AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Just Wrapped. Here’s Why They’ll Be Doing Reshoots
Hello fun today an article from the famous website BADASS DIGEST.
Kevin Feige explains Marvel's tradition of additional photography.
Reshoots! They're a dirty word, mostly because the only time the press
takes notes of reshoots is when a production is troubled. But the
reality is that for many filmmakers - including Woody Allen, who always
schedules reshoots - they're a vital part of the process. They're key to
the Marvel way of making movies, which is very much about finding the
movie in the edit. While doing press for Guardians of the Galaxy (don't let Turtles beat it this weekend) I talked to Kevin Feige about this, and he told me that JW Rinzler's Making of Star Wars books made him feel better about their process.
I’m reading the part in Jedi where George is
finding the movie in the cut. It happened in Empire, and it happened in
Star Wars. You’ve heard about those famous early screenings where people
were like, ‘Poor George. His career is over.’ That brings great solace
to me when we screen our movies for the first time and they’re terrible
and they’re a big mess. I remind myself to get calm and proceed.
Post is my favorite part, because it’s easiest to find what’s wrong with the movie when you’re watching the movie.
For Feige it's important to know in advance that they will be doing additional shooting, no matter what. So while Avengers: Age of Ultron finished
principal photography this week, it's pretty much a certainty that the
cast will be getting back together for pick-ups, additions and tweaks.
In fact Marvel already locked them in.
We always build in two weeks because the hardest thing about the
additional photography is the actors’ schedules, wrangling the actors.
So we just build it in. We’ve done some movies that have three days of
reshoots, some that have fifteen days, twenty days if not more.
Sometimes we know what we need by that point and sometimes we’re
wrangling them anyway. There’s a shot in Thor: The Dark World
we call the Three Continent shot. It’s one shot, with three different
actors in it, that was done on three different continents.
Additional photography is invaluable. Sometimes it’s to fix something
that’s not working, but most of the time on our movies it’s two-fold:
sometimes a better or more exciting idea will come along, or more often
something will come out of the movie - because it’s too long or the
movie is stronger without a particular beat or scene or shot, and you
need connective tissue.
For Marvel these reshoots also offer a chance to put in easter eggs or
small pieces that connect to the other movies. It's possible that cameos
and larger universe shout-outs that will end up in Avengers: Age of Ultron won't even be shot until weeks before release. The famous shawarma scene in The Avengers was shot after the movie premiered.
Of course this isn't a filmmaking method that works for every filmmaker.
Some are more precise in their initial shoot - it's hard to imagine
Edgar Wright needing two weeks of additional shooting - but for some
(and with a producer-driven studio like Marvel), it is a method that
works.
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