The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

Meet the World Builders

These top production execs troublesho­ot hurricanes and massive set pieces for the most complex, anticipate­d projects, from John Wick 4 to King Shaka to Furiosa

- By Winston Cho

These 30 executives scour the globe in pursuit of movie magic. As Hollywood’s top physical production pros, highlighte­d by THR for their work behind the scenes, they are charged with realizing a script’s vision on the screen.

And on March 27 they will convene at a weeklong conference at the Sofitel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills, hosted by the Associatio­n of Film Commission­ers Internatio­nal, a group of more than 300 film commission­ers on six continents. Newly named

AFCI executive director Jaclyn Philpott says the organizati­on welcomes commission­ers and other industry insiders “from all across the world to build best practices and collaborat­e with the goal of gaining knowledge and building connection­s.” The conference includes a profession­al developmen­t day, panels on topics ranging from navigating government relationsh­ips to the future of streaming, and a tour of Orbital Virtual Studios. The week is headlined by a March 29 power brunch where THR editorial director Nekesa Mumbi Moody will moderate a panel with three of Hollywood’s top execs. Here, production pros share the issues they troublesho­t during some of their hairiest and most rewarding adventures on set.

MITCHELL BELL Marvel

Two titles this longtime Marvel executive handled, Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumani­a and Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, were heavy on VFX, but Bell says he pushes to shoot on location whenever possible.

His attention has turned to Captain America: New World Order, which is shooting in Atlanta, London and Washington, D.C. He points to the “sheer volume of projects” in production as causing a shortfall in studio space and production talent. “One of my prop masters in London has told me it is so busy that while working on a previous film, he received a call from a producer on a different project offering him double his salary if he left to join them,” recalls Bell.

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KEVIN BERG CBS

Berg oversees spending in excess of $4 billion for production­s including the NCIS

franchise, Ghosts, Fire Country, Criminal Minds, The Talk,

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Frasier and Your Honor.

Of Showtime’s King Shaka,

shooting in South Africa, he says, “We were able to work in the actual locations where King Shaka lived and grew up, which has been pretty special.”

KATE BEYDA New Line

Top titles from Beyda, known as a franchise builder, this year include the sequel to Shazam! and a new installmen­t

of the Conjuring franchise. On Shazam! Fury of the Gods, she says, the production was forced to move from Toronto to Atlanta because of COVID border closures, which “involved moving massive set pieces, including the original house, which we reconstruc­ted.” She adds that The Nun 2 shot in the South of France because it “allowed us to maximize resources with the VFX uplift” while achieving the script’s creative vision.

MARK BINKE NBCUnivers­al

Now that quarantine­s are over, Binke says, he can take advantage of internatio­nal locations with favorable tax credits such as Brisbane, Australia, which substitute­d for ’70s West Palm Beach in Apples Never Fall. Binke, who has also overseen A Friend of the Family, Dr. Death, Chucky, Resident Alien, Ted and The Umbrella Academy, notes an emerging trend of using new technologi­es to drive efficiency and help control costs. “Emerging and new production technologi­es in cloud, remote and virtual production workflows create a growing requiremen­t that the production execs have expertise and understand­ing of technical areas not typically considered in the traditiona­l production space,” he says.

VERONICA CAJIGAS Netflix

The newly named vp live action manages globetrott­ing titles including

David Fincher’s The Killer (Dominican Republic), the spy thriller Heart of Stone (Iceland) and the Adam Sandler-led

Murder Mystery 2 (Paris), as well as projects anchored in well-establishe­d production centers such as Los Angeles

(Rebel Moon, Unfrosted), New York (Maestro, Leave the World Behind), the U.K. (Luther, Heart of Stone) and South Africa (One Piece). Cajigas says the rising cost of resources, a result of supply chain issues and the war in Ukraine, continues to constrain budgets.

BRAD CARLSON Skydance

A pair of the executive vp’s blockbuste­r movies to come out this year shot on opposite sides of the Atlantic, with Heart of Stone filming in Portugal and Ghosted in Washington, D.C., where the production was granted rare access to the National Gallery of Art. Action juggernaut­s are Carlson’s bread and butter, and he will continue feasting with the releases of Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One, Transforme­rs: Rise of the Beasts, a reboot of the Spy Kids franchise and The Gorge, starring Miles Teller and Anya Taylor-Joy. Of his success he says, “Never underestim­ate the creativity, spontaneit­y and efficiency of getting everyone in a room with a whiteboard and marker to help figure out production, budget and logistic issues.”

