The End of the Beginning

As I mentioned before, we had three shooting days last week. A quick scene with the truck, followed by two mega scenes in a flat in Sussex Heights, which involved some complex dialogue and a great deal of shouting. Amazingly, Lamb, Keaton and Angela all seemed completely confident with their lines.

There were, of course, a few challenges. One scene was a dinner party, which meant I had to concoct a meal and sort out the wine. I’d specifically asked the guy in the shop for clear apple juice, but somehow ended up with cloudy. So, late the night before, I was tearing around various petrol stations hunting for anything transparent and apple-related. I’d originally suggested Spaghetti Bolognese for the meal, but as Angela pointed out, this might lead to……complications such as rebellious strands of spaghetti during filming or enthusiastic slurping and sauce splattering over the actors’ clothes. She suggested chicken, potatoes and beans instead, so five minutes before “Action” saw me frantically shoving plates into a microwave. The dinner party scene went surprisingly well, and I was genuinely impressed with the actors’ performances.

The next day was the big argument scene, and the issue there was that I wanted plenty of movement. The trouble is, once you introduce movement, continuity becomes a bit of a nightmare. In the business, this choreography is known as “blocking”, and I probably should have given it rather more thought. Still, we had time on our side, and after a few takes, Angela and Keaton settled into a reliable pattern. We also shot a few quick Zoom call scenes, and Nicky Patching kindly stepped in as a delivery driver. Thanks, Nicky.

Our final scene was filmed around sunset, which, of course, comes with it’s own lighting headaches – everything changes so quickly that each take looks slightly different. But, with some clever improvisation from Morgan and plenty of perseverance from everyone else, we got what we needed.

That’s it now, other than a very small corridor scene I still need to do with Angela. We may still need to pick up the odd extra bit later, though I won’t know that until I’m further into the edit. So, I guess this is the moment when I’m supposed to say “It’s a wrap”.

I did very little for the rest of the week. It was SO nice not to have that bloody shooting schedule hanging over me. We will have a wrap party, but I think it’s best to leave it until January – everyone’s far too busy in the run-up to Christmas.

I’m extremely grateful to everyone who made this possible. It’s been hard work, but tremendous fun! Thanks to all the actors and everyone who helped with the locations, including Mark Tournoff & Gosia Stewart for allowing us to film in Manchester Street and Nicky Patching for letting us use her house in Seaford. Thanks also to George Prince, who supplied the truck and allowed us to film in his yards. And to Tom & Julie, who helped with social media, graphic design for the posters and general organisation. Thanks to Andrew Cawdery, our tech support and transport guy, who made everything so much easier. Obviously, thanks to Morgan Andrews, the DOP and his legion of extremely capable assistants, Adam Price and Alistair Lock on sound, and the many supporting artists who brought the call centre to life, and anyone else who helped us out. Special thanks to Angela Munnoch, who’s been with me from the start and has been invaluable as AD, wardrobe, script supervisor and general moral support.

I now face the tasks of editing, music, marketing and distribution – another steep learning curve, and I expect it will take several months. I may not blog quite as often for a while, and if I do, it will probably be fairly esoteric stuff about editing and Davinci Resolve.

To misquote Churchill: “This is not the end, nor is it the beginning of the end…. etc”

Serendipity and Chanctonbury Ring

We had shoot days scheduled for 23rd, 24th and 25th November so last week was a flurry of preparation. On Monday, we held a Zoom rehearsal for our final scenes with Angela, Keaton and Lamb, and it all went surprisingly well. Two of the scenes involve fairly complex dialogue, but all the actors were on form and knew their lines.

We’d planned a truck shoot for Sunday 23rd, and I’d assumed it would be straightforward enough for me to handle both camera and sound, with minimal preparation. Naturally, the week quickly descended into the usual scramble with me scurrying around repairing cables and hunting for Allen keys to fix the tripod. The final truck scene required four actors travelling in from as far as Stamford, so we arranged for Lamb to come down the night before, and we’d pick up Simon at Redhill. Rail cancellations meant that by Saturday night, Lamb had only reached Leicester, which, to my mind, meant she was actually getting further away from Brighton. She decided to press on to London and stay with a friend, so on Sunday, we ended up picking them both up from Redhill.

Huge thanks to George Prince, who kindly let us film at his yard near Reigate and provided the truck. We captured some great shots, with excellent improvisation from Simon and Oliver. The last task of the day was to get some decent promotional stills of Lamb and Keaton, ideally echoing the feel of the South Downs scenes. We left Reigate about 3pm with the sun already slipping low. By 3:45pm we were up at Devils Dyke and, unlike our earlier South Downs shoot when it was warm and balmy, it was now November, windy and bitterly cold. We did virtually no planning and just shot what we could. As I snapped away, I realised Chanctonbury Ring was right there in the background, a recurring theme throughout the film. Serendipity strikes again.

Back in Brighton, we had a quick snooze before heading back out to the flat we’d booked for Monday’s shoot to dress the set.

The Monday scenes involved three people eating dinner and drinking wine – always a continuity nightmare. The day went well, and I’d like to write more, but I’ve got to prep for Tuesday. So, maybe I’ll share more about it next week.

Tomorrow is our final scheduled shoot day and, fittingly it’s the big scene. Watch this space next week to see how it all unfolds.