BURN NOTICE co-star Gabrielle Anwar - a great actress to have on your side for a low budget movie.
March 13, 2009
As BURN NOTICE concludes its season, I am once again reminded what a great actress Gabrielle Anwar is. I had the pleasure of directing her in a low budget Lifetime movie in the Caribbean. She helped make the shoot a memorable experience.
As networks world wide pay less for drama but expect more, budgets drop and schedules get shorter; so how does a director meet expectations? Planning and diplomacy. But it’s essential to have the star in your corner. Some recollections.
DATELINE: MARCH 2006. THE GRAND TURK HOTEL, GRAND TURK ISLAND, CARIBBEAN.
“We can’t let them dictate the terms.”
In the bar of the Grand Turk Hotel after a tough shooting day, I was stating my position about a troublesome location deal with 1st. AD Quentin Whitwell, and German executive producer Andreas Hess, whose company was funding a low budget cable movie LONG LOST SON.
“No,” agreed Andreas, “We dictate the terms…We Germans make the best dictators.”
CLANG! That was the sound of my jaw hitting the bar.
Then Andreas’ face turned from Buster Keaton stone face to Cheshire Cat grin. Andreas’ sense of humor was always taking us by surprise. I was tempted, particularly after another couple of Caribbean brews to offer my John Cleese Fawlty Towers goose stepping and don’t mention the war routine, but somehow I exercised restraint. Rare for me. Andreas is also an accomplished scuba diver, a well connected entrepreneur across European television networks, and a good fellow. His wife and business partner Sylvia was the producer of his films. This was the second film I was making for them on Grand Turk. They trusted me. (So helpful to a director when you feel that.)
Our first film together THE PARADISE VIRUS, shot in 12 days, had been a big foreign sales success. Now I was getting a leisurely 14 days to shoot LONG LOST SON, a script pre-sold to the Lifetime Network in the US by a trio of talented US producers. These producers and the German producers initially did not see eye to eye on a lot of matters, and I sometimes found myself playing diplomat between warring parties during prep and the first week of the shoot.
A Director For All Seasons. I am available for duty in the Middle East if required.
But once we got going and people liked the dailies, (which because of our remoteness, we had to view via FTP site each night), things settled down. Everyone could see they were going to get a saleable film.
I knew Grand Turk Island well - 4 miles long, population 2900 approx - from THE PARADISE VIRUS, which I had produced and directed 3 years before. The writer of LONG LOST SON was Richard Blade, a UK born Los Angeles radio personality, who wrote himself the part of the island’s annoying hotel manager - as an Australian (!) no less.
First I worked with him to adapt his script to the locations I knew were available on the island. Next challenge was that the first 20 minutes of the story take place in Los Angeles , a certain amount of it in heavy rain, but all 14 days would be shot on Grand Turk. Stock footage has been very useful to me in the past, and this project was no exception. I had an arrangement with the Paramount Library for a special rate whenever I bought 25 shots or more. So, coastal aerials/heavy surf/Venice at dusk with storm clouds/aerials of Marina Del Rey at night (with digital rain added)/the whole shipwreck simulation/the search helicopter hovering over water at dusk, fireworks in the sky/sharks cruising for prey/diver’s POV of fish and reef/and more - all that production value, all the LA shots we could not get on Grand Turk, I had written into the script, and ordered from the lab at the start of prep. This is the kind of sleight of hand necessary when working at the $1.3M budget level. For instance there are 56 stock shots in my TIDES OF WAR (or USS POSEIDON: PHANTOM BELOW, in US video stores, but the gay version is better drama). Here is the TOW trailer.
Every director has his own way of working with writers and creative hierarchy. I start by distributing a page by page analysis of any problems, and adding any production changes and creative flourishes to the script that occur to me. Get everyone to sign off and avoid misunderstandings later. Here are a couple of extracts from my memo on the second draft.
Page 31. Eliminate the Boeing 767. That was my first response. However, there is a great VFX shot of one in AIR FORCE TWO flying through a stormy night sky- the first shot of the plane, the one my credit is over. Re-rendering the color of the plane, changing the clouds slightly, and flopping its screen direction would make it a new production value shot we own that is 90% built already. A tight close-up of Kristin in an airline seat panning up from her white knuckles to her face would pay this off and gives us the Act Break.
We cannot do Miami Airport. Let’s assume she flew direct to Provo which would be Port of Entry for whatever country the island of Santa Alicia belongs to. (Still British West Indies?) We can do an establishing shot of Provo airport. Then stage the immigration officer scene in an appropriate location on Grand Turk, not the airport (noise), doubling for a Provo interior. Such an interview would have to have taken place before Kristin would have been allowed to get onto a puddle jumper for her hop to the Island. Let’s try and keep Kristin’s obstacles as real as possible. I suggest a speech by Kristin, fighting her emotions, which persuades the officer to bend a little, as he does, but currently it’s his idea, not hers. Make her active, not reactive, solving her own problems. Stars want these hero building moments. Let’s all think about this and revisit it.
