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Profound ripple effects

How Robert Pattinson’s Covid-19 test could affect The Batman – and the industry.

- By ADAM B. VARY

FOR months, the entire entertainm­ent industry has monomaniac­ally focused on how to return to work amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Reams of health and safety protocols have dictated everything from proper PPE attire to testing schedules to how many people can be on a set, and by July and August, a small handful of major production­s – like The Matrix 4 and Jurassic World: Dominion – began to put those guidelines through their paces. While a few people have tested positive, barely any outbreaks have been reported, and no production­s have had to stop completely. It started to seem like maybe Hollywood’s full pipeline could finally start flowing again. And then Batman got Covid-19. The news that Robert Pattinson had tested positive just two days after The Batman resumed production at Leavesden Studios in Britain has presented the industry with the first real-world example of the true hazards of making a movie at this scale amid a pandemic. When the first person on the call sheet of a movie this massive tests positive, the ripple effects are profound for the production.

How what’s happening with The Batman will affect the wider industry, however, remains to be seen.

According to a source familiar with protocols for Britain-based production­s, anyone with a positive coronaviru­s test needs to quarantine for a minimum of 10 days. Then they can be cleared for work if a subsequent test comes back negative and they’re asymptomat­ic.

Other production­s have required at least two negative tests, and no

Covid-19 symptoms for at least 72 hours.

Furthermor­e, anyone who came within 2m of Pattinson for more than 15 minutes would need to be immediatel­y isolated for 14 days, regardless of whether or not they test positive.

That would likely mean any actors or stunt performers who appeared on camera with Pattinson without a mask, along with any crew members tasked with supporting Pattinson through the shoot – including director Matt Reeves, if he didn’t remain socially distant with Pattinson. If any of those people also test positive, further quarantini­ng of individual­s within their respective orbits would be necessary as well.

As a physical production executive at another studio puts it: “It’s probably the worst case scenario you could have.” (A spokespers­on for Warner Bros declined to comment, citing privacy concerns.)

The news also comes at a critical moment for an industry that needs to convince its top-tier talent that returning to work will not put their health in undue jeopardy. Other production­s have mitigated those concerns by effectivel­y isolating talent within an all-encompassi­ng bubble of safety.

On Jurassic World: Dominion, which is also shooting in Britain, Universal famously bought out a luxury hotel to house the film’s stars, director and key production staff when they’re not working. Everyone at the hotel, including hotel employees, are tested for Covid-19 three times a week.

It’s unclear whether The Batman has followed similarly rigorous procedures.

The situation isn’t completely dire for Warner Bros, however. Since The Batman started production before the Covid-19 pandemic shutdown, its current production delay should still be covered by insurance. But Pattinson’s positive test does underscore why insurers have refused to write any new policies that would cover costs due to Covid-19, or any other communicab­le disease for that matter. No insurer wants to be on the hook for millions in production overruns if they can possibly avoid it.

That continues to pose a serious obstacle to a full restart of production – both for major studios and for independen­ts. If independen­t producers did not have insurance in place by March, they will find it next to impossible to get a completion bond.

“On the independen­t side, it is the case that brand-new projects that presumably didn’t have insurance written in March are moving very slowly,” said Jean Prewitt, CEO and president of the Independen­t Film and Television Alliance. “But the studios are not going to fare any better next year than the independen­ts do.”

The Motion Picture Assoc. has urged the United States Congress to provide a federal backstop for Covid-19 insurance. But with US Congress unable to even pass an unemployme­nt extension, an insurance bailout for Hollywood (and other industries) is not likely any time soon.

The next film set to shoot at Leavesdon after The Batman is DC Films’ The Flash, which isn’t scheduled to start until next year, so this delay also won’t likely disrupt Warner Bros’ production pipeline.

The industry’s reaction to Pattinson’s positive Covid-19 test is trickier to pinpoint.

“No one wants to admit this can happen to them,” says a top indusexecu­tive. try “Everyone in prowhite-knuckling duction is it to get it done. The attitude seems to be, ‘I’m sorry it happened to them, but if it doesn’t happen to me, that’s great’.”

It remains unclear how or where Pattinson could have concovid-19, tracted and that uncertaint­y could also feed into a greatdenia­l. er sense of

“I think they’ll try to find out where the exposure was and try to rectify that,” says the production executive. “The problem is unless that studio divulges exactly where the exposure might have come from or where they felt there was an issue, we’ll never know where exactly he might have contracted Covid-19 from.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? Production on The Batman is on pause after Pattinson tested positive for Covid-19. — AFP
Production on The Batman is on pause after Pattinson tested positive for Covid-19. — AFP

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