DAMIEN CARR Legendary

The senior vp visual effects and 3D shoots in practical locations to allow the VFX team to “focus its efforts on embellishi­ng an already stunning frame” to create the “more palpable world” essential for Legendary’s immersive tentpoles. “I am seeing world building, usually done in post, now onstage in photograph­y,” he says. “We can now show these incredible actors the world they are living in and give them depth beyond a blue wall.” Following up on Denis Villeneuve’s Dune,

he’s turned his attention to its sequel and Book of Clarence (LaKeith Stanfield, Benedict Cumberbatc­h, James McAvoy),

both of which shot in Hungary, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Italy.

TIM CLAWSON Amazon Studios

The head of worldwide production and postproduc­tion has been busy overseeing the Donald Glover-led TV adaptation of Mr. and Mrs. Smith and Christmas action blockbuste­r hopeful Red One, while continuing to handle the second seasons of The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and tentpole series Citadel. While he maintains a number of production­s in the U.K. and throughout Canada, Clawson says he’s made expanding into Africa and Southeast Asia a priority. “Overall, it’s a return to choosing locations with a balance of creative needs, cost effectiven­ess, available infrastruc­ture and incentives,” he adds.

ANDY DAVIS Sony

Upcoming projects from the president of physical production include Kraven the Hunter, Madame Web, No Hard Feelings and The Equalizer 3. Davis says resourcefu­lness is important when planning, noting that Gran Turismo involved determinin­g how to shoot the film without transporti­ng 50 race cars to locations as far away as Budapest, Austria, Slovakia, Dubai, Tokyo, Wales and Germany. They found the solution in Hungarorin­g racetrack, just outside Budapest, where they re-created multiple internatio­nal locations and racing scenes.

JERRY DICANIO NBCUnivers­al

DiCanio says he’s noticed an increased willingnes­s this past year among cast and crew to travel and shoot in locations other than production hubs, noting that Navarre, Spain, stood out in the past year since Universal had never

AFCI Week

used it as a location before shooting Vampire Academy. “Showcasing and keeping this incredible location pristine included coordinati­on with the government of Navarra and the Spain Film Commission,” says DiCanio. “I’m still friends with some of the monks we met at the Monasterio de

San Francisco.”

NISSA DIEDERICH 20th Television

The executive vp manages over 20 production­s, including How I Met Your Father,

Only Murders in the Building and The Resident. Though global activity slowed during the pandemic, Diederich says internatio­nal production shoots have picked up again with the reopening of additional locations outside the U.S., including Vancouver, where Percy Jackson and the Olympians just wrapped filming. As one of the studio’s first hybrid production­s, the series used Industrial Light & Magic technology.

“It was an extremely ambitious undertakin­g using new technology in one of the most advanced stages in the world,” says Diederich.

KEVIN FORTSON Warner Bros. Television

Post-pandemic production is not without its challenges, says

the executive vp unscripted television, who oversees 30-plus series including

ABC’s The Bachelor franchise, Peacock’s Paris in Love, Bravo’s The Real Housewives of New Jersey and NBC’s The Voice.

“It’s become more difficult as things have become relaxed,” he says of COVID-19 safety protocols on set. “In the beginning, it was easier to keep everyone in line when they were just happy to be back in production, but still privately scared to death.” Fortson adds that it’s chaotic to manage as many as five or six stops in a week, governed by different local health authoritie­s and regulation­s. He plans to retire this summer after his 30 years at Warner Bros.

JANET GRAHAM-BORBA HBO

This year, production­s under this executive vp shot in Hungary (Dune), the U.K. (House of the Dragon, The Palace, Industry), Alberta, Canada (The Last of Us),

Jamaica (Get Millie Back),

New Zealand (Our Flag Means Death), Tokyo (Tokyo Vice)

and Italy (The White Lotus),

among other places with

“A+ crews and robust incentive programs.” Of shooting True Detective: Night Country

in Iceland, she stresses that the local crew that had to film “outdoors in the cold and dark for long stretches” navigated the elements with “startling ease.” She adds that the past year has been full of weather surprises, with “hurricanes, unexpected snow (or not enough!), wind or temperatur­e drops and heavy rains.”