Page 13. I am considering doing a more dynamic TIME TRANSITION to 14 years later via a lock-off shot. If Kristin has her meltdown of grief in the living room. Dolly back to isolate her in the fetal position on the sofa. Lock off. Dissolve to totally new décor and furniture. Three new characters watching television. Are these the people who bought the house? Then Kristin enters from a doorway beyond, dolly forward to good presentation angle of her 14 years older. No gray. As she moves deeper into it, superimpose title: PRESENT DAY.
Want to do a trombone shot for Kristin’s reaction to seeing Mike is alive. Placement of decor and lighting should be designed to enhance distortion effect.
I saw LONG LOST SON as a heart tugging weepie, dedicated to devoted mothers everywhere, and I went all out for the emotional jugular. But I wanted to keep the performances as real as possible, and was greatly aided in this by Gabrielle Anwar, a highly intelligent actress, who loved the script, but advised 2 days before flying to join us that she hated most of her dialogue and was re-writing it herself.
The two producer groups were divided on this issue. It took some fancy footwork to lower the emotional temperature and persuade them to give her a shot. Because she was going to do it anyway. I made sure that none of the lump in the throat power of Richard’s script was lost in the re-write. Good actors are good detectives. They analyze the whys and wherefores of every beat in a scene, looking for inconsistencies. Drama Sleuth Gabrielle added a lot to her character, and was thus totally comfortable with it from Day 1, which is what you need on a 14 day shoot.
The on-screen fractious chemistry between her and Craig Sheffer, playing her estranged husband, was aided by the fact that they had lived together once for many years and had a 13 year old daughter, whom they brought to the island. Gabrielle’s then husband, from whom she separated after the shoot, and their two children also visited. Chinese Film Proverb: may you live in interesting dinner times.

As is the custom in American television, the network casts the leads. I was allowed an opinion, and requested unknown Chace Crawford for the role of the son, based on his knock out audition via FTP site. Back in LA, the hierarchy chose another actor, then happily dithered before making the offer. Suddenly their choice was gone to another offer, I got Chace, and the movie got a future star of GOSSIP GIRL, which will enhance its shelf life for years. From his first scene, I could tell this lad has a future. Let’s hope the business doesn’t destroy him as it has so many talented young people who get fame in their early 20’s. I found Chace to be very level headed so I think he will be OK.
Probably my most controversial decision was to make it evident that the boy initially found this beautiful older woman attractive, totally unaware she is his mother, while she is not yet sure that this stunning young man is her son. The way Gabrielle and Chace handled the chemistry and Oedipal tension of their first meeting was masterful. “She’s got her headlights on” as a male executive at a woman’s network so delicately put it, having looked at my cut. I managed to torpedo any suggestion of adding digital blur to medium shots of Gabrielle’s bikini top. Sometimes low budget can be your friend.

The Lifetime network got a 2.5 rating for LONG LOST SON with no paid advertising, only on air promos for a week before the premiere, it went on to be among Lifetime’s most requested repeats that year. It’s not perfect. A few things make me wince a little. Critics probably mock it, but female audiences respond as intended. It’s my venture into Douglas Sirk emotional melodrama territory with a Caribbean flavor on a shoestring budget, but aided by a savvy music score from David Reynolds, his fourth for me. The music really helps a lot. But I am proud of the film; it delivers just what a particular audience wants. That’s my job, genre by genre.
I have many happy memories of the shoot, including the day off, when we stood in waist deep water and hand fed baby sting rays, a trip which concluded with Gabrielle Anwar, spontaneously shedding her bikini top and diving off our boat to swim with dolphins - sadly no movie camera was present. Gabrielle joins the ranks of Ann Margret, Marg Helgenberger, Lindsay Wagner, Jacqueline Bisset, Mariel Hemingway, Melody Thomas Scott, Connie Sellecca and Penny Johnson Gerald (my Condi in DC: 9/11) as real good sports to work with.
Personally I will also fondly remember being adopted by this stray dog, who would be sitting at my door every night I came back to my garden apartment I would always bring enough dinner for two. She would sit beside me on the sofa with her chin on my lap watching CNN, as I did my shot list for the next day. There were wild dogs on the island, one of which bit my PARADISE VIRUS continuity girl quite badly. But this dog craved human companionship and affection. She would even go swimming with me. Perhaps she knew she was dying, because I learned months later she had a tumor, and had gone to that great kennel in the sky. True story. Sad but true. We need stories that release our emotions. Which is why I wanted to make LONG LOST SON. (FYI: now out on DVD in Australia)
INDUSTRIAL SAFETY IN FILM IS IMPORTANT, PARTICULARLY WHEN USING A FORK LIFT…
March 3, 2009
I have made only one industrial safety film, HOSPITALS DON’T BURN DOWN, currently available on DVD in Australia as a bonus feature on Madman’s release of my re-mastered THE MAN FROM HONG KONG.
Safety films are a worthy cause, and this business of ours could use more focus on safety, particularly as shooting schedules are squeezed ever tighter.
Here’s a German training film on fork lift safety. I include both German and English language versions for your comparison. It is an absolute gem. Watch the German one first. It runs nine minutes. Be patient. It’s worth it. Enjoy.














