“Lovecraft Country” Production Designer Kalina Ivanov on Melding History & Fantasy

Production designer Kalina Ivanov‘s work on Misha Green‘s Lovecraft Country was one of world-building and resurrecting. The world-building—which included creating more than 162 sets, challenged Ivanov and her team to create haunted houses, a Korean hanok home to a mythical creature, and a pirate ship (to name a few). For the resurrection portion of her work, Ivanov recreated Tulsa’s Greenwood district, known as “Black Wall Street,” the site of the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, for the series’ penultimate episode “Rewind 1921.” The Tulsa massacre functioned as a fulcrum for a lot of the hurt, horror, and healing that take place in  Lovecraft Country‘s brilliant 10-episode run.

Lovecraft Country is set in the Jim Crow era and follows the surreal journey of Atticus Freeman (Jonathan Majors) and Letitia Lewis (Jurnee Smollett) as they criss-cross the country in search of Atticus’s missing father and the missing pages to a mysterious book of magic. Yet the series traverses real historical events, not only the Tulsa massacre but the lynching of Emmett Till in 1955, blending these historical horrors with supernatural doings that include body-switching, time travel, and more.

We spoke to Ivanov about her work on the series, which she calls one of the most meaningful in her long, distinguished career. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Kalina Ivanov on the set of the Hanok built for episode 6, "Meet Me In Daegu." Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Kalina Ivanov on the set of the Hanok built for episode 6, “Meet Me In Daegu.” Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.

What were your initial conversations with series creator Misha Green like?

The very first thing I asked Misha was how grounded in history do we want to be? Creating the reality of the characters was a very important springboard to start from. What Misha said was, ‘Let’s be very historical when it’s Tulsa and Emmett Till and we’re representing actual historical events, and then let’s be bold and all bets are off. You’re free to interpret those parts however you like.’ She was really open and wonderful, which was freeing because it gave me the opportunity to look at the 50s with more of a modern eye, particularly with the fantasy sequences.

Courtney B. Vance, Jonathan Majors, Jurnee Smollett. Image courtesy HBO.
Courtney B. Vance, Jonathan Majors, and Jurnee Smollett in “Lovecraft Country.” Image courtesy HBO.

How did you create a cohesive visual palette when the show pivots from historical events to supernatural scenarios?

From the very beginning, I wanted to start with grounding the series in the real look of photography in the 1950s but then add a very specific color palette. You look at the series and you see how all the Black characters wear really beautiful jewel tones. Color was part of the Black experience and Black look for me, and I kept the much darker, monochromatic, sinister palette for the white people. Some of [the series] drew from Afrofuturism, but all of it was rooted in the history of African Americans, that’s why it’s coherent, that’s what’s guiding you in all the episodes, even in the Korea episode. My goal was to bring a richness of the Black experience in terms of the color palette.

Naomi Mack, Jurnee Smollett, Wunmi Mosaku, Keon Mitchell, Jonathan Majors
Naomi Mack, Jurnee Smollett, Wunmi Mosaku, Keon Mitchell, Jonathan Majors. Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO
Abby Lee. Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO
Abby Lee. Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO

Episode 6, “Meet Me In Daegu,” which is set in Korea during the Korean War, felt almost like a mini-movie in the middle of the series, yet it was also, of course, a crucial piece of backstory to Jonathan Majors’ character Atticus Freeman. Did it ever feel like you were making a series of films? 

What I really wanted to preserve from Misha’s vision was the boldness and grandness. In Korea, we created a very authentic hanok, the house where the main character (played by Jamie Chung) lives. Yet, we still made the choice of the red bed, and a very particular kind of bed which really doesn’t exist, and put it in the middle of the room to make it a kind of altar. There’s a sense of theatricality when we’re producing all the sets, and perhaps that’s what holds it all together. They are different movies, though, and I remember thinking when I got to the Korea episode, oh my god, I finally get to do a Kurosawa movie! I love Ran, it’s one of my favorite movies, and I was like, okay, this is my time! Then I dug into Korean films, of course, and you’re making these different movies, but with an aesthetic throughline that goes through every episode. I finally got to go to Asia, which has always been my dream, even though I haven’t stepped foot in Asia.

Concept art for the Hanok in "Meet Me In Daegu." Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Concept art for the Hanok in “Meet Me In Daegu.” Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Concept art for the Hanok in "Meet Me In Daegu." Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Concept art for the Hanok in “Meet Me In Daegu.” Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.

The major sets—the Arkham Lodge in episode two, the hanok in episode six, the big house where Leti and Atticus live—seem like such massive builds. How did you pull these off?

Just from day one, I had to make eleven big sets. Misha is on record saying we had 162 sets. It was very much a heavy-set building show. We had one double stage, two regular-sized stages, one warehouse stage that could fit many sets, then we had the backlot where we built the Negro Travel Agency. Then there were all sorts of other buildings. I’m very much a believer in doing things practically as much as you can and then extending the sets via VFX. It’s the best for the actors because they feel the environment.

Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO
Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO

How did you recreate Greenwood Avenue in Tulsa for episode nine, “Rewind 1921”?

We went to Macon, Georgia, to get the scale, which was very important to recreate so you can really feel the pain when it gets destroyed because it was magnificent. It was like a French boulevard, it was so huge. But Macon had trees, so Kevin, our VFX supervisor, had to erase all those trees in post, which was painstaking. The collaboration between all the different artists and departments was so strong, and everyone was so passionate about it.

Re-creating Tulsa. Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Re-creating Tulsa. Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.

And you also built a pirate ship, incredibly.

Let’s talk about the pirate ship! We built that for one episode. For one scene, literally one scene, and then we had to destroy it. We put seven cameras on it, it was one take, that was it, bye-bye pirate ship. I could go on and on, every episode was so full of delightful challenges and problems to solve, great, magnificent technical problems. Like creating tunnels submerged in water, how do you keep the scenery from falling apart? We had to submerge a sample of the set in water for a month to make sure the paint would hold. For me as an artist, I’m at that point of my career where I want to be challenged. Lovecraft Country didn’t feel hard because I was so passionate and loved every department, I learned so much, and we all elevated each other. It goes to show when you have good writing, good subject matter, people will come. We were just as intensely passionate on the last day of shooting as we were on the first.

Concept art for the pirate ship. Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Concept art for the pirate ship. Courtesy Kalina Ivanov/HBO.
Michael K. Williams, Jurnee Smollett, Jonathan Majors. Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO
Michael K. Williams, Jurnee Smollett, Jonathan Majors

For more on Lovecraft Country, check out our interviews creator Misha Green, director Cheryl Dunye and cinematographer Michael Watson.

Featured image: Aunjanue Ellis, Jurnee Smollett, Jonathan Majors, Michael K. Williams. Photograph by Eli Joshua Ade/HBO

“12 Mighty Orphans” Costume Designer Goes Deep on Football Helmets & Fedoras

As underdog sports dramas go, it’s hard to improve on the fact-based 12 Mighty Orphans, which tracks a team of scrawny teenagers living in a Fort Worth orphanage as they progress from dead-last in their league to the 1938 state finals under the leadership of Coach Rusty Russell (Luke Wilson). Football fans might marvel at the antique charm of the players’ homemade uniforms while vintage fashion buffs can savor a cavalcade of period-perfect hats worn by Wilson, Martin Sheen, Wayne Knight, Robert Duvall, and every other man who appears on screen.

The haberdashery comes courtesy of costume designer Juliana Hoffpauir, who worked as the key costumer on ’60s-era films Green Book and One Night in Miami before teaming with Texas-based director Ty Roberts on 12 Mighty Orphans (opening nationwide June 18). “We could not have made this movie without the hats,” says Hoffpauir, and she’s not joking.

Zooming from New Orleans, Hoffpauir talks about how she nailed Dustbowl-era couture both on and off the field.

 

Where did you research the look for 12 Mighty Orphans?

Ty sent me a scrapbook put together by an orphan from the Masonic Home and School of Texas, which started in 1932 and went through 1940. It was very personal, done with a lot of love and care. I got to see what the real orphans that are portrayed in our movie actually wore in class and at football practice.

Football uniforms from the late thirties look much less elaborate than today’s super-protective outfits with the giant shoulder pads and helmets. How did you put together the Mighty Mites uniforms?

In real life, the Mighty Mites football uniforms were made by the girls at the school, who hand-painted the letters onto the boys’ uniforms, so we made those. For later in the season, manufacturers provided us with a utility jersey, and then our amazing dyer Susan dyed all those jerseys to get to this orange rust, the team color. The pants, cleats, pads and most of the leather football helmets all came from this company that also did the George Clooney movie Leatherheads. But they didn’t have enough leather helmets so I looked on eBay and found a leather helmet manufacturer outside of Dallas.

Center: Jake Austin Walker as Hardy Brown in 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS. Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.
Center: Jake Austin Walker as Hardy Brown in 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS. Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

Wait, there’s a company in 2021 that manufactures leather football helmets?

Yes, it was more of a memorabilia type of helmet, not really for people to play football in, so we had to add chin straps and stuff like that.

Off the field, a lot of the orphans seem to be wearing what we would today call jumpsuits. Did they really dress like that?

In the scrapbook, I’d often see seven and eight-year-old kids wearing these cotton twill coveralls, and it’s the cutest thing. The orphans wore them to classes and also at the printing press and in the field where they worked. They were basically living in those coveralls.

Where did you source Depression-era coveralls?

Dickies manufactures this type of workwear in Fort Worth so I went to their headquarters and they showed me their archives. Vintage Dickies had a wider collar and pockets. I couldn’t get a hold of a dozen vintage coveralls so we bought new ones and tweaked them to look different from todays. We also washed them down so they look worn in.

How did you define Luke Wilson’s look as Coach Rusty Russell?

Rusty was known for being an immaculate dresser who took pride in the way he presented himself. He was dapper! Luke did not want to wear the classic boxy suit from that era so we compromised and made him a [well-fitted] navy suit and an olive green suit. For the games, we put him in the three-piece navy suit so we could get great shots of him in his white shirt and vest. With Luke, we wanted to channel that classic Gregory Peck look.

 Center: Luke Wilson as Rusty Russell in 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS. Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

Center: Luke Wilson as Rusty Russell in 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS. Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

True to the period, every man in this movie wears a fedora. How did you figure out what those hats should look like?

I had pictures of the real Rusty in his fedora and also found great archival photos online from the University of Arlington near Dallas. All the men are wearing some kind of western soft-felt fedora, whether it’s a Stetson or a Dobbs, or Borsalino.

Left to Right: Luke Wilson as Rusty Russell, Jacob Lofland as Snoggs, Martin Sheen as Doc Hall in 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS. Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.
Left to Right: Luke Wilson as Rusty Russell, Jacob Lofland as Snoggs, Martin Sheen as Doc Hall in 12 MIGHTY ORPHANS.
Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

Where did you round up such a large quantity of period-perfect hats?

Stephen Chudej, who is no longer with us, was a great costumer in his own right. He had an airplane hanger in McKinney Texas full of period costumes and all these Stetsons that he was liquidating, so we got a lot from him. I also got stuff from eBay and Etsy. And then Greg Mitchell, known as the hat whisperer, brought his shaping machine and helped me with Martin Sheen and Robert Duvall’s hats. Another gentleman named Daniel Wright had a place in Fort Worth and taught me about the history of Forth Worth hats. Working with those guys, I felt pretty confident because hats are tricky. You don’t want to put the wrong hat on someone.

Left to Right: Wayne Knight as Frank Wynn, Vinessa Shaw as Juanita Russell in 12 MIGHTY OR- PHANS. Image by David McFarland. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.
Left to Right: Wayne Knight as Frank Wynn, Vinessa Shaw as Juanita Russell in 12 MIGHTY OR- PHANS. Image by David McFarland. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

12 Mighty Orphans includes big football game crowd scenes. Was it challenging to dress so many extras on an indie budget?

The extras were the biggest challenge in the movie and my key costumer/tailor Leila Heise really worked double time. I’d email the extras: “If you have them please bring round-toe, lace-up dress shoes, wider pants, light white or cream dress shirts and tie.” You can’t rely on extras to show up with the right thing, but you can always put them in a period overcoat and a hat, and a tie and you can’t really tell.

Martin Sheen brings a sort of rumpled elegance to his kindly physician Doc Hall. How did you see that character?

We wanted him a little bit undone at the beginning because Doc Hall’s a drinker/. There was this great necktie I saw at Daniel’s place, a western ascot kind of situation. Everyone else wore a tie so we wanted to do something a little different with Martin. He’s a little — I don’t want to say disheveled — but a little loose.

