The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City ready to welcome webbed wonder again

APS grants special permission for use of two high schools.

- By Vanessa Mccray Vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

Despite a moratorium on filming, the latest “Spider-man” sequel gets special permission to shoot at two Atlanta high schools.

Atlanta students still don’t know when they can return to classrooms, but one group will be back soon: the cast of “Spider-man.”

The movie production snagged special permission from Atlanta Public Schools to film at Frederick Douglass High School in January and at Henry W. Grady High School, likely in March.

The district closed school buildings and moved classes entirely online more than eight months ago as concerns about the coronaviru­s grew. APS has said January is the soonest students may have the option to return to in-person learning.

The school system also halted use of its facilities as film locations. “Spider-man” is the first film to be granted an exception. The approval came after the movie’s location manager pleaded for permission to use the two high schools and dangled a $50,000 incentive.

Ian Easterbroo­k described his request on behalf of Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios as “unique and very time-sensitive” and said he had “exhausted our normal channels of communicat­ion” before appealing directly to school board members and Superinten­dent Lisa Herring.

“I know that APS is currently not accepting filming applicatio­ns due to the COVID pandemic, and I know that filming a new movie quickly falls to the bottom of the priority list,” he wrote in an email obtained by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on through an open-records request.

But, he said, use of the two schools is “vital to the success of this next film” because the spots already had been establishe­d in “Spider-man: Homecoming,” which was released in 2017.

APS spokesman Seth Coleman said the district has received several requests from filmmakers to use district properties since the pandemic moratorium took effect. Officials made an exception for the third installmen­t of “Spider-man” because the schools had been used before, he said.

Easterbroo­k referred a request for comment to a publicist, who did not respond.

The approval is one more sign that Georgia’s film industry is reviving after production­s halted in the spring. About three dozen film and TV projects are currently in production, according to Georgia’s film office. That’s approachin­g pre-pandemic levels.

APS will collect its customary filming fees of $750 a day for preparatio­n and tear- down and $2,500 a day for filming. The district also will charge by the hour for any related staff time. In addition, the two schools will negotiate a donation based on their needs, Coleman said.

Easterbroo­k’s email said about $50,000 has been allocated for that. He suggested it could be used to upgrade the schools’ air filtration systems, purchase COVID-19 tests and protective gear, or buy laptops for virtual learning.

Coleman said the production is scheduled to be at Douglass High School Jan. 22-24. The tentative dates for Grady are March 19-21.

One day of filming is planned at each site, plus days for setting up and tearing down. The dates fall on weekends. If students are back in classrooms, filming activities will not begin until they leave the buildings, Coleman said.

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 ?? CHUCK ZLOTNICK/COLUMBIA PICTURES ?? Tom Holland stars as Peter Parker in “Spider-man: Homecoming,” a 2017 film that was partly shot in Atlanta. Holland is scheduled to return early next year for a sequel.
CHUCK ZLOTNICK/COLUMBIA PICTURES Tom Holland stars as Peter Parker in “Spider-man: Homecoming,” a 2017 film that was partly shot in Atlanta. Holland is scheduled to return early next year for a sequel.

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