National Post (National Edition)

Lights, cameras... get off that phone

Cellphone bans on movie sets gain traction

- STEPHANIE MERRY

It’s hard to imagine any corner of the planet where smartphone­s aren’t ubiquitous. But director Christophe­r Nolan is fairly certain that in the not-so-distant future, every movie set will be like his own: entirely devoid of phones and the zombified addicts they spawn.

“In a few years nobody is going to be allowing that on sets,” he said while doing publicity for his Golden Globe-nominated Dunkirk this year.

“It’s an unprofessi­onal lack of concentrat­ion, so our rule is very simple: If you need to make a phone call or use your phone to text, you go off set.”

But should we take the word of a guy who doesn’t even own a cellphone?

Maybe — because he’s not alone. Just as the wider world grapples with the habit-forming machinery sending us phantom vibrations from our pockets, a small number of directors are taking a hard line. At the moment, Nolan’s most vocal comrade is Quentin Tarantino. If others follow suit, it would drasticall­y change the feel of movie sets where long stretches of downtime are conducive to constant, widespread web surfing.

Nolan and Tarantino’s views aren’t altogether surprising, considerin­g the two are also some of the loudest defenders of old-school technology in the great filmvs.-digital debate. They’re hardly Luddites, though, and besides, they have compelling reasons for their rules. For starters, every device is equipped with a camera, and leaked footage at the hands of internet pirates is a real concern.

Secondly, much like loud phones in theatres, an illtimed ring on a movie set can really ruin the experience.

“There’s nothing more frustratin­g than taking all the time to get the camera ready and get the actors prepared and get them in there and start shooting the scene and something (messes) it up that’s not directly in front of the camera,” said producer and assistant director William Paul Clark, who has worked with Tarantino in various capacities since the Pulp Fiction days. It’s one thing when a problem occurs in front of the camera — an actor flubs a line, for example — but a crew member’s cellphone going off is like an unforced error.

On Tarantino’s sets, one person has the job of collecting phones at “Checkpoint Charlie” — “he’ll even charge it if you want,” Clark assured — so the rule is crystal clear.

“It’s accepted and it’s known that if a phone goes off on set, that’s your last day,” he said. No one has ever gotten fired that he recalls, though he does remember a fruitless manhunt after a ringtone sounded during the filming of Django Unchained.

Oscar-winning cinematogr­apher Robert Richardson — who is a frequent collaborat­or with Tarantino and Martin Scorsese, among others — prefers a cellphonef­ree set, but acknowledg­es certain benefits, including the ability to quickly share footage with other department­s.

“The makeup department can see the actress or actor in detail as can wardrobe, hair, production design,” he wrote in an email from New Zealand while filming the Shailene Woodley movie Adrift. There’s no need to crowd the monitors when everyone has their own tablets and phones to see the shots.

There are other practical reasons to keep phones on sets. While shooting Landline, director and co-writer Gillian Robespierr­e had a baby at home — and with babies come the potential for emergencie­s. She nearly laughed out loud when asked whether she ever thought about boycotting cellphones.

“No, we wanted a happy set — and we had a happy set,” she said while in Washington over the summer promoting her movie. “I feel like there might have been a couple (of) scenes where there was even a cellphone under a tush.”

Even though her movie takes place in the 1990s, she didn’t feel the need to force her actors to also pretend they were actually living in that era.

Meanwhile, Marshall director Reggie Hudlin considered a phone ban but thought better of it. As a producer on Django Unchained, he saw the benefits, especially the bonds that happen when the cast and crew aren’t burying their noses in their text messages. Then again, he said the people who worked on Marshall grew just as close.

Besides, the star of that movie, Chadwick Boseman, would not have been a fan. “It would be a problem for me,” Boseman said, not because he’s some kind of addict but because he uses his phone so often for work purposes. Fair enough. But there remains an intangible argument for nixing phones that’s pretty convincing: the focus it creates.

Nolan argues, “The way the human brain works, there’s no such thing as multitaski­ng,” the director said. “It’s a myth in intellectu­al terms. You process informatio­n linearly so when you look down at your phone, you are stepping out from the other conversati­on you’re having.”

For Nolan, putting phones away is simply the next step in a natural progressio­n. When cellphones were first getting popular, there wasn’t etiquette for how and when to use them. But over the years, the general population has started to find consensus on what’s socially acceptable.

“We live in this strange bubble,” Nolan said. “The cellphone comes along and you’re sitting at lunch with somebody and they start having a conversati­on with somebody else, which nobody does now because after a few years we figure out that’s not appropriat­e. With the smartphone culture, it’s 10 years old and it’s taking time to figure out.”

IF A PHONE GOES OFF ON SET, THAT’S YOUR LAST DAY.

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