Making Soup from a Bag of Screws.
Video Production on a Budget
The job involved
producing a music video, commissioned by Bonnieramigo Records-Stockholm, for
the band Molotov Jive.
·
Background:
In 2006, the ground was just about to fall
out from under the music industry. The spectre of massive file sharing meant
that revenues were about to be hit hard, and labels were already tightening
their belts in regard to promotional spending. Where once, you might expect a
budget of $50’000 for the video of a labels new flag ship artist; now you might
be lucky with a few thousand at best. Such was the case here. My budget for this
shoot was 40’000 Swedish Kronor. ($ 6071 in today’s Aussie money)
·
The Start
Point.
As the producer, the first job was to
assess the song and create a visual treatment for the video clip. As it was the
band’s first real video, I thought it was important to do more of a performance
video than some elaborate story led clip. This was the band’s ‘big hello’ so I
wanted the audience to get to see who they were, rather than get too arty with
the clip.
·
The Song.
The song was called ‘Made in Spain’ and it was spawned
by the band’s main man, Anton Annersand. The song was basically a tale of teenage
lust and guilt that came about after Anton had slept with his best friend’s
girlfriend, whilst they were both on a 3 day college study trip to Barcelona.
The song dealt with the lustful holiday romance, and then the awful guilt that
they both felt upon returning home and trying to pretend nothing had happened.
·
The
Director.
With not much money to play with, I turned to an old
friend, Nick Small. Nick was currently a director on TV show, Top Gear, but
prior to settling down with wife and kids, he had directed several great videos
by Welsh band The Manic Street Preachers, as well as working with Madonna.
Nick decided to do it, simply as he liked the song,
and he quite fancied doing a music video again. He offered to do it for $1000.
The
Treatment.
Nick Small made the comment in his usual blunt,
northern English way.
‘Unless you
want to film it in a fucking Swedish tapas bar, I suggest we go to Barcelona;
being that it features so heavily in the song.’
He was right of course. The location was integral to
the song and how we visually captured it, but it wasn’t reflected in the
budget. However, we decided to at least try to work out a way of doing it, and
that then gave rise to the key idea within the treatment. A few years earlier a
movie came out called, Catch Me If You
Can. In the film, Leonardo DiCaprio plays real life 1960’s con-man, Frank
Abagnale, who spends a decade pretending to be an airline pilot, a lawyer, and
also a surgeon, albeit never having trained to be any of them. The back drop
for the film is the 1960’s playgrounds of the rich and famous. The French
Riviera, Rome, Paris, and Barcelona, and Steven Spielberg’s cinematography
perfectly captures the cool and vibrant spirit of the time.
At the beginning of the film, a 17 year old Abagnale
watches a young airline captain walking down his street. The young mums with
their children are all looking at him as he passes by in is smart uniform, peak
cap on his head, and mirrored aviator shades. Every girl he passes turns and
looks longingly at him; and it is the moment that Abagnale, decides that the
girls obviously love airline pilots, and he subsequently breaks into Pan
American Airlines warehouse and steals some uniforms for himself. What if we
could get our hands on four airline captains’ uniforms, and capture the same
reactions on the streets of Barcelona?
The
Logistics.
So far I had spent $1000 for the director and another
$400 for his return flights from Manchester to Barcelona. However, an intensive
web search for accommodation had sourced a 7 birth apartment in down town
Barcelona for $800 for 3 nights, arriving Sunday and leaving Wednesday. I had
also managed to get budget airline flights from Stockholm to Barcelona for
around $100 per person. I was now running at $2700.
The plan was to arrive on the Sunday afternoon. On the
Monday we would dress the band as handsome young airline pilots and source some
locations to film them, and the reactions of the people on the streets. On the
Tuesday, we would find a location that screamed BARCELONA, and do a performance
shoot of them miming to the song.
The big issues that still needed resolving were the
following.
1. Cameras and
filming equipment.
2. Drums.
3. Airline
Uniforms.
4. Transport.
5. Permits to
film.
