‘Kong: Skull Island’: When Hollywood comes to Vietnam
Director Jordan
Vogt-Roberts (R) at the set of ‘Kong: Skull Island’ in Quang Binh, Vietnam,
February 22, 2016. Instagram/voteroberts
Hollywood filmmakers for
‘Kong: Skull Island’ came to Vietname arlier this week,
bringing along a sense of professionalism that local Vietnamese rarely
experience.
Though not
the first time a Hollywood film crew has picked Vietnam as a shoot location,
it certainly has been a while since the Vietnamese last got up close and
personal with American-style filmmaking.
This may
explain the media hype surrounding the event, with dozens of reporters and
paparazzi flooding the outdoor film set in Phong Nha, a town in the
north-central province of Quang Binh.
The tranquil
town, with a population of around 1,000, became lively overnight when
hundreds of locals abandoned their daily work to catch A-list stars Tom
Hiddleston, Brie Larson, and Samuel L. Jackson in the flesh.
Locals gather near the 'Kong: Skull Island' film set in Quang Binh,
Vietnam as seen in a photo uploaded by director Jordan Vogt-Roberts on
February 22, 2016. Photo: Instagram/voteroberts
Absolute confidentiality
Locals say
the lake being filmed, which until now has only served irrigational purposes,
is exotic even to Vietnamese people, and tourists are rarely seen visiting
the attraction despite its beauty.
Tuoi Tre (Youth)
newspaper reporters followed Giang, a local official, to the film set but
were stopped 1km from the scene by a group of security guards.
The
reporters were only allowed to stay on the condition that no recording
devices were to be used.
There have
been previous cases, Giang said, where security has had to seize onlookers’
phones to erase clips and photos they took of the film set.
There are
three separate security checkpoints, says a head of one security team. The
checkpoints lie at 1,000m, 400m, and 100m from the scene.
The
camp site of ‘Kong: Skull Island’ crew on the set in Quang Binh, Vietnam,
February 24, 2016. Photo: Tuoi Tre
“The filmmakers put confidentiality
at the top of their priority list when negotiating the contract with us,”
said a guard when asked for permission to get closer to the set. "With a
budget of hundreds of millions of dollars for the film, a minor leak about
its content can cost the producers a fortune, so we can’t take the risk.”
The film set
is not the only thing being kept secret. All information regarding the film
crew is also confidential.
An official
at Quang Binh’s Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism said the producers
of ‘Kong: Skull Island’ demanded complete confidentiality about the film,
including the specific place each actor and actress stays.
The Tuoi Tre reporters,
hoping to get more information about the film, went inside a hotel where one
of the crew’s vans was parked outside, but it was in vain.
“We have
signed a confidentiality contract with the crew,” a manager told them.
Brie
Larson tries out the traditional costume of Hmong, an ethnic minority in
Vietnam, at the set of ‘Kong: Skull Island’ in Quang Binh, Vietnam, February
22, 2016. Photo: Instagram/brielarson
Professionalism
Rain started
Tuesday afternoon on the second day of filming, but the crew showed no sign
of worry as they quickly grabbed plastic sheets to cover equipment.
Meanwhile, the cast wore raincoats and continued filming.
A Vietnamese
chauffeur hired by the crew told the Tuoi Tre reporters on Wednesday how impressed
he was by the intensity of their working schedule and the effort and
responsibility each member put into their job, regardless of their position.
Parked near
the set were dozens of mini-trucks and trailers carrying the crew’s tools, as
well as an ambulance ready to respond to on-set emergencies.
Among the
fleet were three costume trucks with washing machines, two trucks reserved
for make-up, one for hairdressing, and three others carrying fuel, water, and
food.
Some of the
trucks are refurbished to look like mobile homes on the inside, with all the
necessities required for the filming process.
All these
thorough logistical preparations are to help the cast focus on their job
without being distracted by trivial matters, said Leann Emmert, the crew’s
director of settings.
The scene
takes place on an island undiscovered by humans, she added, so everyone on
the crew had to follow certain paths when moving around the set so as not to
disturb its primitiveness and ensure the film’s logic.
The
lunch area of ‘Kong: Skull Island’ crew on the set in Quang Binh, Vietnam,
February 24, 2016. Photo: Tuoi Tre
The crew stopped for a buffet lunch
around 1:00 pm, with a wide choice of dishes from Western to Vietnamese
cuisines.
Marketing
executive Gregg Brilliant said it was an immense amount of work preparing
food for hundreds of people at the same time, but the cooks were working
their hardest to 're-energize' the crew.
“I’d also
like to speak on behalf of my colleagues,” Brilliant said, “that your country
is truly a beautiful and ideal place for both filming and working. We are
filming scenes that have never been known to the world. Compared to Hawaii
and Australia, where we filmed prior to coming here, Vietnam has scenes that
nowhere else does.”
A photo of the 'Kong: Skull Island' film set in Quang Binh, Vietnam
uploaded by Director Jordan Vogt-Roberts on February 25, 2016. Photo: Instagram/voteroberts
“We have
never witnessed such professionalism!” Ho An Phong, director of Quang Binh’s
Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, exclaimed upon observing the film
set.
‘Kong: Skull
Island’ tells the story of a group of adventurers who set foot on an
uncharted island in the Pacific Ocean – one so breathtaking that people
consider it unreal. Little did they know they just walked into the territory
of the legendary King Kong.
The film,
produced by Legendary Pictures and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, is
expected to hit cinemas in March 2017.
TUOI TRE NEWS
|
Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 2, 2016
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