 

The epilogue of this movie features photographs of the actual Masonic Home orphans portrayed in the film. I wonder if those first-hand scrapbook images gave you a more personal way into the story or impacted the way you felt about these characters and their clothes?

When you have the responsibility of depicting real people you try your hardest to get it right. In fact, we had the real Opal [portrayed in the film by Natasha Bassett] show up one day on set wearing her husband’s letter jacket.

She must be in her nineties!

It was a really touching moment. Opal had just lost her husband the year before and wished he’d been lived long enough to see this movie being made about their experiences. We actually had a lot of orphans from the thirties forties and fifties participate as extras for the football games. Before 12 Orphans, I’d never had that kind of experience and I probably never will again. It really felt homemade.

Featured image: Left to Right: (Back): Preston Porter, Woodrow Luttrell, Sampley Barinaga, Jacob Lofland (Middle): Levi Dylan, Luke Wilson, Martin Sheen, Manuel Tapia, Austin Shook, Michael Gohlke (Front): Slade Monroe, Jake Austin Walker, Bailey Roberts, Tyler Silva. Photo by Laura Wilson. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

Final “Tomorrow War” Trailer Features Chris Pratt’s Alien Foes

“We’re food, and they’re hungry,” says Romeo Command (Yvonne Strahovski) in the final trailer for The Tomorrow War. Romeo Command is a tough-as-nails soldier/scientist in the year 2051, and she’s doing her best to get Dan Forester (Chris Pratt) up to speed on just how bad things are going here in the future. That’s one of the conceits of director Chris McKay’s sci-fi feature—Dan has been plucked from his timeline and dropped into the future in an effort to help win the titular war against a race of hungry aliens. Humanity has been losing this fight, badly.

The final trailer gives us our best look yet at those aliens, and they’re not a pretty sight. They are big, fast, smart, and brutal, and in one nifty sequence, they reveal they can sort of fly. The LEGO Batman Movie helmer has assembled quite a cast at hand to help him make the transition from animation to live-action, with Pratt in the lead role as a man with nothing short of the fate of humanity on his shoulders.

Pratt, of course, is no stranger to aliens, but these beasties aren’t the lovable misfits of the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise. The conceit of The Tomorrow War is that Earth gets a grim message from a group of time-travelers who break the bummer news that the world of the future is on the verge of collapse after a brutal and costly war with aliens. Pratt’s Dan Forester is a high school teacher and family man, with a problematic relationship with his father, Slade (J.K. Simmons), and a deep love for a daughter he’ll do anything to protect. Hence him zooming off into the future to fight in a war.

Joining Pratt, Strahovski, and Simmons are Betty Gilpin, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Sam Richardson, Edwin Hodge, Jasmine Mathews, Theo Von, and Keith Powers.

Check out the final trailer below. The Tomorrow War is due to hit Prime Video on July 2.

Featured image: CHRIS PRATT stars in THE TOMORROW WAR. Courtesy of Amazon Prime Video

“In The Heights” Supervising Sound Editor On Capturing a Musical City’s Magic

In The Heights is, in all ways, an epic collaboration. Director Jon M. Chu‘s adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Tony Award-winning musical, written by original playwright Quiara Alegria Hudes, summoned musicians, choreographers, and a vast team of filmmakers to pull off. It’s never easy to adapt something that was already massively successful in its original form, nor is it easy to make a compelling, modern musical. Throw a pandemic into the middle of it and you’ve cranked up your difficulty setting to eleven. Yet what In The Heights required most of all, however, was respect for the Washington Heights neighborhood that gives the film its title. Whether it was cinematographer Alice Brooks learning about the northern Manhattan neighborhood’s unique, dazzling light (due, in part, to its relative narrowness that brings the Hudson and East River close-ish together), or the film’s Los Angeles native choreographer, Christopher Scott, basing the film’s many moves on Washington Height’s unique architecture, the creative team behind In The Heights was committed to getting the specifics of a vibrant, largely Latinx community right.

The same was true for the sound team. Executive music producer Bill Sherman had his work cut out for him (and a melange of musical genres and musical geniuses to help him sort them all out), and so, too, did supervising sound editor and re-recording mixer Lewis Goldstein. A veteran of some iconic films of the past (The Big Lebowski) and some iconic films of the near-present (Hereditary), Goldstein says that In The Heights was of an entirely different scope and scale. We spoke to him about getting In The Heights up to snuff, sonically, from a distant car horn to a thunderous solo vocal performance, and every beep, breath, and barking dog in between. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Part of me wants to do a side interview about Hereditary and The Big Lebowski. 

Everybody always picks up on Hereditary and The Big Lebowski.

If we had an hour, I’d do it. 

I was just the sound effects editor on The Big Lebowski back in the day, but that was a lot of fun. It was funny because when we working on it, I’m not sure all of us got it right away, but after a certain period of time, we all started realizing we were talking to each other using Dude-isms.

I think I still do that.

That’s very Dude, dude.

Walk me through your workday on In The Heights.

It started from day one in trying to see how to integrate a musical and the songs into the real-world lives of our characters and trying to keep it so it wasn’t a music video, but a movie. We have characters and actors that are basically singing their dialogue. So we had recordings of actors singing, and studio recordings, then there’s the music, the background, and all dialogue, which interweaves with the songs and singing, so my ultimate job was managing all of the material.

This sounds exceedingly complicated. You had multiple jobs on this film, can you break those down?

I basically wore two hats; I was a supervising sound editor, which is handling all the different sound departments, from dialogue to effects to backgrounds to foley. I was interfacing with the music editors and the picture department to make sure when got to the point of mixing the sound for the film, the material was there and manageable. Then as a re-recording mixer, it was my responsibility to put it all together like a giant jigsaw puzzle and balance it to the liking of the director and producers and Lin-Manuel Miranda and Myron [Kerstein], the editor.

How much of the sound that we hear in the film was actually captured during production, versus the sound that was recorded and deployed after the fact?

The actors are phenomenal singers, and a large component of the vocal performances are live, but all of the ambiances were all enhanced. Microphones on set are really designed to pick up the dialogue, but the recording on this was quite good. We had ADR [automated dialogue replacement], but not a significant amount. Most of the dialogue was captured during production, and the vocal performances are a big combination of live capture and several different studio recordings. One of my main tasks was trying to make all of that sound consistent, and not sound like they were from different days of shooting or from different studio recordings. You have to remember they do multiple takes, so even when they’re singing live there are multiple versions. We’re building performances from different angles and takes, then it’s cut together to tell the story in the picture editing. Our job is to take to those different vocal performances, both dialogue and singing, and make them consistent.

Was there a particular sequence you found most challenging?

I’d say all of it. It’s pretty much constant singing and music and performance from top to bottom, so it was difficult all the way through. There are certain scenes, like “96,000” that are very big, with lots of voices and lots of people singing, and then throughout the film, there is this ensemble of background vocals that are just tremendous, and managing those as well as our lead character vocals was a lot of work.

How naive would it be to assume your work on In The Heights is vastly more difficult than what you did on something like Hereditary?

They’re both difficult in their own ways from a mechanical point of view and creative point of view, but this film is just a whole different scope and scale. It’s a long movie, with a tremendous amount of material.

How do you know when you’re done? 

You know, I don’t think I’ve ever felt done. It’s always, ‘Give me one more day.’ I don’t know if I’ve ever felt completely finished. Pretty close. But then I go back and watch later on and I’m pretty happy. Sometimes you’re just so close to for it so long that it’s hard seeing the trees for the forest, or the forest for the trees? One of those.

What was your experience when you finally got to watch it, not as a sound editor or mixer, but as a viewer?

I think I’ve seen this movie from top to bottom more than any other movie I’ve ever worked on, and I enjoy it every single time. For the number of times I’ve seen this movie and still enjoy it every single time, it’s kind of nuts. It was a very enjoyable process, Jon M. Chu was phenomenal and a wonderful person. If you’re going to be in a pandemic and locked in a studio with someone, he’s the guy to do it with. And the other mixer I was working with in LA, John Marquis, was great.

In The Heights is in theaters and on HBO Max now.

Featured image: Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

The Limitless World of Fashion Created by the “Bridgerton” Costume Designers

As we were all distancing ourselves from one another over the past year, Bridgerton burst into our homes with a voyeuristic view of steamy couples getting very, very close. The most indulgent fantasy of the series, however, was imagining the pleasure of putting on a magnificent Regency ensemble and actually having somewhere to go.

We have costume designers Ellen Mirojnick and John Glaser to thank for those scrumptious fashion treats. The lavish dressings of the ‘ton’ were truly unbridled, thanks to five months of pre-production that allowed the design team to call upon any fabrics, ribbons, and bows they could dream up.

No detail was spared by the team that employed experts in every imaginable accessory and facet of construction. “We had in our shop a full embellishing team, we had milliners, we had jewelers, we had aging and dying, tailors. We had Mr. Pearl, the corsetier of anybody’s dreams. We had costumer’s assistants, and about four cutters,” Mirojnick recalled. “We had what was necessary to create this world that was filled with principal characters – two families, relatives, etc. – a massive amount of background players.”

BRIDGERTON PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON in Costume Department of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON in Costume Department of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

Glaser even ran an entire team dedicated to fittings. “The size of the show demanded – and the challenge of the show demanded – that we create our own costume house. So, what that means is we started from scratch with everything,” Mirojnick revealed. The base design and stock pieces of certain outfits may have started with a pattern, but they were then transformed into stunningly unique pieces created to perfectly suit each character.

BRIDGERTON in Costume Department of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON in Costume Department of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

The incredible scale of the season called for an immense number of resources to develop an entire town’s worth of wardrobes. “With that came sourcing as much fabric as we could put our hands on, because of the amount we had to make, which was enormous,” Mirojnick said. “Resourcing came from Italian mills, French mills, English mills, shops in London, a number of shops in Italy, shops in New York. We never had enough fabric. When we thought we had enough, we had to go back out and get more.”

BRIDGERTON (L to R) NICOLA COUGHLAN as PENELOPE FEATHERINGTON, POLLY WALKER as PORTIA FEATHERINGTON, HARRIET CAINS as PHILLIPA FEATHERINGTON, BEN MILLER as LORD FEATHERINGTON and BESSIE CARTER as PRUDENCE FEATHERINGTON in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) NICOLA COUGHLAN as PENELOPE FEATHERINGTON, POLLY WALKER as PORTIA FEATHERINGTON, HARRIET CAINS as PHILLIPA FEATHERINGTON, BEN MILLER as LORD FEATHERINGTON and BESSIE CARTER as PRUDENCE FEATHERINGTON in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

In the end, there was practically not enough material in the world to outfit the Bridgerton cast. Mirojnick had the idea to create sheer overlays and other layers to fill out the designs. “We went about creating our own fabric, frankly,” Mirojnick explained. “What that meant was layering fabrics together, laser cutting, laser printing, embellishing everything. We had full departments that could actually execute all that we dreamt of.”

BRIDGERTON GOLDA ROSHEUVEL as QUEEN CHARLOTTE in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON GOLDA ROSHEUVEL as QUEEN CHARLOTTE in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

Being draped in fine fabrics by some of the most talented creatives in the business sounds like a glamorous fairytale dream. Even the private dressing gowns that characters wore in their homes spectacularly outdid the sweatpants we were donning in our houses every day. Bridgerton costumes can be measured in degrees of fancy, fancier, and fanciest. “Everything was there for the imagination to be able to soar. If it said ‘fancy,’ and then it was fancier, we had to be restrained, to be honest with you,” Mirojnick said. “It was to what degree? There were some characters that could hold that amount of embellishment, and there were some that couldn’t.”

Not every family approached the high season with a gaudy “more is more” mentality. Some of the debutantes were more modest or possessed a dignified, understated style. “I think that all of our actors, whether it was Daphne (Phoebe Dynevor), for example, who needed to be simple. She would not be able to hold overembellishment,” Mirojnick noted. “It was clear when we would put a piece of jewelry on her. The best example is when she gets the Prince’s necklace, which is so big, it looks like ‘this is a gift.’ She didn’t choose this. Because of what her scale and proportion could hold, we just kept it as simple and as elegant.”

