbury Park the next day.  There was still a chance of rain, and I wasn't going to have this happen again.  Rody, of course, was her usual supportive self, reminding me that I had been wrong about today, and that shooting a cover set tomorrow would put stress on her friend's art department.  I didn't care; we were shooting the interior tomorrow.  Trust me on this.

The next day was sunny in New York, and in Asbury Park.

As we struggled with a lack of locations and prepared sets, we headed out to Asbury Park a second time a while later in the schedule.  As we got a little bit outside of the exit, it was a little cloudy.  Please, please, no rain!

No rain.  Fog thick as soup rolled in, fog so thick you couldn't see your hand in front of your face.  Don't ask me about the weather service.

Fog?



JR and I weren't joking as much this time, but, in an effort to cheer me up, he did mention that we hadn't yet seen locust or raining frogs.

There is little worse than objectively knowing you were making the best decisions possible given the information and circumstances at your disposal, yet doubting yourself because the results were so bad.

We did eventually get Asbury Park shot, and it looked great.  Combined with the location problems and the art department problems, though, we did lose days.  At one point, I had to have us down for a few days to regroup and save money from shooting half-days.  Not good.

We were now going to wrap somewhere into the third week of October, and Halloween was looking scary.