Breaking the Back of the Filming

Friday saw us filming in a cafe, Saturday at a university and Sunday in a suite of offices in Kemp Town.

We met up on Friday evening at the Rotunda Cafe in Preston Park. The scenes themselves weren’t overly complex, although one required a manager to address a small crowd. With around eight supporting artists to assist and some clever cinematography courtesy of Morgan Andrews, I think we pulled this off. The scene must have worked because all the extras clapped at exactly the right moment, without anyone having to remind them to applaud in unison.

Saturday morning we were at Brighton University for 8am. Just three scenes to shoot, but these were the very first for four of the five principal actors, who’d had little chance to settle into their roles. Fortunately, they were excellent from the outset – much of the credit due to Angela Elise Munnoch, who managed most of the casting. The scenes weren’t particularly complicated, but with five people in a room, it takes time to get the scene to flow and ensure that every angle is covered.

I’d hired the university room for its corporate feel, but the real surprise was the exterior of the building, which plays extremely accurately into the whole theme of the film. When someone suggested adding a scene outside, I said yes. It worked beautifully, although it threw the schedule into a bit of disarray. By the time we reached the final scene, I was getting quite frantic to keep things moving. In the end, we rattled through it and I think we got everything we needed.

One of the things I’ve learnt on this project is that the first set-up of the day always takes longer than expected. Once everyone’s in the flow, scenes move faster, but then we’re often running very close to the deadline and rushing to finish. I suspect the lack of crew is the main cause because, more often than not, it’s just the DOP, his assistant, the sound recordist, me, and Angela plugging the gaps.

Sunday felt a bit more relaxed. We were back on location at the Kemp Town offices by 8am. Just two actors and two short scenes in the morning, then B-roll in the afternoon. Best of all, I had my main tech support, Andrew, on hand, which took a load off my shoulders.

However, I did manage to forget some props and had to dash home. Then the sound guy needed another mic, so home I went again. Inevitably, we started later than planned but managed to wrap the main scenes by around 1pm. After a quick lunch, the afternoon was spent capturing B-roll with supporting artists improvising short office scenes. A successful day that rounded off a successful week.

By 5pm I was home, managed a quick snooze, and by 7pm was sitting in a local Indian restaurant with a Lamb Madras and a couple of glasses of red.

Very many thanks to everyone involved. The actors Martin Portlock, Mike Freeman, Kat de Leiros, Mark Beauchamp, Oliver Sebastian, Lamb Bennett, Keaton Makki, Gillian Fischer, Stewart James Barnham, Simon Willshire; our DOP Morgan Andrews and his assistants, Cameron Ryan and James Will Day; our sound guys Alistair Lock and Adam Price; my AD and crucial support throughout the whole project Angela Elise Munnoch; Andrew Cawdery our unflappable and ever competent Technical Support; Mark Tournoff who organised the offices and coordinated the supporting artists including Diana Mikhaylova, Daren Callow, Cameron Dean and Dev Renj who gave stellar performances as office workers. Also thanks to Mark for the shirts!

That’s fifteen days filming in the bag with four or five still to go. The next shoot days involve some pretty emotional scenes so will be fairly challenging – although they involve fewer actors in more accessible locations. At last, it feels as though we’ve broken the back of the filming.

The Petrol Station

Last week we filmed in a petrol station. A very simple scene, the main challenge being avoiding customers. Just as we were ready to shoot, someone would wander in. We’d all scurry out of the way to allow the staff to get on with their work, then return once the customer had gone. Many thanks to Mary Rees, Mark Tournoff and Saskia Wilcox for stepping in as supporting artists.

Once again, filmmaking is giving me a chance to appreciate places I’d never normally think about. I’d assumed petrol station staff had a fairly dull time when it was quiet. Not a bit of it. These days a petrol station is part mini-supermarket, part bakery and part car wash, so there’s always something to do. The weather was less than ideal, which does present a bit of a problem script-wise, but I’ll sort that out later. I’d also hoped to shoot a few street scenes, but with one of the actors being unavailable, that’ll have to wait for another day.

Meanwhile, Julie conducted further interviews with some of the actors: one with David Burton and Pat Garrett, and the other with Keaton Makki and Lamb Bennett. We captured some excellent material that can be edited down for publication here and across social media.

I also spent time scrabbling around for supporting artists to help out with the shoots scheduled for next weekend. We’ve got a hectic three days planned and I wanted to ensure we’re properly prepared. On Friday, Saturday and Sunday, we’ll be filming in a cafe, a university, and also back in the offices. We’ll be working with five actors who haven’t appeared yet: Martin Portlock, Katherine de Leiros, Mike Freeman, Mark Beauchamp, and Christina Dembenezi. It should be an interesting few days ahead.

Welcome Martin Portlock As Morgan

The biggest news from last week is that we’ve cast our new CEO character. I’m delighted to announce that Martin Portlock will be taking on the role of Morgan.

Martin Portlock is a dynamic English actor whose captivating performances have won over audiences worldwide. His breakthrough came in 2022 with his chilling portrayal of ‘The Witch’ on ITV’s Britain’s Got Talent. Martin won ‘Best Actor’ at the National Film Awards 2025.

Last week, I also started uploading some of the footage we’ve shot so far. I’m editing in DaVinci Resolve and trying to remember everything I learned from editing my last film a few years back. As I reviewed the footage, I spotted a few issues with the sound and picture quality, but fingers crossed, nothing that can’t be sorted. This made me realise I need to start reviewing the footage much sooner after each shoot.

We had another day filming at our house in Seaford on Friday, which went very well. Most of the time was spent on an outdoor scene with Angela Elise Munnoch and David Burton. The scene carried a substantial emotional weight component, so the actors’ performances were absolutely key. Both Angela and David delivered nuanced and convincing performances.

A takeaway lesson for me was when Angela pointed out that my reply of “Yep” to her question, “Was that alright?” wasn’t particularly helpful. Ah! I tend to be a bit rushed on set, but maybe it’s time I did a bit of work on my interpersonal skills.

We shot a handful of shorter transition scenes before wrapping up with a scene at a local bus stop. It was a productive day, and we finished around 4pm. I was very grateful to have Arun Varghese assist Alistair on sound.

Next week, we’ll be rehearsing for three quite intense shoot days scheduled for the week beginning 18th August. I also need to focus on the schedule again.