BRIDGERTON (L to R) PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) FREDDIE STROMA as PRINCE FRIEDERICH, PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON and REGÉ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 104 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) FREDDIE STROMA as PRINCE FRIEDERICH, PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON and REGÉ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 104 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

The Duke of Hastings (Regé-Jean Page) had a more worldly style than the other men on the show. “He had been traveling, so we just decided that he was probably in Asia, Turkey, somewhere like that,” Glaser explained. “It was the vest. The fabric is from his travels. It’s a little aged. His colors are darker. He’s a little dustier than everybody else. Very subtly, but the fact that he’s not part of the town, that’s why he can wear his shirts open. He is a rugged guy. He’s independent. He arrives on a horse.”

BRIDGERTON (L to R) REGÉ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 108 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) REGÉ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 108 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

The most eligible bachelor of the season was dark, brooding, and dared to sport a more open collar than the rest of the buttoned-up town. “He really needed to be a man unto himself and have his own spirit, his own style so that you could feel a rebelliousness as he rode into town and as we first see him at the ball,” Mirojnick said. “He is one of the only characters that does wear black.”

BRIDGERTON (L to R) PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON and REGÉ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 101 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON and REGÉ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 101 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

That darkness in his aura is revealed to be influenced by a tragic past. The somber scenes of the Duke’s childhood shed the whimsy of the rest of the show and introduce a bleaker palette. “There, we actually followed the period because it was a flashback,” Glaser explained. “The colors were a more smoky color to help let you know that you were no longer in Bridgerton and the cut was more historically accurate because that was a history lesson.”

“The rest of the show wasn’t,” Mirojnick emphasized.

In fact, with some modifications, the 19th-century designs could be easily fitted for a 21st-century closet. Each costume captured the essence of the period but also hinted at a more modern time. Mirojnick and Glaser always kept this balance in mind. “For me, it was as long as you saw a character, basically the women, and you knew that it was Regency, but you also knew that it wasn’t Regency and that it was modern,” Glaser said. “That is how you had to visualize it. If it looked really Regency, then it was wrong. It didn’t have enough fantasy to it.”

“Basically, we took the cut and the silhouette of the Regency period, and that was always at the foundation,” Mirojnick added. “What we did to make you want to wear it is that we changed the line slightly of the under-bust and the back. We made the dresses, in general, more fluid in the layering and how the dresses were cut than strict Regency. We changed the color palette, and we changed the fabrication.”

The cast worked their way through a luxurious amount of costume changes, but they each maintained their signature style. “In the main part of the story, where you see lots of different people and so on, you know, for example, the silhouette of Eloise (Claudia Jessie) and that she’s usually buttoned up. And that there’s little male/female idea going on,” Mirojnick noted. “Daphne is just that simple elegance. The Featheringtons, of course, are in acid and severe colors. Absolutely more than anybody else in their decoration. Cowper (Joanna Bobin) is overly decorated in the ‘ton’ way. Her hair is complex.”

BRIDGERTON (L to R) NICOLA COUGHLAN as PENELOPE FEATHERINGTON and CLAUDIA JESSIE as ELOISE BRIDGERTON in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON (L to R) NICOLA COUGHLAN as PENELOPE FEATHERINGTON and CLAUDIA JESSIE as ELOISE BRIDGERTON in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX/NETFLIX © 2020

Series creator Chris Van Dusen dictated early on that there would be one major divergence from the historic fashion of the era. “Everything, if you notice, in the show in terms of a bonnet-less universe is that our hair designer (Marc Pilcher) was so genius,” Mirojnick said. “We took the bonnets off, but he sculpturally did things with the hair that are extraordinary. They’re some of the best work I’ve ever seen, actually. It identifies the character so specifically and so interestingly.”

BRIDGERTON GOLDA ROSHEUVEL as QUEEN CHARLOTTE in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020
BRIDGERTON GOLDA ROSHEUVEL as QUEEN CHARLOTTE in episode 102 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

Look closely and you’ll find one exception to the rule. Glaser recalled one minor character who made a lasting impression. “The only one that I always mention is an obscure little person at the footbridge. He’s a guy and he’s dressed like a little milkmaid. He’s wearing a corset made by Mr. Pearl. He’s the only person in the show that is wearing a bonnet and it’s on a man.”

The show featured large crowd scenes and actors in smaller roles who are often as dazzling as the main characters. The costume team had to be mindful of many elements to be certain that focus never shifted away from the action. “The people that take care of the background make sure that no background person is in the same color or the same look as the principal character,” Glaser explained. “It’s playing chess moving people around to the right spots to always pull focus on the principle. We also looked at the scenery. The houses we were in and the colors to make sure that they never faded away.”

Despite the massive undertaking, Mirojnick said they delighted in the task. “This was a project that was like God’s gift from the heavens for a designer. We loved it so very much. We were able to create a world that didn’t exist before.”

That world will continue—Netflix has renewed Bridgerton through its fourth season.

Featured image: BRIDGERTON PHOEBE DYNEVOR as DAPHNE BRIDGERTON in Costume Department of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

“The Flash” Director Andy Muschietti Reveals Barry Allen’s New Logo

The Flash director Andy Muschietti knows how to build intrigue. Muschietti built all sorts of intrigue—and horror, and delight—with his two-part epic It and It: Chapter 2, and now he’s at the reigns of another big Warner Bros. film, trading in killer clowns for speedy superheroes. Muschietti took to Instagram to reveal the new logo for Barry Allen (Ezra Miller)’s super suit.

The image shows the Flash’s iconic gold lightning bolt, which is located on the center of Barry’s chest in what appears to be an updated costume. This reveal comes after Muschietti teased the return of Michael Keaton’s Batman, in a post that showed Batman’s iconic logo covered in blood. While, sure, these Instagram posts aren’t all that revealing, they’re something, and something is better than nothing for a film that’s been in the works for a very, very long time.

The Flash, written by Birds of Prey and Bumblebee scribe Christina Hodson, is influenced by the “Flashpoint” comic book series and will feature Barry Allen traveling back in time. This is how he ends up coming into contact with Keaton’s Bruce Wayne on a parallel timeline (the last time we saw Keaton in cape and cowl was in Tim Burton’s Batman Returns in 1992), so Allen will be the only person in history (we think) to have two Batmans in his life—Ben Affleck’s, from Batman v. Superman and Justice League, and Keaton’s version. (Affleck will also appear in the film.)

Joining Miller, Keaton, and Affleck are a host of new faces, including Sasha Calle as Supergirl, Kiersey Clemons as Iris West, and Maribel Verdú as Nora Allen. The Flash is set to zoom into theaters on November 4, 2022. Check out the logo below:

For more on Warner Bros., HBO, and HBO Max, check out these stories:

Cinematographer Alice Brooks on Lighting the Real Heights of “In the Heights”

James Wan Reveals The Title for “Aquaman” Sequel

“In The Heights” Executive Music Producer Bill Sherman on Marshaling Many Musical Styles

Playwright & Screenwriter Quiara Alegria Hudes on Adapting “In The Heights” for the Big Screen

“In the Heights” Choreographer Christopher Scott on Dancing in The Streets

Featured image: Ezra Miller (The Flash / Barry Allen) in Justice League. Courtesy HBO Max.

“Star Trek: Discovery” Costume Designer Gersha Phillips on the Future of Fashion

Costume designer Gersha Phillips has been part of building the world of CBS Studios’ Star Trek: Discovery since the beginning, garnering acclaim for her futuristic and creative designs used on the show over its 3 seasons. The 3rd season in particular represented major costume challenges, as the Discovery crew gets propelled through time to almost a thousand years in the future. Phillips and her costume department were more than up to the task, as evidenced by the team coming away big winners at the 2021 Canadian Alliance of Film and Television Costume Arts and Design Awards. Phillips’ peers recognized the invention necessary in believably bringing Federation officer Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) and the whole Discovery crew into a new millennium. Humble in the face of intense Emmy buzz, Phillips spoke to The Credits about what made the costumes for Star Trek: Discovery Season 3 so memorable and such an integral part of the show’s storytelling.

 

In some respects, it feels like the costumes have a larger arc, just as the show itself does, especially as it relates to the Federation and Michael’s character.  How do you see the arc or the story of the costumes you’ve designed?

I think the big thing was jumping forward a thousand years at the beginning of Season 3. That was a big arc for us, in terms of how we would approach the story, and what we wanted our costumes to say about the future, which is quite daunting. In the beginning, when I was brought on and working with Brian Fuller, the mandate was to look at what Star Trek had done in the past and try to do something better. Brian wanted to create something that hadn’t been done before. So for Season 3 we still had that mandate, but we were jumping 1000 years into the future. Not 300 or 500. In the beginning, I was paralyzed. I didn’t know where to start. Then I remembered, when I started doing the original costumes, the first samples I did were costumes in which I tried not to show the sewing or the construction technique. They didn’t like that, because they were too clean. I realized I could maybe use them for this future, so I did some illustrations and got samples of what it could look like. I was fascinated by this technique called ‘No Sew’, where it’s just bonding. A lot of athletic performance wear companies like Nike and Adidas are really good at it. It’s fabulous to me in terms of what the future can look like, and in terms of what we were doing for Star Trek, it was just this way of evolving the costumes into this futuristic look.

Aurelio Costume: Courtesy of Gersha Phillips
Aurelio Costume: Courtesy of Gersha Phillips

Can you talk about the specific bonding techniques? 

We like two different companies right now. One of them, Bemis, has a glue that comes in sheet form, and it’s sticky on both sides. So you first bond one side to the fabric, and then you lift off the carrier, and then you bond the other fabrics to it. That’s one type of bonding. And then there’s another company, Framis, that has pre-made tapes in really cool patterns. You can buy it in sheets, or you can have it made in whatever size or width you want it to be, and we use that to cover our zippers, to bond seams together, and just to hide things that we don’t want to be seen.

In several instances, Michael and Book have costumes that work together, and that are synergistic visually. What were the discussions about designs for them as a couple? 

When we meet Book, he makes those comments about her being part of the Federation, because she’s wearing the badge on her undersuit, so he throws her one of his own coats. We had to find something that worked on Burnham that still had that Book flavor. We used Demobaza in Bulgaria, which a lot of shows use for anything apocalyptic or futuristic, for Sonequa’s coat. We actually dismantled her Demobaza jacket and put it back together using leather and other bits and bobs to bring in a little bit of the Book flavor. When she became a courier, we pulled a lot from Book’s look, and gave her some really cool pieces to work with. It was really nice to work with Sonequa in that way, because being in the Starfleet uniform most of the time, we hadn’t yet really been able to express her personality. We were able to tap into Book’s style, which speaks to a sort of freedom and self-expression. What would she wear if free to pick her own garments? She’s always had either the Federation or the Vulcan influence, which holds her within tight boundaries. It was interesting to play with the idea of her picking her own things and allowing her personality to shine.

David Ajala as Book, Sonequa Martin-Green as Burnham
David Ajala as Book, Sonequa Martin-Green as Burnham

The costumes for secondary characters are so interesting. For example, Jake Weber as Zareh has a strong Wild West vibe.

Both Book and Zareh have that feel, because when we started with Book, the directive was to find inspiration from Han Solo. That was the mandate for me. I loved the idea of the space cowboy. When I was designing for Zareh, I thought he’s definitely that as well. He’s actually more outlaw than cowboy.

ZAREH Costume: Courtesy of Gersha Phillips
ZAREH Costume: Courtesy of Gersha Phillips

His costumes immediately recall classic Westerns. With Aurelio, played by Kenneth Mitchell, how did his being in a wheelchair impact his costume design, or did it?

I think it did, because we had to take into consideration what we could do, so there was a lot that went into trying to figure that out. He wore leather from his chest down. I developed a certain language for the Emerald Chain. It was a really cool piece that we did for him actually, another using bonding, where I had some lace that I had bought, and we ended up bonding it between leather, and when you do that, the leather picks up the texture from the lace, and that’s what created those hex patterns, then our breakdown team did a great paint job on it, because it’s actually black leather they painted to be a copper color that was slightly iridescent.

Pictured: Kenneth Mitchell as Aurellio of the CBS All Access series STAR TREK: DISCOVERY. Photo Cr: Michael Gibson/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Pictured: Kenneth Mitchell as Aurellio of the CBS All Access series STAR TREK: DISCOVERY. Photo Cr: Michael Gibson/CBS ©2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

There are so many details that can go unnoticed. What is another touch or element viewers should look for? 

On Burnham’s undersuit, the one that you first see after she takes off her spacesuit, has a print on it. It’s the honeycomb print that we use on all our Federation uniforms. You’ll see it there, and It’s also on the sports costumes that they wear later on.  We also did a different version of it for the mirror universe. When you see Georgiou, you’ll notice we just flipped it. We use that print everywhere. You can’t always see it, but it’s always there.