The first two were going to be the hardest to solve. Although
Nick Small was able to get a good deal on a high end HD camera in the UK, the
cost of the insurance to take it abroad was more per day than the cost of four
days entire hire. The only option was to hire one in Barcelona. A web search of
Spanish film production companies gave us a great result. Not only did Nick
find one with a suitable camera, but the manager turned out to be a guy he had
worked with some years earlier. To cap it off, they currently had a shoot on
hold, because the lead actor had broken his leg after drunkenly throwing a TV
out of a hotel window and falling out with it. The crew were currently being
paid to sit around a swimming pool for a few days, and the camera truck was
parked up on the director’s driveway. We could have the truck for $1000 for the
2 days, (as it was already paid for) and one of the camera crew was happy to
come and help out for $400 cash in the hand. (Running Total $4100)
The next issue was a drum kit. The band were going to bring
guitars and cymbals as their main pieces of luggage, but we couldn’t very well
afford to ship a drum kit over from Sweden. The solution was social media. I
did a social media search for bands in Barcelona and got in contact with a
couple of people. Barcelona indie band, Dunno,
were great guys. I explained the situation and offered them $150 to borrow
their drum kit for an afternoon. Of course, they could come to the shoot and
we’d take them out afterwards for dinner and beers. I just had to hope they
turned up.
Despite several airlines saying that they would see what they
could do; it seemed that 9/11 had put pay to anyone feeling comfortable about
loaning out fly-boy uniforms. The solution was to go DIY. All the band members
informed me that they had some smart black suit trousers and formal black
shoes, so that was the bottom half sorted. $100 in an army surplus store bought
me four peak caps, $50 in a sewing and craft store bought me some gold braid, a
metre of black felt cloth, and suitable gold plastic cap badges, and another
$100 in H&M got me four cheap white shirts and black ties. With the help of
someone’s nice mother, the gold braid and black felt was glued around eight
pieces of stiff card and made into shoulder epilates, which were fixed to the
white shirts with Velcro. Hey, presto, airline pilots.
Transport was solved by the director picking up a Renault
crew bus at the airport hire company, for around $400 for 3 days, and
delivering it back on his return. This also saved us his taxi fares to, and
from the airport.
Running
Total. $4900.
We arrived to Girona airport around lunch time on the Sunday,
and were at the rental apartment by around 3pm, via the airport shuttle bus.
($20 each, return) Nick, the director arrived at around 8pm, from Manchester,
UK, and thankfully the Spanish band guys arrived around 9pm and had some beers
and tapas.
On the Monday morning at 10, am, a Mexican guy called Juan
Pablo showed up in a massive location truck full of camera gear and lamps. Nick
had ear marked a few locations, and after a quick stop at the town hall to pay
$50 for our public filming permit, we headed off in to Barcelona. First stop,
Los Ramblas, the main tourist area. We then headed to the Sargada Familia, the
amazing cathedral designed by Antonio Gaudi, and collared a load of English
school girls to be in the video. We also realized that the exterior of our
apartment block was designed by Gaudi and decided to try and film as much of
his architecture as we could.
Next stop, the Gaudi Gardens, on the plateau above the city. Upon arriving here, we realized we would need to adopt a guerrilla shoot tactic, as the signs said no filming, and the place was a nightmare to park. We had no option but to park illegally next to a park rangers shed and hope that any wardens assumed it was a park ranger’s vehicle. We had no such luck. Before we had taken the camera cases from the back of our little hire bus, a Guardia cop pulled up on his Harley Davidson; all leather boots, aviator shades, and big mustache. He started to tell us to move our van, but then spotted all the camera equipment.
Next stop, the Gaudi Gardens, on the plateau above the city. Upon arriving here, we realized we would need to adopt a guerrilla shoot tactic, as the signs said no filming, and the place was a nightmare to park. We had no option but to park illegally next to a park rangers shed and hope that any wardens assumed it was a park ranger’s vehicle. We had no such luck. Before we had taken the camera cases from the back of our little hire bus, a Guardia cop pulled up on his Harley Davidson; all leather boots, aviator shades, and big mustache. He started to tell us to move our van, but then spotted all the camera equipment.
‘Hey, Gringo’s... You are making movie?’
‘Yes,’ I replied; hoping for some empathy.
He took off his
shades and smiled. ‘You need policeman in your movie?’ he said, half joking.
