Kuwait Times

Reinvent the reel: Hollywood mulls new measures to restart shooting

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Movie moguls, directors and lawyers are searching for radical solutions to reopen Hollywood as soundstage­s gather dust and studio profits slide weeks after cameras stopped rolling due to coronaviru­s. The film industry has been on lockdown in California since mid-March following strict stay-athome orders, with movie and television shoots particular­ly exposed to the pandemic because of the large casts and crews required. But even as politician­s mull a gradual easing of restrictio­ns, insiders say Tinseltown’s sky-high costs — and liabilitie­s — mean filmmaking could look very different to what came before, and be many months away.

“It’s impossible to make a ‘Star Wars’ or a Marvel movie tomorrow morning,” said Nicolas Chartier, Oscar-winning producer of “The Hurt Locker.” “Logically, there’s too much liability and there’s too much fear,” agreed fellow producer Stephen Nemeth (“Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.”) “I can’t see a movie like ‘Dune’ getting produced now. I can’t see another epic film like ‘Mad Max’ — these films are 250 crew members and 250 extras. We just can’t control it.” Though California has been praised for its pandemic response, the movie industry heartland has still recorded 45,000 cases, disproport­ionately centered around Los Angeles.

As such, insurance companies refuse to cover future production halts caused by on-set coronaviru­s outbreaks — delays that could cost millions on blockbuste­r projects. “Coronaviru­s waivers” signed by employees have been touted as a way to protect studios from lawsuits, but are unproven particular­ly where A-list stars are involved. Replacing crowd scenes with computeriz­ed background actors is another option being explored, but “would cost a fortune,” said Chartier. “In my opinion, the big movies as we knew them — to the extent that they’re ever going to be back as we knew them — won’t be until there is an actual vaccine,” added Nemeth.

‘Moral dilemma’

One possible interim solution is temperatur­e, virus or antibody tests for those entering sets. On-set social distancing is being trialed in Sweden and Denmark, where production has resumed on sterilized soundstage­s, and studios are discourage­d from hiring over-70s or those with health conditions. Steven Soderbergh, director of prescient 2011 pandemic thriller “Contagion,” is leading a taskforce to explore similar options in Hollywood.

But those restrictio­ns are far from practical on crowded film sets, and could lead to discrimina­tion and other dangers, warned producers Jean de Meuron and Elena Bawiec. “The crew that are most vulnerable is the ‘below-the-line’ crew — the gaffers, the grips, the electric, the camera,” said de Meuron. “You can’t put sixfeet distance... the focus puller is right next to the camera operator, they’re within a couple of inches from one another.”

 ??  ?? In this file photo a man in a mask walks past a sign near Madame Tussauds wax museum, one of the popular tourist attraction­s in Hollywood, California.
In this file photo a man in a mask walks past a sign near Madame Tussauds wax museum, one of the popular tourist attraction­s in Hollywood, California.
 ??  ?? In this file photo the closed Paramount Studios are seen amid the coronaviru­s pandemic in Los Angeles, California.—AFP photos
In this file photo the closed Paramount Studios are seen amid the coronaviru­s pandemic in Los Angeles, California.—AFP photos

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