Star Trek costuming in particular is so exciting for the fans. Cosplayers seem to study them to copy the intricate details.

I think a lot of people don’t really know what we do or the lengths we go to, but I feel like they embrace it nonetheless. That’s all without knowing the mechanics of how we get there, which is pretty cool. I do love the fans that try to figure it out. Sometimes they send me little shots on social media of what they’re doing, and their process in creating their cosplay. They care about getting it exactly right. There really are no fans like Star Trek fans.

Star Trek: Discovery Seasons 1-3 are streaming now on Paramount Plus.

“Cruella” Sound Editor Mark Stoeckinger on Getting 1970s England Right

Whether it’s her bohemian attic lair, Liberty’s department store, or her job at an insufferable couture designer’s immaculate atelier, young Cruella, née Estella (Emma Stone) divides her time between very particular environments in 1970s England. She and her pals, Jasper (Joel Fry) and Horace (Paul Walter Hauser), are roommates, professional delinquents, and dog-lovers. A terrier and a chihuahua assist them in their lives of petty crime and everyone seems to get along in the free spirit of communal living funded by pickpocketing, but Estella, whose orphaning at a young age we witness early on in Cruella, longs for more.

In director Craig Gillespie’s Disney origin story of how 101 Dalmatians’ unrepentant villain came to be so mightily attached to wearing dalmatians in the form of a coat, little Estella didn’t mean to be bad any more than she intended to be born with a head of black and white hair, precisely split down the middle. But as she gets more deeply involved with her hellacious boss, the Baroness (Emma Thompson), she snaps. Growing increasingly distant from social norms in her efforts to take down the evil designer, Estella, along with Horace and Jasper, gets up to hijinks across London which the movie gleefully sets to everyone’s favorite hits from the 1970s. As such, Cruella’s musical soundtrack, which includes tracks from Queen, the Clash, The Doors, and Nina Simone, has been getting rave reviews. But it takes more than just a tear-down musical memory lane to recreate 1970s England.

 

Supervising sound editor Mark Stoeckinger (John Wick, Atomic Blonde) had planned to record in the UK to get the sounds he needed to fully recreate the era, but Covid-19 necessitated a change in plans. Researching in sound libraries and working remotely with automated dialogue replacement actors instead, Stoeckinger and his team were able to place Estella, the Baroness, and their partners in numerous crimes into a vintage version of England half a century ago, punctuated by the barks, growls, and footsteps of a cast of believably realistic CGI canines. We sat down with the sound editor to talk about turning dogs into characters, recreating Cruella’s Coupe Deville, and getting particularly English details right.

Cruella’s musical soundtrack is full of beloved hits. Did that impact your process at all?

All the needle drops and all of the score, that is not my purview, but I kind of wish it was on a film like this. But all the other aspects of the soundtrack that bring it to life — making the ballrooms feel like you’re in a ballroom, making London feel like London in the 70s, those were the intricacies under my area of influence. We do know what’s happening with the music, because as I’m doing what I’m doing sound-wise, there’s also those that are doing the same with music. It’s all coalescing through Tatiana [Riegel, the editor], into the picture. It really all starts with the picture editor and the director.

 

The film has distinct sets — the lair, the atelier, the Baroness’s two mansions. How do you use sound to create a sense of place in each of these locations?

I can tell you what we wanted to do and what we ended up doing, which tended to be two different things. In a situation like this, I was all set to go to England and recreate that environment. I’ve done that on a couple of films before to various degrees. On this one we ended up recording a group of ADR actors — you might get groups of eight to 20 people and you’ll go into a studio, which is a controlled, seemingly dry space, and you recreate a bunch of conversations. You layer it and layer it and I or somebody I’m working with will take it, add the room space to it, and try to craft it around the dialogue and action, and you sew all this together to make it as natural as possible. It works very well and most films happen that way. In the time of distancing with Covid, we did our first session with actors in England, while we were here, and everybody was separate. There were probably over ten people. Everyone was in their closet at home, or wherever they could go to get a quiet space. And the mixer in England had all these different feeds — it had to be crazy. The actors could see scenes on their laptops and we’d say okay, can you play the red-haired guy in the back or the lady with the funny hat. It’s amazing what that level of acting brings to the movie because they’re ad-libbing. They’re supposed to be native British English speakers and depending on where you are, they need to do something posh for the parties or not quite so posh for the streets. That was one aspect of the sound for Cruella which was important, to give it life and a sense of immediacy.

 

The film is also a period piece. Did you have to do much in the way of research?

It was a fair amount of research. Thank God for Youtube, that’s all I have to say. If I’d had that as a kid, I’d probably know more. Because if you want to explore something cultural or in a particular time period, it’s there. You have many variations, and then you can draw your own conclusions about how you want things to sound.

What was something you searched for there that applied to this movie?

Dumb as it might sound: the double-decker bus. It’s not a big player in the movie, but you need the sound of it. They don’t sound like an American bus. They sound sort of simple and a little bit old-fashioned, because of the engines they used. So we need to find or make something that does that, so it feels right in the film in the mid-70s. It’s maybe weird to pay attention to those details, but others did for the look of the film, so why not do that for the sound of the film? So the idea was to record all that in England, but with the pandemic, of course, that didn’t happen. But we were able to recreate things that sounded solid and substantial. Some of the props in the film sounded that way, so the rest of the sound had to live up to that.

What’s a solid example?

This sounds so boring, I know, but doors. There’s something about big, heavy, intricate locks and handles. Particularly in the Baroness’s places, it’s important to make that sound right. I didn’t record any specific doors for this, but sometimes you reach old sounds and try to make them sound a little bit modern. There’s a little bit of archaeology in that. Cruella’s car she escapes in, that needed to sound kind of mean and dramatic — that’s when she’s really taking a turn as a character. It was fun to use a car that I used to own a long time ago, a Cobra Mustang. It had a supercharger whine to it and was a hot rod muscle car. It worked for Cruella’s Coupe Deville. It meant something to me because it meant intense and powerful and it had a little character because it had some other sounds in the engine. It worked perfectly for her car. There are also some aspects that matched the production car — there are bits and pieces of that in there too, fortuitously.

 

Was it tricky to get the  CGI dogs right?

Well, yes and no. You just find sounds that seem to fit what you see visually. There were some real dogs that eventually got replaced by CGI dogs, believe it or not. And since the dogs are such characters, you try to think about what will make those characters. There are some wolf sounds for the dalmatians — they don’t sound like wolves, they just sound like vicious dogs when they need to. Wink and Buddy needed to sound like a bunch of personalities. You tend to put more sounds for the dogs than a real dog would actually make. They need to have character. They need to react to things. Their reaction shot can be a look, but more often, it’s a sound. Watching the film with that in mind, you’re going to hear the dogs a lot, more than a real dog. But it’s more fun. They look fabulous and flawless as far as I’m concerned. There’s something about visual effects and sound that complement each other very effectively, with one justifying the other, sometimes. There was a lot of intricacy and detail, the dogs probably being the highlight of that. Nobody complained about how we made the dogs sound, which is great, because there are a lot of them and they’re very active throughout. And you can’t step on your characters, either. Even the footsteps of the dogs become a big deal because you want to hear them, as well as all the growls that will make it feel right, but a little over the top.

Emma Stone as Cruella in Disney’s live-action CRUELLA.
Emma Stone as Cruella in Disney’s live-action CRUELLA.

Cruella is playing in theaters now and on Disney + Premiere Access

For more on Cruella, check out these interviews:

Production Designer Fiona Crombie on the Luxe World of “Cruella”

Behind the Costumes, Wigs, & Makeup of the Deliciously Punk “Cruella”

Featured image: Emma Stone as Cruella in Disney’s live-action “Cruella.” Photo by Laurie Sparham. Courtesy Walt Disney Studios. 

Cinematographer Alice Brooks on Lighting the Real Heights of “In the Heights”

In the Heights, Lin-Manuel Miranda’s pre-Hamilton musical transformed into a film by screenwriter Quiara Alegría Hudes and director Jon M. Chu (Crazy Rich Asians) is set over a handful of days at the height of summer in Washington Heights. The action is centered on two would-be couples, Usnavi (Anthony Ramos) and Vanessa (Melissa Barrera), and Benny (Corey Hawkins) and Nina (Leslie Grace). Usnavi, an orphan and bodega owner who dreams of life in the Dominican Republic, is too bashful to pursue Vanessa, who’s concerned with leaving the salon where she works for a career in fashion design and an apartment downtown. Nina is the pride of the neighborhood, but after a harrowing first year at Stanford, she’s struggling to reveal that she may be returning to 175th St. for good. Benny, her ex, is still smitten, but Kevin (Jimmy Smits), Nina’s father and Benny’s boss at the local taxi service, doesn’t approve. At the center of the community is Abuela Claudia (Olga Merediz), an elderly Cuban matriarch universally beloved by all. On the comedic side, Miranda makes periodic appearances as a disgruntled piragua seller in an ongoing feud with the local Mr. Softee, while far more seriously, Usnavi’s young employee, Sonny (Gregory Diaz IV), grapples with the personal implications of the politics swirling around DACA.

Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

The action, whether it’s a piece of the twin unfolding love stories or a major dance number, takes place across sets at the heart of a few blocks in Washington Heights: Usnavi’s bodega, Abuela Claudia’s cozy apartment, Kevin’s dispatch office, the public pool. Aside from Usnavi’s narration, which takes place on an intentionally overly picture-perfect beach in the DR, and ten shooting days on a soundstage, In the Heights was in fact largely shot in the Heights. The film opens with a major number at 175th Street, and throughout the film, some of the biggest set pieces take place in a public pool, a courtyard, and a club that pulses with energy right up until the lights go out in a major blackout. For cinematographer Alice Brooks (Home Before Dark, The Walking Dead), this meant ensuring getting Washington Heights’ unique sunlight right just as much as it meant highlighting the dance numbers to the fullest possible effect. We had the chance to speak with Brooks about these aspects of the film, along with how she used practical effects during the blackout, hit the perfect golden light in Usnavi’s bodega, and the unexpected coincidence that helped achieve the special lighting in Abuela Claudia’s apartment.

Caption: (L-r) DP ALICE BROOKS (foreground), director JON M. CHU, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) DP ALICE BROOKS (foreground), director JON M. CHU, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

You’re not just lighting and shooting a movie, but a musical with huge dance numbers. How does that work?

I’ve known Jon Chu for around 20 years. We went to USC to film school together, and I shot his short musical, When the Kids Are Away, when we were in college. We bonded over our love of musicals at a time when very few features were being made into musicals anymore. We’ve done a lot of music-driven projects together, including The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers, which is when we started working with Chris Scott as a choreographer. The three of us have a very close relationship in terms of figuring out dance. We learned so much about how to capture dance and how to light dance and how to use it as a storytelling method. So Jon and I, after we looked at locations in Washington Heights in the morning, we’d spend the afternoon at the dance rehearsal space. When Chris wanted us to see stuff, we’d come and start to work out the little details. We each would take an iPhone and film the dance rehearsal. We had these anamorphic adapters for our cameras, for our iPhones — we shot anamorphic lenses on the movie — and the three of us would shoot from different angles. On the weekends, we would get together and AirDrop the videos to each other, and Jon would start to edit things together. We’d start to figure out oh, this would be a great crane move here, or let’s do something low here, or can we make this a really long shot? Our process is very fluid and connected, and we all have a similar work ethic and style, so it’s a great collaboration.

Caption: (L-r) DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla and DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla and DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

The quality of light in Washington Heights is often described as being unique within the city. How did that play into your process?

I got to Washington Heights in March 2019. It was freezing cold, we were bundled up in coats standing in the middle of empty swimming pools or on rooftops, looking at the George Washington Bridge, and we had to imagine what summer would look like. Day after day as I spent time there, I noticed that the light there is different than anywhere else I’ve been in the world. And summer in Washington Heights is really different. While we were making the movie, I called it an urban summer, but it’s more specific than that — it’s a Washington Heights summer. It’s not even a Manhattan summer. I have theories about why. The buildings are lower, there’s less red brick than in the rest of Manhattan, and there are these beautifully silvery-gray buildings that are perfectly patinaed. When the sun hits it in the summer, it creates these cool shadows and this very warm sunlight. When we were filming, we were there at the time of year when the sun path lines up directly with the streets, and with 175th Street specifically, where we filmed. So in shots of Nina walking down the street and the opening and final numbers, the sun lined up perfectly where we wanted it to be. The color is so different. Someone also said to me maybe it’s because it’s a very narrow point of Manhattan — you can walk back and forth from the Hudson River on one side and the East River on the other, so you also have the sun hitting these huge reflecting pools.

Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Did you film any exteriors outside Washington Heights. If so, how did you make it look like that neighborhood?

We shot the downtown stuff downtown. We shot a little bit in Inwood for the outside of the Floradita restaurant. We shot in, I think Harlem, for the exterior of the club night. But that was night and you can get away with a lot more. It was also a blackout, so all we lit that with was car headlights and one ambient source. All our street scenes were right [in Washington Heights], though, or on the surrounding blocks.

Caption: (L-r) Director of photography ALICE BROOKS and director JON M. CHU on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) Director of photography ALICE BROOKS and director JON M. CHU on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

The film counts down to the big blackout, which is a turning point for most of the main characters. How did you approach this section?

I love “Blackout.” It’s one of my favorite numbers. It was a huge challenge. We had to work with all the people in the neighborhood to try to get everyone to turn off their lights, first. We also needed access to all the rooftops for our fireworks effects. We put what’s called SkyPanel S360s on all the roofs. Those created our fireworks display, so the light hitting the buildings would be red, purple, then blue pops, then white pops. But “Blackout” starts in the club, where there are these ambers, reds, and rust colors. Then the light goes out and the first thing you see is a very cool cell phone light. You start to see different people emerging into the light with their camera phone flashlights. Everyone piles into the street and there are car headlights that light up the environment. Then we get back to our main intersection and we’ve got the fireworks display lighting everything up. We framed glass into things. When Daniela and the salon ladies are walking past the salon, we left extra room so that you could see the glass, and visual effects could put fireworks in its reflection. Theres a great shot I love in “Blackout” where weve got people singing, theres a high angle crane shot of a car, and you see the reflection of a firework in the windshield. All the fireworks were shot practically, but we couldn’t do it in Washington Heights. I mean, you can’t have a fireworks display in New York City.

Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

And then the action moves inside, to Abuela Claudia’s home.

At Abuela’s, she starts to light candles. That scene is lit mainly by candlelight and that is a real location. It was right there in our intersection, which is amazing. The salon ladies come in and start turning their cell phones on and putting little pieces of glass on top of the lights. One day a couple weeks before we shot “Blackout,” there was a big thunderstorm, and the AD team needed everyone to get into a safe place. Jon Chu, Lynn, Quiara, the set photographer, and I all got put into Abuela’s house, and it was completely dark because our generator was off. We had this idea to start turning on our phone flashlights. Jon and I wandered around Abuela’s house and found beautiful pieces of glass from set dressing and put them on top of the cell phones and it created this beautiful light in the apartment. That was the inspiration for us shooting “Blackout” in her apartment.

In The Heights is in theaters and on HBO Max now.

Featured image: Caption: (L-r) LESLIE GRACE as Nina Rosario and COREY HAWKINS as Benny in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

James Wan Reveals The Title for “Aquaman” Sequel

We finally know what Aquaman 2 will be called, thanks to director James Wan, courtesy his Instagram page. The next installment of Wan’s vision for Aquaman is titled Aquaman and The Lost Kingdom, which is an interesting title considering Wan’s comments at last year’s DC FanDome event. “The second one is a little bit more serious, a little bit more relevant to the world we’re living in today. That’s where it wants to go.”

If Aquaman wants to go in a more serious direction, the Lost Kingdom, better known to you and me as Atlantis, will feature heavily in that vision. We’ll likely learn a lot more about why Atlantis has become so politically riven, why it’s so insular and warlike, and what that says about the folks above the waves, you know, us. We don’t know much about the sequel, which is par for the course at this stage of production. We do know that Jason Momoa returns, of course, in the title role, along with Amber Heard (Mera), Patrick Wilson (King Orm), and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II (Black Manta). We also know a swashbuckling pirate from a whole different realm—Game of Thrones‘ Pilou Asbæek, who so memorably played Euron Greyjoy in HBO’s juggernaut series—is on hand here. That guy knows how to break bad.

Here’s Wan’s big reveal of the title. Aquaman and The Lost Kingdom is due in theaters on December 16, 2022.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by James Wan (@creepypuppet)

For more on Warner Bros., HBO, and HBO Max, check out these stories:

“In The Heights” Executive Music Producer Bill Sherman on Marshaling Many Musical Styles

Playwright & Screenwriter Quiara Alegria Hudes on Adapting “In The Heights” for the Big Screen

“In the Heights” Choreographer Christopher Scott on Dancing in The Streets

Steven Soderbergh’s Star-Studded “No Sudden Move” Drops Trailer

“Mare of Easttown” & “The Underground Railroad” Hair Department Head Lawrence Davis

Watch the First 8 Minutes of “In The Heights”

Featured image: Caption: (L-r) AMBER HEARD, director JAMES WAN, JASON MOMOA and WILLEM DAFOE on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ action adventure “AQUAMAN,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Jasin Boland/ ™ & © DC Comics. Copyright: © 2018 WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT INC.

Two New Epic “Black Widow” Videos Reveal Marvel’s Big Return to Theaters

The first Black Widow video is just a ripping 45-second teaser that showcases why people are so stoked for director Cate Shortland’s film. It gives us a few fresh looks at the film’s villain, Taskmaster, a masked master of whatever his opponent’s fighting style is. This means that Taskmaster will be able to do whatever Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johnasson) can do—and we know that’s a lot. The second video is a 90-second clip that features Natasha and Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh) fighting their way out of a building, onto a rooftop, and, well—you’ll have to watch to see what happens from there.

Both the video and the clip highlight Black Widow‘s surfeit of thrilling action sequences. The film is set between the events of Captain America: Civil War and Avengers: Infinity War, with Natasha confronting her past, and the people she left behind, to become an Avenger. Those people include Melina Vostokoff (Rachel Weisz) and Alexei Shostakov (David Harbour), who, along with Yelena, all appear to be allies against the Taskmaster and the shadowy force trying to take Natasha out.

Check out the two videos below. Black Widow opens in theaters and on Disney + Premiere Access on July 9.

Here’s the official synopsis from Marvel Studios:

In Marvel Studios’ action-packed spy thriller “Black Widow,” Natasha Romanoff aka Black Widow confronts the darker parts of her ledger when a dangerous conspiracy with ties to her past arises. Pursued by a force that will stop at nothing to bring her down, Natasha must deal with her history as a spy and the broken relationships left in her wake long before she became an Avenger. Scarlett Johansson reprises her role as Natasha/Black Widow, Florence Pugh stars as Yelena, David Harbour portrays Alexei/The Red Guardian, and Rachel Weisz is Melina. Directed by Cate Shortland and produced by Kevin Feige, “Black Widow”—the first film in Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe— will launch simultaneously in theaters and on Disney+ with Premier Access in most Disney+ markets on July 9, 2021.

For more stories on what’s streaming or coming to Disney+, check these out:

Review Roundup: “Loki” Mixes Wit, Wackiness, and the MCU’s Most Beloved Antihero

“Black Widow” IMAX Screenings Will Boast 22 Minutes of Expanded Aspect Ratio

New Footage Revealed in Ripping “Black Widow” Featurette

“Thor: Love and Thunder” Wraps Filming as Taika Waititi Promises It’s Craziest Film He’s Ever Done

Production Designer Fiona Crombie on the Luxe World of “Cruella”

Behind the Costumes, Wigs, & Makeup of the Deliciously Punk “Cruella”

Featured image: L-r: Taskmaster and Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson) in Marvel Studios’ BLACK WIDOW. Courtesy Marvel Studios.

“In The Heights” Executive Music Producer Bill Sherman on Marshaling Many Musical Styles

Zooming in from his studio in his basement, executive music producer Bill Sherman was a week away from the end of a very long—but joyous—journey. Sherman was one of the main players responsible for everything you hear in director Jon M. Chu‘s In The Heights, an adaptation of the play that Sherman himself helped create, alongside his former roommate Lin-Manuel Miranda, and playwright (and screenwriter of the movie) Quiara Alegría Hudes, more than a decade ago. The play eventually made its off-Broadway run in 2007, hit Broadway in 2008, and ended up with 13 Tony nominations and four wins, including Best Musical. Now, Chu’s adaptation is about to hit theaters across the country, and Sherman finds himself happily dazed by the idea that millions of people will finally get to see this labor of love.

We spoke to Sherman about the long, musically vibrant ride from stage to script to screen. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

So what, precisely, does an executive music producer on a film like this?

Executive music producer, to me, encompasses every sound that you’re hearing. So from the development of the songs themselves to recording it to orchestrating and arranging it, to being there for the mixes—both sound mixes of the songs and the mixes of the movie itself, which was a little difficult given the pandemic. We did finish mixing it the day before everybody went underground. Literally the day before. We were in New York and then Jon Chu got home the next day just as lockdown began, which was just insanity.

How do you make sure you’re capturing all of those different musical styles accurately? 

You bring in hip-hop producers, you bring in Reggaeton producers, you bring in salsa guys, people who are known for that kind of stuff to help you shape the overall sound. And that was a really fun experience because it was literally like you could choose from anyone you want to. Our hip-hop tracks in the opening “96,000” are from Mike Elizondo, the Latin stuff is helped out by Sergio George, the Reggaeton is from this famous Reggaeton guy named Trooko, the string stuff is by Rob Mathes, Sting’s string guy. It’s the all-star team, that being said, a lot of this stuff is the stuff we had on Broadway because it was pretty successful there. This is like the blown-out, technicolor, high-volume Dolby surround sound version of it.

Speaking of “96,000,” that looks like it was a fairly massive challenge.

When we were at the pool, the crowd was just so electric. What was interesting about that day was it was supposed to be a hot, summer day, but it was in fact quite cold and it wasn’t sunny. But thanks to supreme movie magic, it doesn’t look like that all. People look like they couldn’t be more excited to be there, but the water was really cold and people were really freezing. It was a wild movie magic situation.

 

So how does the ultimate decision get made that a song is done?

I think one of the best parts about In The Heights is it’s a bunch of very talented people in one room, and the overall mantra with all Lin-Manuel Miranda’s projects is the best idea in the room wins. And that’s not to say it’s always his idea, or my idea, or somebody else’s idea, and I think that kind of egoless get together of people and ideas is the only way to have something that’s truly successful and the only way to make the best stuff. Your idea might suck, but it also might lead to something else that becomes the idea. With this movie, we pre-recorded the entire score before we even started filming, then we shot the movie and recorded all that stuff live, then we came back and did ADR and even re-sung some stuff, and then we mish-mashed all that stuff together. I’m sure you could finagle it until you’re crazy if you’re one of those micromanager types, I’m not one of those types. Alex [Lacamoire, co-executive music producer] is one of those types, so we make a good team in that sense. 

How did the original In The Heights team work with director Jon M. Chu?

In the beginning, it was like, ‘Who is this guy? Do we trust this guy? He made Crazy Rich Asians, which is great, but does he get this?’ What’s interesting about Jon is he’s super musical. Having done Step Up and all those other things, and he gets the rhythm of things, so it was sort of like, how do we rise to his visual level? Dancing on the side of a building, or having “96,000” be in a pool, it was like, okay, we have to take what worked for the stage and turn it into this over-the-top thing worthy of 500 people dancing in a pool and making that work. Me and Alex Lacamoire said, “If off-Broadway was Beta, and Broadway was 1.0, then this is 2.0.” So the movie is louder, faster, bigger, more

Caption: (L-r) Director JON M. CHU, concept/music & lyrics/producer LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA and ANTHONY RAMOS on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) Director JON M. CHU, concept/music & lyrics/producer LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA and ANTHONY RAMOS on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

Do you feel like the film is something totally new, or really just an advanced, bionic version of the play you all created all those years ago?

I feel like it’s a combination of both. It’s definitely bionic because it still has the blueprints and DNA of the original, but I think it’s all new because when you make something for the stage, it has one kind of drive, and it’s stage dimensional, it can only be in one place. With the movie, it’s like four-dimensional. In the play, when you go inside, a chandelier comes down but you’re still on that same stage. With the movie, we were on the streets in Washington Heights for months, the fire hydrants are real, the people are really real, everything about is real. It was hot, it was crowded, it was awesome. I feel like a lot of it was just turning the camera on and there it was. It was such a vibrant place to live.

 

What was the driving creative ambition of the film adaptation, if you had to pick one?

