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T O P I C R E V I E W |
James N. |
Posted - August 18 2011 : 12:10:11 PM My Datebook for the middle of August, 1991, is full of interesting annotations: Aug. 12: "RAINED OUT FILMING!; Dale Dye gone!"; 13: "OFF - Due to weather; visit the gang in Swannanoa"; 14: "Shoot in fort again - RAINY & COOL"; 17 - 20: "Filming in 'Massacre Valley'; very sunny & hot; long days - 5-6AM to 7-8PM, but cooler". Add in my "side trips" on mountain roads to East Tennessee, Old Salem, N. C., and once again to Cowpens, S. C., and you can see I was very "busy" at this time!
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The first day filming in "Massacre Valley".
As I've said before, Michael Mann intended to shoot a full week at a time, then take "regular" two-day weekends off, but unfortunately for his plan the weather didn't always cooperate. Even though we'd already had our "weekend" off, the rain dictated another two or three more days "off" as well. The final week of filming for the Military Core was therefore Sat. Aug. 17, through Wed. Aug. 21, all of it spent in the "Massacre Valley" set. With our part drawing to an end and with the long-anticipated absence of CAPTAIN Dale Dye, I finally relaxed and enjoyed myself! At the end of that last five-day period, our filming was finished though the rest of the shooting would drag on well into the fall. Here is a sequence of photos alluded to in my longer account showing DD-L, Eric, and Russel at the beginning of several "takes" rushing to save Cora and Alice:
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Everyone standing around waiting.
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A bit more tension as they prepare for "Action!"
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Here they go again!
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This is as close as I could get!
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Last of the Mohicans as I like to remember it - on set surrounded by friends, cast, and crewmembers.
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8 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Gadget Girl |
Posted - October 17 2011 : 5:42:10 PM Awesome pics, James! Thanks again for sharing them!!! |
IWLFNDU |
Posted - August 26 2011 : 5:45:02 PM Lol...I like that one, too, WW.
Although long sleeves and pants can be a cooler option, with the jacket and the gear and the dark colors--and knowing the South in the summertime--I'm surprised folks looked as good as they did in the in-between-takes shot, especially when considering all of the action sequences in that scene. I would expect to see more people pancaked out like the few there in the pic.
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Monadnock Guide |
Posted - August 21 2011 : 4:28:54 PM Now THAT is a great answer Joyce, ... ;) |
Robbman |
Posted - August 21 2011 : 4:22:58 PM Aint it cool news does a 'behind the scenes pic of the day' feature.. you should send some to them and see if they'll use them. That goes for any of you that have pics.
Here's but one example of one of their pics. http://www.aintitcool.com/node/50898 There should be an email for you to submit to on that page. |
Fitzhugh Williams |
Posted - August 21 2011 : 3:13:56 PM For the original battle at the original Fort William Henry, it was hot, too. Montcalm had the soldiers leave behind their waistcoats, or more properly their vestes. They wore only their justaucorps. Why, you might wonder (or maybe not), instead of the other way around? The justaucorps were unique to the unit in which the soldiers served, so they wore them as a badge of identification. In the movie, of course, it is the other way around. And all the French are dressed the same even though they represented different regiments, some of which would have been dressed in red. |
Wilderness Woman |
Posted - August 21 2011 : 2:08:02 PM quote: Of course it's a cliche reenactors hear all the time: "Ain't you hot in them clothes?"
My favorite reply to that question is, "Yes, I am. Now if I could just find an available man who thinks so, too, I would be all set!"
Love the pics, James! |
James N. |
Posted - August 21 2011 : 12:19:01 PM quote: Originally posted by IWLFNDU
Fantastic pics, James! Really enjoyed these. You can feel the tension as they ready for the rescue!
I would imagine that it got rather warm wearing that costume in NC in August!
Thanks, IWLFNDU! Of course it's a cliche reenactors hear all the time: "Ain't you hot in them clothes?" But here it was true! At the Fort William Henry set, the humidity was such that they felt like a damp, smothering weight much of the time. Here, the sun FINALLY came out and stayed, but the steam from the ground and woods was suffocating in a different way. THIS is how we spent most of our time between "takes":
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IWLFNDU |
Posted - August 18 2011 : 5:13:59 PM Fantastic pics, James! Really enjoyed these. You can feel the tension as they ready for the rescue!
I would imagine that it got rather warm wearing that costume in NC in August!
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