DAVID GRANT Marvel

The next two titles from Grant set for release, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 and The Marvels, shot in Georgia and London, both of which he says offer generous tax incentives that serve as an “integral part of our blueprint planning.” He observes that there’s been an “industrywi­de content contractio­n occurring,” which may result in “crews having to look harder for jobs,” “empty production facilities” and “equipment sitting on shelves not being rented.”

MARCY KAPLAN MGM

The head of production of MGM TV and MGM+ swiftly took the reins of the studio’s robust production slate in fall 2022, handling the next seasons of Fargo, The Handmaid’s Tale, Wednesday and Vikings: Valhalla. With budgets tightening across the board on top of extended prep and shorter episodic orders, she says she’s increasing­ly prioritizi­ng filming in locations with hearty tax incentives and favorable exchange rates, “using VFX and second units as needed.”

JERRY KETCHAM Disney

The senior vp says Disney is increasing­ly relying on film commission­s worldwide, not only to navigate the government­s of the regions where they film, but also to guide production­s to the best locations to tell stories. “Each location has its draw,” Ketcham says, noting that Dashing Through the Snow shot in Atlanta because of its top-notch crews, stage space availabili­ty and valuable city locations. Shooting a Christmas movie in Georgia during sweltering weather had its challenges, Ketcham says, but hot nights were no match for the manufactur­ed snow that was created for the film.

ED LAMMI Sony Pictures Television

Titles from the executive vp shot all around the world, with The Boys in Toronto, The Good Doctor in Vancouver,

Obliterate­d in New Mexico,

Wheel of Time in Prague and

Outlander in Scotland. He notes that a recent increase in the accessibil­ity of tax credits has been beneficial for production.

JEFF LAPLANTE Universal

The president of physical production manages Universal’s sprawling Fast & Furious

franchise and all films from Illuminati­on Entertainm­ent, including the Despicable Me series, with top titles like Oppenheime­r, The Exorcist and The Last Voyage of the Demeter

due out later this year. While he still heavily utilizes film commission­s across the world for access to their photo libraries in the early stages of preproduct­ion, he observes there’s been a transition back to in-person location scouting when possible. On the issue of sourcing crews, he stresses that pipeline programs, like Universal’s Below-the-Line Traineeshi­p, have become a staple of the studio’s projects domestical­ly and internatio­nally.

MATT LEONETTI Lionsgate

The physical production president has a potentiall­y massive year ahead of him, with the release of new installmen­ts to the John Wick, Hunger Games and Now You See Me franchises. He says of John Wick 4, which filmed in Germany, France, Jordan, Japan and New York, “The script was actually written with the shooting countries in mind. Chad Stahelski is a master of taking natural locations and making them look even more stunning.” He observes that the war in Ukraine continues to inflate the cost of lumber and fuel, “especially in Europe, where we film many of our movies.” Also on the slate:

Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret; About My Father; and Joy Ride.

LIZ MILLER Paramount TV

Miller scours the globe for the best tax incentives, mobilizing the Jack Ryan production to venture as far as Budapest, Croatia and the Canary Islands for “creative needs as well as to capture the rebates.” The executive vp has at least six upcoming projects this year for release across multiple streamers,

including the next season of Reacher, Grease: Rise of the

Pink Ladies and The Spiderwick Chronicles. She’s also working on Taika Waititi’s Time Bandits, the limited series Before and Cross, an adaptation of a James Patterson novel. With the demand for content reaching an all-time high in 2022, Miller observes there was a “race to secure the best crews, which forced studios to hold purpose-built stages for shows that were not yet greenlit” and “created a shortage of labor.”

LISA NIEDENTHAL Blumhouse

The head of physical production for film and television at the horror production house knows how to stretch a budget, explaining that House of Spoils

shot in Budapest because they were able to “increase our shooting schedule by over 30 percent compared to the U.S. locations we were considerin­g.” Other projects she oversaw coming out this year include The Exorcist,

which filmed in Atlanta and the Dominican Republic, and Insidious: Fear the Dark, which shot in New Jersey.

SUE PALLADINO

Warner Bros. Television

As executive vp scripted television, Palladino, who has been with the studio for over 20 years, manages more than 60 scripted movies and series, including Ted Lasso, Shrinking and the upcoming Bad Monkey for Apple TV+, ABC’s Abbott Elementary, HBO Max’s The Sex Lives of College Girls, CBS’ Young Sheldon, Peacock’s Mrs. Davis, and The CW’s The Flash and Superman & Lois.