Lin and I were roommates for many years. We lived in 212th Street and Broadway. His parents lived on 180th and Broadway, and every Sunday we’d go watch the new episodes of The Sopranos at his parent’s house. Lin said he wanted to make a play that captured whatever it sounds like from 212th to 180th, which was bachata and merengue, Big Pun, classical music, salsa, and people out dancing. I feel we really captured that in the film. You can feel those things, you can feel the heat, you can hear the music. It’s just way more of an all-encompassing thing than the stage version was, and that’s what makes In The Heights so fantastic as a movie, you really feel like you’re there.

Caption: (L-r) DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla and DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla and DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

The musical numbers feel like they arise naturally, how did you pull that off?

From a very technical musical point, in musicals, there’s always this suspension of disbelief where people all of a sudden start singing, and you just have to be like, ‘Oh, cool! You couldn’t just say that? You’re gonna sing?’ With the film, Jon wanted to make that transfer from singing to talking as seamless as possible. So for us, we recorded a lot of things live. Like “Champagne,” which is at the end of the film, is mostly live, which is incredible. Then we mixed the live music with the pre-recorded stuff to make it seem like they’re actually talking and singing to each other, rather than the presentational version. That was a challenge because you still wanted the vocals to sound great, but you also want them to sound real. So it was a constant back and forth that was really fascinating and fun to watch. If you looked at the Pro Tools sessions, you’d be amazed what was pre-recorded and how much was actually done live.

I imagine capturing the music live, in Washington Heights, was a challenge?

When we could get useable audio that we knew would aid in making it look convincingly realistic, we’d do that. Sometimes, as moviemaking goes, all you can hear is the city and people are screaming and it messes up the audio, and you’re doomed. But I’m sure we used more live audio than any other movie musical ever made. Particularly because the performers could pull it off, like Anthony [Ramos] and Melissa [Barrera], they’re all so amazing. When you’re doing it 15 times and they’re nailing it 15 times, it’s amazing.

Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

What was your experience like when you finally stopped working on this and just watched the final, finished version?

You really sort of don’t believe it. We mixed it and it was done a year and a half ago, and I hadn’t watched it again until last week. When you’ve been on something this long, it’s like when your kids are really small, you’re totally helicoptering them, and then as they grow up you’re like, ‘Oh, look at that thing! It has its own life!’ I feel like that with In The Heights. There’s nothing else we can do, so you give it over to the world and you watch it grow up and find out what other people think about it. That’s where I’m at psychologically and emotionally. It’s a movie about togetherness, community, and home, and after everything we’ve been through, all being at home but not been with our community, we get to go and sit with people in a movie theater and be in the same room!

For more on In The Heights, check out these stories:

“In the Heights” Choreographer Christopher Scott on Dancing in The Streets

Playwright & Screenwriter Quiara Alegria Hudes on Adapting “In The Heights” for the Big Screen

“In The Heights” Director Jon M. Chu on Capturing a Neighborhood’s Magic

Featured image: Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

“In The Heights” Director Jon M. Chu on Capturing a Neighborhood’s Magic

Director Jon M. Chu had to become “a complete listener” to bring the story of the largely Latinx community of In the Heights to life. In an interview, Chu talked about the connections he felt between his Chinese heritage and the characters in the film. He also brought the exuberance that made his previous films, like Crazy Rich Asians and Step Up 2, so vibrant.

Caption: (L-r) Director of photography ALICE BROOKS and director JON M. CHU on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) Director of photography ALICE BROOKS and director JON M. CHU on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

How did you focus on the specifics of the Latinx culture for the film?

The whole time I was learning. I had to be a complete listener. My whole process was about “I’m not from Washington Heights. I’m not Latino. I knew what the importance of those details were in Crazy Rich Asians, even as simple as four friends driving at night.” The number of emails and letters that I got about that moment of just seeing people in that film, aspirational as friends. So, I wanted to protect that in going into In the Heights. I kept my ears and eyes very open, whether it was a crew member or a cast member, [writer] Quiara Alegría Hudes, [composer and lyricist] Lin-Manuel Miranda, to speak up to say, “Hey, you know that dish that they’re making that’s never been on film? You’ve got to get that close up.” So, there’s a breakfast scene in the opening number with the Dominican family. We do this close-up on their breakfast and, and I hear hoops and hollers every time that shot is shown. It was such a random moment of like, “Yeah, do the close-up.” But when you see that impact, you know how important that is. Even when we did Carnival de Barrio, we didn’t have all the flags [from all of the characters’ nationalities] there on the day. And someone said, “If you’re going to put one flag up there, you better get all the flags there.” And so, we digitally put in some extra ones that we were missing on that day. And it’s amazing when you put that shot in the trailer people are freeze-framing it and being so proud to post that and say, “Look, that’s my flag in a movie.” I didn’t understand that before. That only happened because of conversations.

Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

The musical number in the pool is so joyful. I loved it.

We had the best pool tour guides in the world in Lin-Manuel Miranda and Quiara Alegría Hudes. As we were walking around the neighborhood, I remember seeing this building at the end of the block. “What’s that?” I asked, and Quiara’s like, “Oh, that’s the public pool.” “That’s where you went swimming? Let’s go check it out,” I said. Quiara said, “Yeah, this is our pool.” I thought it was a joke when she said, “How cool would it be to do a big Busby Berkeley or Esther Williams style number with the whole block here of all shapes and sizes and ages and skin tones there? How beautiful?” And we laughed about it and got in the van. As we’re driving back, we’re like, “Oh, we have to do that; we have no choice anymore.” As all the producers’ jaws dropped on the floor. “How many extras is that gonna take?”

Caption: Behind the scenes on Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: Behind the scenes on Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: COREY HAWKINS (center) as Benny in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: COREY HAWKINS (center) as Benny in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

So you just went for it.

And you know what, it made a difference to go there. Someone asked, “When they get into the fantasy, should they all match?” And we’re like, “No, they should all have their own styles and hair colors and bathing suits.” Like, that’s the whole point. Tattoos or not, you could show that they could be as beautiful and elegant as any of those old Broadway or those old Hollywood musicals. And yet these performers were not able to be in those films or musicals back then. So that was a huge moment for us in the movie.

 

The festival scene must have been another massive undertaking, with so much going on.

We shot the Carnival del Barrio scene in one day. I think it’s like eight minutes of screen time. It was nuts. The best thing about that is in the rehearsals, they could do the whole scene live. Like we could take that and just go on a stage and they could just do it all the way through for a live audience. All the actors knew how to do all the dances in there, all the background, they knew exactly what was happening and I just had to catch it.

Caption: (Center l-r) DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca, DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela and STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: (Center l-r) DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca, DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela and
STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Alice Brooks, our amazing DP had all her nets out and we were catching butterflies. And Chris Scott, our choreographer, and Eddy Torres Jr, our amazing Latin choreographer, really created a piece that had to feel authentic and genuine, especially as we go around to the dances from the Dominican Republic, dances from Mexico, dances from all these places, and have all the different styles be a part of it.

Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

It was one of those days, probably the most energetic, most beautiful shooting day of my life. We were exhausted by the end, I called “cut,” and the dancers did not stop! They kept cheering and dancing. The background started the crowd, they started jumping up and down, the crew members got off the cameras, they’re all jumping up and down. And Lin is on that fire escape, and he’s looking down because he can’t move because he has a camera on him. And they all look up to him and start chanting “Lin, Lin, Lin, Lin, Lin,” and he is just bawling because he manifested this. He didn’t have a role for himself in the theater. And so, he wrote it. His community didn’t have roles for them. So, he wrote it. And now here they were making a movie about it. And that was when we knew this was much bigger than ourselves at that point.

I remember one of the background extras said, “You know, this park has been only shot in Law and Order where there’s a murder and police officers. The fact that we get to be extras and have a picnic and a dance party, that’s never happened at this park, in a movie before, or in a TV show.” And I just think that that was when they put that on you, you just know that everyone’s giving their all because of that.

Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

Of course, we were all very disappointed that the movie got delayed last year due to the pandemic. And yet somehow it seems perfect, that it’s coming out right now. What do you think is meaningful about this particular moment for this movie?

We went into this trying to tell the truth. The music is written about the truth of growing up and the struggles and what it feels like to feel powerless sometimes. But there is community and family that will get you back up and that there’s so much hope and so much pride in life amongst people that maybe if you don’t know, you might just pass by that bodega on the corner. But what I love about this is now, because of the relevance of the last year, that we could wait and somehow that this movie would find its moment to come out. And somehow it would be Washington Heights. This is a neighborhood that knows struggle. And they would be the ones to guide the whole world on how to get back up again, and how to turn to each other again, and to say, “I see you my neighbor, and I’m going to help you no matter what it takes through song and dance.” What a moment that they are going to lead this way out!

Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

In The Heights hits theaters and HBO Max on June 11.

For more on In The Heights, check out these stories:

“In the Heights” Choreographer Christopher Scott on Dancing in The Streets

Playwright & Screenwriter Quiara Alegria Hudes on Adapting “In The Heights” for the Big Screen

Watch the First 8 Minutes of “In The Heights”

Featured image: Caption: Caption: (L-r) DP ALICE BROOKS (foreground), director JON M. CHU, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

“The Eyes of Tammy Faye” Trailer Reveals Jessica Chastain as the Conflicted Televangelist

Jessica Chastain is likely not the first actress you’d imagine playing the famous televangelist Tammy Faye Bakker, but once you watch the official trailer, you won’t be able to picture anybody else in the role. Chastain seems to channel Tammy Faye from the lashes to the soul, and the film, by the veteran comedy writer and director Michael Showalter, looks like a portrait created not out of a desire to punish or impugn, but reveal just what made Tammy Faye tick. Alongside her husband, Jim Bakker (Andrew Garfield), what made them tick for a long time was a passion for Christian evangelism and money, which led to them creating the world’s largest religious broadcasting network and theme park, and becoming fabulously wealthy in the process. If you know anything about their story or the Bible, you know the rise comes before the fall. Their fall was spectacular and very, very public.

The story of Tammy Faye Bakker was of an ambitious if initially naive Christian woman who, alongside her husband, built a multi-million dollar empire and became a massive cultural force in the 1970s and 80s. The Bakkers success collapsed into scandal when revelations about their PTL Club (Praise the Lord) included sending nearly $300,000 to buy the silence of model and actress Jessica Hahn, who claimed Jim Bakker raped her. Jim Bakker was eventually sentenced to 45 years in prison on 24 fraud and conspiracy counts.

Yet Tammy Faye’s life in the public eye wasn’t over, nor were her views in lockstep with the larger Christian evangelical community she was a part of throughout her career. Her heterodox views included an acceptance of and compassion for the LGBT community. This was stance was made most emphatically when she interviewed Steven Pieters (played by Randy Havens in the film), a gay Christian minister with AIDS, on her show “Tammy’s House Party.” During that segment, Tammy Faye made an emotional plea to her fellow Christians to love everyone, including those suffering from AIDS. She also interviewed drug addicts on her show, even while she herself was being treated for prescription drug addiction.

You can see why Tammy Faye’s life was such rich material for an actress of Chastain’s caliber to take on. The Eyes of Tammy Faye is in theaters on September 17. Check out the trailer below.

Here’s the synopsis for The Eyes of Tammy Faye:

THE EYES OF TAMMY FAYE is an intimate look at the extraordinary rise, fall and redemption of televangelist Tammy Faye Bakker. In the 1970s and 80s, Tammy Faye and her husband, Jim Bakker, rose from humble beginnings to create the world’s largest religious broadcasting network and theme park, and were revered for their message of love, acceptance and prosperity. Tammy Faye was legendary for her indelible eyelashes, her idiosyncratic singing, and her eagerness to embrace people from all walks of life. However, it wasn’t long before financial improprieties, scheming rivals, and scandal toppled their carefully constructed empire.

Featured image: Jessica Chastain as “Tammy Faye Bakker” in the film THE EYES OF TAMMY FAYE. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2021 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved

Playwright & Screenwriter Quiara Alegria Hudes on Adapting “In The Heights” for the Big Screen

Quiara Alegria Hudes adapted her Tony Award-winning musical In the Heights for the big screen, with some streamlining and updates. As in the original, it follows the lives of a group of people in the Washington Heights section of Manhattan over a hot summer three-day period that includes a power black-out. In an interview, Hudes talked about using very specific, evocative details to tell a universal story of dreams, home, and family.

Caption: (L-r) Concept/music & lyrics/producer LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA and QUIARA ALEGRÍA HUDES on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: (L-r) Concept/music & lyrics/producer LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA and QUIARA ALEGRÍA HUDES on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

It’s often said that the more specific something is, the more universal it is. And I think that’s very true of this film. So, what is very specific about it, and what is universal?

