This series had its genesis when I began Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»area location shoots last summer to get over a long post-Olympics funk. Film and TV productions like This Means War, Mission Impossible 4, Fringe and the new AMC series The Killing showcase our city in similar fashion and sometimes put a celebrity actor or two in the frame. |
Hail Caesar! Andy Serkis's motion-capture performance as the chimpanzee CaesarÌýin the mostly Vancouver-filmed Rise of the Planet of the Apes is nothing short of astonishing. I am nowÌýkicking myself for not stumbling on to any of the Apes location shoots last summer, especially the one on Hornby Street of digital apes scrambling down the marble facade of the YWCA Health & Fitness Centre, which happens to be my gym. That'll teach me not to skip a workout.
Filming of Rise of the Apes began here in July last year before moving onto to San Francisco and Hawaii.ÌýWhen you catch this reboot of the Planet of the Apes franchise in theatres you'll see it does make for a decent game of spot the location. I didn't do well, getting caught up in the story and forgetting to look for Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»area locations. A friend recognized the home of scientist Will Rodman (James Franco) andÌýhis Alzheimer-addled father CharlesÌý(John Lithgow) as aÌýheritage house up behind the Mountain Equipment Co-op Store on Broadway. Crew filmed on that street for two weeks andÌýrecreated the interior of the house for more scenes in studio. ThisÌýis the house where young Caesar grows up and Andy Serkis honoured the home owners by introducing himself to them.
I did spot the BCIT Aerospace and Technology Campus in Richmond in some of the exterior scenes of GEN-SYS, the lab where Will Rodman is using apes as test subjects to develop a cure for his father's Alzheimers.ÌýAndÌýthe Hornby StreetÌýlocation of apes rampaging through San FranciscoÌýafter their escape from theirÌý"Ape Alcatraz" animal shelter, proved instantly recognizable, although I missed the anomoly of Canada Place in one of theÌýcamera shots looking north down to Burrard Inlet.
As for the climatic showdown of apes and men on the Golden Gate Bridge, most of it wasÌýfilmed here with greenscreens on the huge gravel field at Kent and Boundary near the Fraser River path. Background performer Thomas C. Andrews tweeted to tell me ofÌýthe five days he spent last summer running scared on that gravel, playingÌýone of the many pedestrians/motorists trappedÌýon the bridge. I don't know how many days in totalÌýit took to film all the sequences in that showdownÌýbut here's where I got lucky. Rise of the Planet of the Apes returned to Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»this springÌýto do some reshoots ahead of the movie'sÌýopening this month. I photographed the greenscreens, Highway Patrol cars, the extras playing Highway Patrol officersÌýand three of the stop-motion apes (see below). None of themÌýlook like Andy Serkis, but these three performersÌýcould have played some of the other lead apes, such asÌý the chimp Koba and gorilla Buck.
Unlike the other Planet of the Apes Ìýmovies, the apes in this one are not actors in makeup. Peter Jackson's Weta Digtial created them digitally using time motion capture, which is what the orange square markings are for. From a distance I watched one of the men playing an ape bend over simian-style and scamper along the ground with his crutches. He mimicked the movement so well that I could imagine what this ape would look like on the big screen.
Elsewhere, crew used a crane to tipÌýa bus on its side for reshoots ofÌýscenes where the apes upend a bus to use as a barricade from bullets as they try to force their way through the police barricade to get to the giant redwoods in Muir Park.
At the other end of the Kent HangarÌýfield, crew filmed or photographed the scene of one of the mounted police horses rearing up at an ape.ÌýI spied it easily in the finishedÌýfilm.
Some might complain that I'm destroyingÌýmovie magic with these photos but the contrast between the raw greenscreen scenes and what I saw in the movie theatre actually made me more awestruck at what the filmmakers accomplished. For me, Rise of the Planet of the Apes is an instant classic comparable to the 1968 original (which was showing on the TV in the background of one of the Ape Alcatraz scenes; the reboot even paid direct homage with the line:Ìý "Take your stinking hands off me, you dirty ape!") Most film critics agree about Rise of the Planet of the Apes,Ìýgiving it an 82% fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes dot com. The latest Apes filmÌýgrossed almost $55 million in its opening weekend,Ìý making it theÌý#1 movieÌýin North America last weekend, and its week's gross exceeds its just-under $100-million budget.ÌýSequels areÌý being talked about already. And so with apologies to the Twitter campaign trying to shame the filmmakers into filming the next movie in San Francisco as San Francisco, here'sÌýhoping that Caesar and his descendents continue their fight-for-freedom movie saga right here in Vancouver.
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