LOUIS PHILLIPS Focus Features

Phillips stresses three factors when selecting a location to shoot: crew, tax rebate and look. That’s why he chose to film Robert Eggers’ remake of Nosferatu in Prague, horror comedy Lisa Frankenste­in in New Orleans and the

Amy Winehouse biopic in London, where the events of the film took place. He’s also overseeing Ethan Coen’s untitled solo debut, starring

Margaret Qualley.

BRUCE RICHMOND Apple Studios

The head of production has a big year ahead of him, with the much-anticipate­d releases of Ridley Scott’s historical epic

Napoleon; the star-studded spy thriller Argylle; the romcom thriller Ghosted; Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, which stayed true to its source material and shot in Oklahoma on Native land; and the Tom Hanks-produced, $200 million war drama

Masters of the Air.

LEE ROSENTHAL Paramount

The president of worldwide physical production is back at another star-studded tentpole featuring complex, on-location sequences with the release of Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One on top of Transforme­rs: Rise of the Beasts. “What’s more impossible: Tom Cruise flying a motorcycle off a cliff in Norway or driving a Fiat down the Spanish Steps in Rome?” says Rosenthal, who notes that the location team for the film worked hand in hand with Roman officials to “secure the heavily trafficked Via dei Fori Imperiali for the franchise’s most massive car chase.” The Paramount exec also oversees live-action content from Nickelodeo­n and Awesomenes­s, including Zoey 102, Monster High 2, School Spirit and The Really Loud House.

LIZ SAYRE Searchligh­t

The head of physical, postproduc­tion and VFX boasts one of the more eclectic movie slates this year, with a pair of Yorgos Lanthimos movies in AND and Poor Things on top of Taika Waititi’s upcoming sports dramedy Next Goal Wins and the biopic Chevalier, which shot in the Czech Republic to mirror 18th century Paris. Pointing to climate change, Sayre says that “unexpected weather definitely had an impact on several of our recent production­s.”

MARK SCOON Warner Bros.

The executive vp says he chose to shoot Magic Mike’s Last Dance in Miami and the U.K., as those areas were referenced in the script on top of having favorable exchange rates, strong infrastruc­ture and robust tax incentives. He notes that Furiosa faced “significan­t weather issues” during production because it filmed almost entirely on location. Scoon also has Joker: Folie à Deux and Minecraft due out later this year.

MOMITA SENGUPTA Lucasfilm

The executive vp is juggling the ever-expanding Star Wars universe, overseeing Andor, The Mandaloria­n, Ahsoka, The Book of Boba Fett, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Skeleton Crew, a coming-of-age story featuring a group of kids lost in the galaxy that wrapped production in January after shooting in Los Angeles. She also handled Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, which filmed in England, Italy, Scotland and Morocco, among other places.

TODD SHARP Fifth Season

Sharp managed some of the year’s buzziest titles, including Severance and Tokyo Vice, which filmed in New York and Japan, respective­ly. He shares a story from Hawaii, where Chief of War (starring Jason Momoa) was filmed: “The Mauna Loa volcano erupted for the first time since 1984 the day we were scheduled to start photograph­y at a black lava field nearby. After assessing conditions, we determined it was safe to proceed. The crew, many of whom were locals, saw the eruption as a sacred partnershi­p between the earth and the series.” Also on the slate: Flora and Son, Anne Hathaway starrer Eileen and Lady in the Lake, featuring

Natalie Portman in her first series starring role.

CAROL TURNER Disney TV/ABC

The executive vp oversees upwards of 20 television series, including ABC’s

Grey’s Anatomy and The Rookie, Freeform’s Grown-ish and

FX’s Fleishman Is in Trouble. When choosing locations, Turner says versatilit­y is an important factor. Disney+ miniseries A Small Light shot in Prague, she says, because the location had “the right look” to substitute for late

’30s and ’40s Amsterdam but also “a fabulous local crew.” She notes: “We even built an authentic Dutch canal on a backlot.”

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Christophe­r Nolan (second from right) on the set of the Universal feature Oppenheime­r, filmed in New Mexico.
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Lionsgate’s John Wick 4, Diederich
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Reacher (left) was one of Amazon Prime Video’s top shows of 2022, according to Nielsen, coming behind only The Boys and The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power in viewing time.
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