In the Heights is a tapestry of one block in Washington Heights. So, it’s multi-generational. There are school-aged children. There are abuelas who are the elders and matriarchs of the block. And there’s every age in between. And in weaving this community tapestry, there’s no one lead character. In fact, the community together is the lead character. And each of them even though they’re all Latino, that does not mean they’re all the same. They have different dreams, they have different experiences, they have different histories and cultures. So, I had to get really specific and really detailed. God was really in the details in writing this one. In terms of what’s universal, though, I think many of us struggle with “What is home?” and “How do I balance my loyalty to where I come from and my background with my own desires and dreams to strike out as an individual?” That balancing in your life between individual responsibility and community responsibility is universal.

Caption: (L-r) STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla, OLGA MEREDIZ as Abuela Claudia, DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca, MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa, JIMMY SMITS as Kevin Rosario and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla, OLGA MEREDIZ as Abuela Claudia, DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca, MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa, JIMMY SMITS as Kevin Rosario and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

What were some of the details that were absolutely essential to get right?

What’s really important is that we filmed on location, in Washington Heights, which is where I live. So, we had to get it right. I don’t want the guy at the Bodega to spit in my coffee and be like, “You messed up the neighborhood.” Some of them I wrote from experience. It’s about a strip of local businesses and locally owned businesses and their struggle to survive in a gentrifying marketplace. So, there’s that. And so, when we went on our location scouts, we were looking for like, “Okay, what’s the perfect corner in Washington Heights for us to film on that really captures the essence of these businesses?”

Caption: (L-r) DP ALICE BROOKS (foreground), director JON M. CHU, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) DP ALICE BROOKS (foreground), director JON M. CHU, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ and DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

But then there was also just a lot of exploration and letting the community lead with cues. So, [director] Jon Chu said to us, “What haven’t I seen yet? What’s really important to this neighborhood that I haven’t seen yet?” And I was like, “Come on, let’s go over to the Highbridge Pool,” which is a huge public pool where my kids swim in the summer. And we’re looking at it and he’s like, ‘We have to film something here.” But what would it be? What can we fit in? The screenplay was already budgeted. This was late in the game to add a new location and I was like, “The $96,000 song.” That’s where everyone can be floating around dancing and singing about what a lotto ticket win would mean. So, the community taught us a lot, too.

 

There’s a lot in the movie about dreams.  What was your dream growing up?

I loved writing; I wrote non-stop. But what I did even more than write is, I eavesdropped. I was like a habitual serial listener. Because of the way that my elders told stories and talked about their history, first of all, they couldn’t agree on anything. Like you asked four of them, “Why did we leave Puerto Rico and why did we come to Philadelphia?” You hear four very different answers. And they’ll be contradicting each other. “That’s not it.” “No, that’s wrong.” But they all had the experience. So, I would just ask these questions, and then kind of listen quietly, and there would be history unfolding before my eyes. These were not histories available to me in any other medium. There were no movies about this history. There were no books that I encountered about this history. And certainly, it wasn’t part of my formal education. So, this was it. This was my only way to know the truth of where I came from. And so, that was my dream. My dream was to just hear and understand as much as possible about what got me to the life that I was living and then tell their stories with my writing.

In The Heights hits theaters and HBO Max on June 11.

For more on In The Heights, check out these stories:

“In the Heights” Choreographer Christopher Scott on Dancing in The Streets

Watch the First 8 Minutes of “In The Heights”

Review Roundup: “In The Heights” Soars

Featured image: Caption: (L-r) DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela, STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla and DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

Review Roundup: “Loki” Mixes Wit, Wackiness, and the MCU’s Most Beloved Antihero

It seems as Marvel Studios is now 3-for-3 on the limited series front. WandaVision started things off as the first Marvel Studios Disney+ series, and creator Jac Schaeffer and director Matt Shakman‘s delivered a charming, beguiling, and ultimately heartbreaking mediation on love, grief, and sitcoms. (Just writing that sentence makes you appreciate what they pulled off). Then came creator Malcolm Spellman and director Kari Skogland‘s The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, a ripping action series with cinematic sweep and a finger on the pulse of real-world events, turning Anthony Mackie’s Sam Wilson into a one-of-a-kind Marvel superhero. Now the third series is upon us—writer Michael Waldron and director Kate Herron’s Loki, centered on everyone’s favorite meddlesome trickster god, set to debut on Disney+ on June 9. The early reviews of the first two episodes are here, and while that’s only a snapshot of the big picture, it’s still a good enough chunk to get a sense of the show. Unsurprisingly, combining Tom Hiddleston’s Loki with a stellar cast (including the likes of Owen Wilson, playing Agent Morbius M. Morbius), Richard E. Grant, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, and one of Lovecraft Country‘s breakout stars, Wunmi Mosaku) with a time-hopping, MCU-mixing narrative is a winning combination.

Before we get to the spoiler-free review snippets, a brief synopsis on Loki. The series centers on Thor’s lesser half as he’s arrested by the TVA (Time Variance Authority) for having broken their temporal laws when he snatched the Tesseract during the events of Avengers: Endgame. Working at the TVA are Owen Wilson’s aforementioned Agent Morbius, and the series will track Loki’s incarceration, his pending trial, and the many, many shenanigans he’ll get into.

Now, let’s take a brief stroll across those reviews, with links if you’re the sort who likes to know as much as possible before dipping into a show:

YouTube‘s Perri Nemiroff writes, “The Beetlejuice-like atmosphere and wildly creative details of the TVA are hugely appealing, as is how the exploration of time will challenge Loki to assess/reassess his actions.”

Paste Magazine‘s Allison Keane writes that “the key to Loki—both the character and the show—is always Tom Hiddleston.”

Collider‘s Liz Shannon Miller writes, “The wit and wackiness on display here is tempered by life-and-death stakes, as early on a clear mystery of sorts is established, offering up just a touch of a classic procedural format to help ground the action.”

The Chicago Sun-Times‘s Richard Roeper says, “Loki” is a great-looking, well-paced, original piece that’s equal parts workplace comedy, time-hopping adventure, murder mystery and superhero fantasy.”

ComicBook.com‘s Adam Barnhardt writes, “Balancing the standard Marvel comedy with strong character beats and heart-tugging moments, Loki is a well-balanced series that never once takes itself too seriously.”

i09‘s James Whitbrook writes, “Appropriate perhaps then, that in a series for a character as shape-shifting and tricky as Loki, that we’re given the chance to add new layers to our definition of the character in such a charmingly clever manner.”

The Verge‘s Andrew Webster writes, “The chemistry between Wilson and Hiddleston is great, with the pair able to seamlessly transition from throwing barbs to contemplating serious revelations.”

Loki begins streaming on June 9 on Disney+.

For more stories on what’s streaming or coming to Disney+, check these out:

“Black Widow” IMAX Screenings Will Boast 22 Minutes of Expanded Aspect Ratio

New Footage Revealed in Ripping “Black Widow” Featurette

“Thor: Love and Thunder” Wraps Filming as Taika Waititi Promises It’s Craziest Film He’s Ever Done

Behind the Costumes, Wigs, & Makeup of the Deliciously Punk “Cruella”

“WandaVision” Production Designer Mark Worthington on Creating Wanda’s Ever-Changing Worlds

“WandaVision” Director Matt Shakman on Landing His Dream Job

The First “Eternals” Teaser Has Arrived

Featured image: Loki (Tom Hiddleston) in Marvel Studios’ LOKI. Photo Courtesy Marvel Studios.

“Black Widow” IMAX Screenings Will Boast 22 Minutes of Expanded Aspect Ratio

The fact that director Cate Shortland’s Black Widow is a mere few weeks away from its premiere is reason enough to celebrate, but now our reasons for excitement have been enlarged by around 26%. Deadline reports that the film will open with an expanded aspect ratio on IMAX—22 minutes worth—meaning the biggest possible picture to watch Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson) face down her past.

IMAX revealed the news yesterday, which is only added incentive to see the film in theaters. Black Widow is the first film in Marvel’s Studios Phase Four, and the first Marvel Cinematic Universe movie since 2019. It’s been a long wait. What’s more, the last time we saw Johansson’s Black Widow, she was (spoiler alert!) sacrificing herself for the fate of humanity in Avengers: End Game. Black Widow represents what is likely the last time we’ll get to see Johansson in the role in any substantial way.

The expanded ratio is exclusive for IMAX theaters—it’s 1.90:1, which shows 26% more of the image onscreen. Considering most films are shown in CinemaScope aspect ratio of 2.40:1, which makes them wide but not tall, allows IMAX to show more of the original image that was caught by cameras while filming. The way this translates for a viewer is a screen that plunges you into the moviegoing experience, filling your vision with the moving image.

Utilizing IMAX’s capabilities isn’t new for Marvel. “Marvel and Imax have a really great partnership and we think we each complement each other’s brand,” IMAX CEO Rich Gelfond told Deadline. “We try to do something for the fans to celebrate the relationship.”

L-r: Taskmaster and Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson) in Marvel Studios' BLACK WIDOW. Courtesy Marvel Studios.
L-r: Taskmaster and Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson) in Marvel Studios’ BLACK WIDOW. Courtesy Marvel Studios.

Black Widow is set between the events of Captain America: Civil War and Avengers: Infinity War. It follows Natasha as she faces people from her past, including Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh), a sister (of sorts) who seems just as capable as Black Widow at handling herself and any challenges that come her way. Natasha will also be reunited with Melina Vostokoff (Rachel Weisz) and Alexei Shostakov (David Harbour), who appear to be allies against the Taskmaster, a villain capable of matching any adversaries’ skill sets, and who is hellbent on taking Natasha, and her family, down for good.

Black Widow hits theaters—including IMAX—and Disney + Premiere Access on July 9.

For more stories on what’s streaming or coming to Disney+, check these out:

New Footage Revealed in Ripping “Black Widow” Featurette

“Thor: Love and Thunder” Wraps Filming as Taika Waititi Promises It’s Craziest Film He’s Ever Done

Production Designer Fiona Crombie on the Luxe World of “Cruella”

Behind the Costumes, Wigs, & Makeup of the Deliciously Punk “Cruella”

Emily Blunt & Dwayne Johnson Set Sail In 2nd “Jungle Cruise” Trailer

“WandaVision” Production Designer Mark Worthington on Creating Wanda’s Ever-Changing Worlds

“WandaVision” Director Matt Shakman on Landing His Dream Job

Featured image: Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson) in Marvel Studios’ BLACK WIDOW. Courtesy Marvel Studios.

“In the Heights” Choreographer Christopher Scott on Dancing in The Streets

When Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda needed a director to adapt his 2008 stage musical In the Heights for the big screen, he enlisted Jon M. Chu, director of Crazy Rich Asians and mastermind behind Hollywood’s Step Up dance movie franchise. Chu, in turn, picked his go-to choreographer Christopher Scott to create the movie’s elegantly gritty dance sequences, performed to riveting effect by star Anthony Ramos and his castmates.

Scott learned his craft by dancing for tips on the streets of Santa Monica and later forged a tight bond with Chu and cinematographer Alice Brooks when they created the 2012 YouTube series The LXD: The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers. He later choreographed Step Up Revolution and Step Up All In for Chu. Those successes led to three Emmy nominations for the ABC series So You Think You Can Dance. For Scott, the collaborative spirit has remained intact over the years. “It’s funny, because no matter how big the budget gets, the process for Jon, Alice, and me really doesn’t change,” he said. “With In The Heights, we had our little group of collaborators joining up with Lin-Manual’s side, with [writer] Quiara [Alegria Hudes] [music executive producers] Alec Lacamoire and Bell Sherman. They’re like the Broadway version of us and their process is very similar. No ego, just this beautiful flow of creativity and a ‘best idea wins’ kind of vibe.

Choreographer CHRISTOPHER SCOTT on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. COPYRIGHT: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Choreographer CHRISTOPHER SCOTT on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
COPYRIGHT: © 2021 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Zooming from his Los Angeles home, Scott talks about tailoring his dance sequences to Manhattan’s Washington Heights neighborhood, where most of In The Heights was filmed, and explains why he had to yell at the top of his lungs to give his dancers direction.

Locations play a key role in shaping the neighborhood vibe for this movie. What was your process for designing dances around these real-life settings in Washington Heights?