Fuck it, I thought, ‘Yes! You wanna be in our movie?’
For the next hour we enjoyed a free reign of the amazing
Gaudi plateau gardens, accompanied by our new friend, whom we constantly got to
walk through shots we were never going to use. We decided to wrap for lunch and
asked El Copper if he knew anywhere nice to have lunch?
‘You know La
Salamanca?’ he said.
After some protracted direction that we were struggling to
comprehend, he simply climbed on to his motorbike and beckoned us to follow
him. We were then given a police escort through the mad Barcelona traffic to
the beach at Barcelonetta, where he peeled off and gave us a blast on his siren
as an Adios.
Nick, the directors, luck in procuring all the camera gear so
cheaply had meant we had a little more money left than I had expected, so it
was decided to treat ourselves to the greatest Paella we would ever eat in our
entire lives.
After lunch we resumed our filming and encountered a very
comical situation in one of the cities squares. There was another film crew,
whom we discovered were from an MTV Europe music show. It wasn’t long before
their producer pulled over the guys in the band and asked them to do a link for
the show with the pretty Spanish girl VJ. As we walked off, laughing at their
Spanish TV debut of, ‘Hey, you’re
watching MTV with Maria Hernandez.’ It suddenly occurred to Nick, our
director, that the MTV crew maybe hadn’t realized the guys were actually a
band? Having run back and checked it
out, the pretty girl presenter ran over to us once more, telling us that they
thought the guys were actually airline pilots, but even more brilliant if they
were a band, and did they want to do an interview and plug their new single?
Day two was to be a performance shoot, miming to the song.
The director had chosen the beach at Barcelonetta, half a kilometre down from the
main tourist area to avoid too many locals coming over and trying to get into
the shot. We arrived at around 10.30 am and it looked to have been a good call.
The location had an amazing panorama of the city behind us, and the whole
stretch of beach was practically deserted.
As we set about organizing the shots list and setting up the
Spanish bands drums, Johan, the drummer looked up from his kneeling position
next to the kit and found himself staring at a wizened and sun tanned set of
elderly gentlemen’s vegetables. It transpired that we were on the nudist beach;
which accounted for why there weren’t many people there. Some old nudists had
wandered over to see what we were doing, and Johan had looked up and almost
bumped some wrinkly old man’s wedding tackle with his nose.
By 2 pm it was a wrap. We had filmed the band performing the
song about ten times, and then thrown in some surreal shots of them sun bathing
in full pilot regalia, in between lots of mustachioed Spaniards constantly trying to get in to the shots. To cap off a fun few days, our new friends from
Spanish indie rockers, Dunno, had managed to organize a very short notice gig
at a local venue.
With serious hangovers, we flew back to Sweden on the
Wednesday lunch time, suffering a massive and dramatic loss of altitude as we
hit cold air over the Alps. This was then compounded by Stockholm being in the
grip of a Baltic gale and the plane almost barrel rolling before it touched
down. Within two weeks we had a finished edit of the video. The editor had
graded the digital film to make it look like wide-screen soft focus 35 mm, and
it totally captured the feel we had been hoping to achieve. A few days later,
the head of A&R at the record label, called me up in a panic.
‘How much
money have you spent on this?’ he said nervously.
‘Less than $6000’ I told him, ‘And we still had enough left
over to spend $500 on lunch at La Salamanca, and then get roaring drunk on mojitos
at the end of the shoot,... all on your budget.’
I knew he would think I was joking.
The record label’s promo people continued the trend. No one
could believe that we had flown seven people to Spain, accommodated them all in
a beautiful city centre apartment, fed and paid them, and rented a huge
Ghostbusters truck with a million dollars worth of film equipment and crew. We
had also delivered a music video that looked as if it had cost ten times what
it actually did. In addition, we had all enjoyed a nice sunny working holiday
in one of the world’s most beautiful cities, eaten like kings, drank like lords,
and all out of a tiny budget.
If there is a lesson to be learned here, it’s that the idea
and the vision are much more important than the budget. Of course, there is no
point in trying to shoot a Spielberg epic on only a few thousand dollars, because you are always
going to end up with a mess. However, a strong central idea and a resourceful
mind set can often buy you much more.
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