It’s funny because one of the big themes of the movie is about how this character Vanessa gets her inspiration from the neighborhood, and as filmmakers, we were doing the same thing. You want inspiration? Go walk around the neighborhood. Go sit at the park. Look at this staircase thing. I’m sure they didn’t design it thinking somebody was going to dance there one day, but when you see it you think, “That’s a real stage in a real place that’s going to highlight these powerful women as they’re hanging out at the pool.” If you look and listen, it all just starts to speak to you.

Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: MELISSA BARRERA (center) as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (Left Center-Right Center) ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi and MELISSA BARRERA as Vanessa in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

You’ve worked with director Jon M. Chu several times before. I imagine by now you have a shorthand for what he wants you to achieve with your choreography within a given scene?

I’m very lucky because Jon’s vision is always so clear. He doesn’t just tell you, “Okay we’re going to have the dancers on the wall to enhance the visuals.” No, he wants it to feel like the characters’ love has no boundaries so let’s trim it down. He sets up such a strong foundation, there’s no second-guessing and then it becomes my job to fill in those blanks.

(L-r) Director JON M. CHU and choreographer CHRISTOPHER SCOTT on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Courtesy Warner Bros.
(L-r) Director JON M. CHU and choreographer CHRISTOPHER SCOTT on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Courtesy Warner Bros.

In several scenes, your dancers take over the street of this very lively neighborhood. How much time did you have to get these dance sequences in the can?

We had very limited access to a lot of these spaces. For example, the opening number we’d only have like two minutes at a time on the street where they’d closed it off from traffic. You go, “Okay everybody go go go!” Two minutes later, “Everybody get off the street and remember where you were when we stopped!”

Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: A scene from Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

You designed this epic outdoor swimming pool sequence with dozens of women splashing around in a way that feels reminiscent of Busby Berkley’s overhead shots from the 1930s. How did you go about putting that water dance together?

That was the hardest sequence in the film because these are dancers, they’re not swimmers. We’d talked about hiring a synchronized swimming group but looking for one that represented the Latinx community? We just couldn’t find it. We weren’t going to sacrifice the representation over the skill of synchronized swimmers so we decided to do our own version. Our dancers stepped up and made it happen to the best of their abilities. I love the version we came up with because it’s a bit of an homage to Busby Berkeley but it also has this element of representation.

Caption: COREY HAWKINS (center) as Benny in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: Behind the scenes on Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

You’re based in Los Angeles but your dances feel rooted in a very specific way to the character of this Brooklyn neighborhood. How did you find your footing in Washington Heights?

In L.A. I created some stuff with a skeleton crew of dancers but when I flew out to Washington Heights, a lot of that stuff went right out the window because the neighborhood itself is such an inspiration. I remember at the park, for example, I’d sit at the park for hours, watch things, walk things out, time it out. I’d have my little iPhone, playing Lin-Manuel’s music. In a dance studio, you can get a lot of work done but when you go to the actual space, the dance just pours out of you. This neighborhood is the story. This is the reality. It’s right there if you just open your eyes.

 

Anthony Ramos’ Usnavi character runs a bodega and the dance you stage there feels very authentic. Did you guys take over somebody’s shop for the shoot?

The bodega was built on a soundstage by our production designer Nelson Coates. The first time I walked in there I said, “Nelson, you killed it.” One of the most important things I’ve learned to do as a choreographer is to talk to your actors. Anthony Ramos is the dream guy to play Usnavi because he grew up in [nearby Brooklyn neighborhood] Bushwick. Anthony knows what it means to walk into a bodega. I’m from L.A.—I don’t know. Working out the dance stuff, Anthony became my gauge for, ‘Is this real or is this bullshit?’ He might say yeah, or he might say “Actually, we’d probably do it more like this.” Movies become more authentic when you step aside and let people who know more than you do tell you how it’s supposed to be.

Caption: (L-r) Director JON M. CHU, concept/music & lyrics/producer LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA and ANTHONY RAMOS on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay
Caption: (L-r) Director JON M. CHU, concept/music & lyrics/producer LIN-MANUEL MIRANDA and ANTHONY RAMOS on the set of Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay

When you’re directing dozens of dancers outdoors with all this noisy city life going on all around you, how did you make yourself heard?

We weren’t allowed to have microphones for the street scenes because they had a noise ordinance. As soon as you go through a speaker you’ve got the city telling you to keep it down. So it was just my voice, yelling to the actors as loud as I could. That was actually a blessing because there’s so much energy, between Jon and me yelling “let’s go!” at the cast—they’re going to give you the same energy back.

You earned three Emmy nominations for choreographing So You Think You Can Dance but with Heights, you’re working on a much larger scale. Did you find that there was a kind of strength in numbers?

Most movie musicals stick to that 30 to 40 dancers, but here we had 75 dancers for that opening number and 90 for the pool. Having such a large group of people makes it feel powerful as a way of representing a community with all these different stories. I know it’s expensive to hire dancers, but it’s worth the money.

Caption: COREY HAWKINS (center) as Benny in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
Caption: COREY HAWKINS (center) as Benny in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

You went to Hollywood High School in Los Angeles. Were your parents in show business?

No. My mom moved us to L.A. from Maryland because my sister and I were struggling there and weren’t doing well in school. If you’d told me then I was going to be a dancer, I would have laughed. But just like Washington Heights has inspiration everywhere, so does Hollywood.

Your choreography has so much personality and drama, it feels like a perfect fit for In The Heights. How did develop your style?

I was inspired by street dance. If you look closely at flexing or bone-breaking, for example, some people might watch that almost like it’s a freak show. But if you watch what they’re actually doing, there’s so much expression in it. And I also love ballet, the way they bring in groups from one direction and then another group swoops around seamlessly. So that’s how my style developed. I’ve been almost on this mission to showcase street dancing as a beautiful art form and putting it together with ballet. It’s like B-boys alongside ballerinas.

When did you get into dance?

When I was fourteen, these tap dancers named John and Sean Scott came to my school. They were street performers at the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica. I would just go dance with them, for tips, and it changed my life. For the first time, I realized “I’ll never be homeless.” We didn’t grow up with a lot of money. I had no direction but all of a sudden I saw that I could always go out and dance for tips. Some people look down on street performers, but it’s an amazing craft because you really have to pull in your audience. Most people are there to shop. Nobody has to give you money. “Pull the car around let’s get out of here.” But if you can grab that audience, get them to reach into their pocket and pull out a five-dollar bill, or a twenty—or I’ve been given $100 bills—that’s entertainment. That’s the power of dance.

In The Heights hits theaters and HBO Max on June 11. 

Featured image: Caption: (Center l-r) DASCHA POLANCO as Cuca, DAPHNE RUBIN-VEGA as Daniela and
STEPHANIE BEATRIZ as Carla in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Steven Soderbergh’s Star-Studded “No Sudden Move” Drops Trailer

When Steven Soderbergh directs a movie, there are a few things you can expect no matter what. One of them is a star-studded ensemble, and that is certainly the case with his upcoming crime caper, No Sudden Move. Set in Detroit in 1954, No Sudden Move features a ridiculously potent ensemble in a story of small-time criminals tasked with what appears to be an easy, low-stakes crime—lift a document, babysit a family, collect their reward. Naturally, the crime is more complicated than that, and the crooks find themselves embroiled in a plot far deeper and more dangerous than they imagined. HBO Max has revealed the official trailer, and it does brisk work of making the case that No Sudden Move has got to be on your summer movie watchlist.

Another thing you always get with a Soderbergh movie is crisp storytelling, crafted by a man who knows every single facet of the filmmaking process down to the most minute detail. The trailer emphasizes how expertly Soderbergh can weave together narrative threads, a dozen or more characters, and a technically brilliant, unfussy filmmaking approach that keeps everything moving.

Two of the crooks are played by two of the best character actors in the business—Don Cheadle is Curt Goynes, and Benicio Del Toro is Ronald Russo. Watch as their simple job becomes anything but, and a parade of stellar actors, including Amy Seimetz, Jon Hamm, Julia Fox, David Harbour, and Ray Liotta pop up. Adding to the allure is a period-perfect mid-century Detroit, complete with the cars that made that city famous.

Check out the trailer below. No Sudden Move hits HBO Max on July 1.

Here’s the official synopsis from HBO:

From director Steven Soderbergh comes the new feature film NO SUDDEN MOVE from Warner Bros. Pictures. Set in 1954 Detroit, NO SUDDEN MOVE centers on a group of small-time criminals who are hired to steal what they think is a simple document. When their plan goes horribly wrong, their search for who hired them – and for what ultimate purpose – weaves them through all echelons of the race-torn, rapidly changing city. The film premieres exclusively on HBO Max THURSDAY, JULY 1 in the U.S.

The film stars Don Cheadle, Benicio Del Toro, David Harbour, Jon Hamm, Amy Seimetz, Brendan Fraser, Kieran Culkin, Noah Jupe, Julia Fox, Frankie Shaw, with Ray Liotta and Bill Duke.

Soderbergh directed the film from a screenplay written by Ed Solomon and produced by Casey Silver, both of whom he collaborated with on his HBO series “Mosaic.” Julie M. Anderson executive produced.

The director’s creative team behind the scenes included Oscar ®-winning production designer Hannah Beachler (“Black Panther”), costume designer Marci Rodgers (“BlacKkKlansman”), with music by David Holmes (“Baby Driver,” TV’s “Killing Eve”).

For more on Warner Bros., HBO, and HBO Max, check out these stories:

“Mare of Easttown” & “The Underground Railroad” Hair Department Head Lawrence Davis

Watch the First 8 Minutes of “In The Heights”

Director David F. Sandberg Teases “Shazam! Fury of the Gods”

“The Flash” Set Photo Teases Bloody Battle for Michael Keaton’s Batman

Featured image: “No Sudden Move” key art. Courtesy HBO.

Watch the First 8 Minutes of “In The Heights”

Get a peek at why critics adore In The Heights by enjoying the first eight minutes of the film. Warner Bros. has made the opening available, and we’ve embedded it for your viewing pleasure, and it’ll give you a good sense of why this is going to be such a blast to see on the big screen.

In the Heights is centered on Usnavi (Anthony Ramos), a bodega owner with big dreams living in the largely Hispanic-American neighborhood of Washington Heights in New York City. When we spoke with music supervisor Bill Sherman last Friday (that interview will be published this week), he told us the original inspiration for the off-Broadway play was the music he and his roommate at the time, Lin-Manuel Miranda, would hear on their walk from their apartment on 200th and Broadway to 180th and Broadway, every Sunday night, to watch The Sopranos at Miranda’s parents’ place. Now here we are, some 13-years later, and the film adaptation from playwright and screenwriter Quiara Alegría Hudes and director Jon M. Chu is here. The opening reveals just how seamlessly the transition from stage to screen has been made, from Miranda’s original inspiration to a big, bold film.

The cast is terrific—joining Ramos are Corey Hawkins, Melissa Barrera, Leslie Grace, Olga Merediz, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Gregory Diaz IV, Stephanie Beatriz, Dascha Polanco, and Jimmy Smits.

Here’s the official synopsis from Warner Bros.:

The creator of “Hamilton” and the director of “Crazy Rich Asians” invite you to a cinematic event, where the streets are made of music and little dreams become big… “In the Heights.”

Lights up on Washington Heights…The scent of a cafecito caliente hangs in the air just outside of the 181st Street subway stop, where a kaleidoscope of dreams rallies this vibrant and tight-knit community. At the intersection of it all is the likeable, magnetic bodega owner Usnavi (Anthony Ramos), who saves every penny from his daily grind as he hopes, imagines and sings about a better life.

“In the Heights” fuses Lin-Manuel Miranda’s kinetic music and lyrics with director Jon M. Chu’s lively and authentic eye for storytelling to capture a world very much of its place, but universal in its experience.

Check out the opening here. In The Heights hits theaters and HBO Max on June 11.

For more on Warner Bros., HBO, and HBO Max, check out these stories:

Director David F. Sandberg Teases “Shazam! Fury of the Gods”

“The Flash” Set Photo Teases Bloody Battle for Michael Keaton’s Batman

“Reminiscence” Trailer Reveals Hugh Jackman in “Westworld” Creator Lisa Joy’s Sci-Fi Feature

The Warrens Dig Deep in Final Trailer for “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It”

Review Roundup: “In The Heights” Soars

James Gunn Teases Epic Harley Quinn Action Sequence in “The Suicide Squad”

Featured image: Caption: (L -r) NOAH CATALA as Graffiti Pete, GREGORY DIAZ IV as Sonny, COREY HAWKINS as Benny and ANTHONY RAMOS as Usnavi in Warner Bros. Pictures’ “IN THE HEIGHTS,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Macall Polay