From the monthly archives:

January 2007

Behind the Scenes: Military Advice

by Ambrose Heron on January 25, 2007

John Adams of Universal CombatWhenever you see military action on screen the production has probably hired a military advisor to make sure things look accurate.

But what are the usual mistakes filmmakers make when portraying the military on screen? How does one become a military advisor? And why do action heroes always pull back the chamber of their pistol?

In order to find the answers to these questions and few more we spoke to John Adams from Universal Combat.

He has worked on projects as diverse as The Four Feathers, The Queen and the forthcoming The Mark of Cain. In the following interview he tells us about the world of military advice for films.

Ambrose Heron: What exactly do you do?
John Adams: I run Universal Combat Ltd., an agency which represents ex-military personnel and provides tri-service military advice and support to the entertainment industry. Universal Combat was formed in the year 2000 by former Commissioned Officers and NCOs representing Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine units from around the world.

Our primary goal was initially to provide the right military advisor to every specific project, but we quickly built up an extensive database of ex-military personnel and found that we could also provide small calls of trained background artists to perform specialist military action in front of camera. Basically, if a project features military action, we are there to advise the key production team and cast to ensure that it is as realistic as possible.

AH: Where are you based?
JA: Universal Combat is based in Chelmsford, Essex but I am also a partner in production company Cowboys & Indians plc and have an office at Shepperton Studios. The Shepperton office has proved vital because I am constantly aware of forthcoming productions and can ensure that we contact them at the earliest possible stage.

AH: How long have films had official military advice?
JA: To my knowledge, we were the first exclusively military agency in the UK and especially the first to set up with our aim to provide the correct military advisor with the relevant experience and qualifications specific to each project. However, military advisors have been commonplace in Hollywood for much longer. During the 1940s and 50s it was not uncommon for military support to be provided to productions by the Ministry of Defence as propaganda and to aid public relations.

More recently though, perhaps because modern films tend to be more politically and socially challenging, the MoD has tended not to become involved. Bear in mind that until 1960 we had National Service in the UK so it is a fair assumption that at that time most production team members and cast had a basic military training!

AH: How did you start out in the industry?
JA: Because of my military experience as a Commissioned Officer in the British Army, I was offered a nine month contract as a specialist background artist on Steven Spielberg’s Band of Brothers. It was during my time on Band of Brothers that I met my future partners in Universal Combat and developed my love for the industry and determination that my future was in film and TV. Band of Brothers was completed in November 2000.

We set up Universal Combat the following month and by mid 2001 we had provided a 76 year old former prisoner of war as an advisor to Hart’s War (starring Bruce Willis and Colin Farrell) and worked on The Four Feathers and submarine horror movie Below.

AH: What films have you worked on recently?
JA: Over the course of the last seven years, we have not only been employed on films but also on TV programmes, commercials, video games, live shows and even security contracts. Recent projects include providing advice and personnel to the Oscar nominated feature The Queen and a TV movie remake of The Shellseekers; training animators and designers from Electonic Arts developing the PS2 and X-Box video game Black in basic military skills relevant to the game; helping the writers of Eastenders to develop a new character for the series; and taking over the military advice role for the post production of the feature film Doom including providing US Marine voice artists for ADR work and writing additional dialogue.

AH: What did you do on The Queen?
JA: As far as possible, The Queen used original archive footage of the events surrounding the death of Princess Diana. However, one event for which they didn’t get the rights to use archive footage was the arrival of Princess Diana’s remains back in the UK at RAF Northolt on August 31st 1997. We were asked to recreate this as accurately as possible.

Initially, our intention was to use ex-soldiers from our database to perform the ceremonial coffin drills but because the RAF Regiment picked the youngest members of the Queen’s Colour Squadron to bear the coffin from the BAe 146 aircraft of the Royal Squadron to a waiting hearse we found that we didn’t have any ex-servicemen young enough for the roles. As a result, I trained a group of background artists in the correct drills and ended up in front of camera to whisper the commands and timings!

AH: What was the toughest challenge you had on a film set?
JA: Without mentioning any specific projects, providing military advice is always a compromise between the reality of a situation and the Director’s artistic vision for the film. Our job is to ensure that as much realism as possible is kept within the constraints of the project but in a way which compliments and helps the Director to achieve their vision without destroying the artistic integrity.

AH: What battle would you love to see re-enacted on screen that is yet to be done?
JA: Perhaps because of my military allegiances, I would love to see a film version of the battle of Salamanca. Salamanca was fought between the Anglo-Portuguese army of Lord Wellington and the French under Marshal Marmont on 22nd July 1812 as part of the Peninsular War. When Wellington observed that Marmont had made the tactical error of separating his left flank from the main body of his force, he allegedly threw the chicken leg he was eating over his shoulder and shouted, “By God, that will do!”.

During the course of the battle a young Officer from the 44th East Essex Regiment of Foot named Lieutenant Pearce captured the Salamanca Eagle from the French 62nd Regiment of Line. The 44th became part of The Essex Regiment which was subsequently amalgamated by stages into my unit The Royal Anglian Regiment in 1964. As an Army Cadet I was proud to bugle The Last Post and Reveille for veterans at the Essex Regiment reunion.

AH: What is the biggest mistake filmmakers tend to make when portraying the military?
JA: Strangely, it’s the little errors which stand out for me much more than the glaring ones. Most mistakes stem from a lack of knowledge which is understandable, but there are occasions when filmmakers show a complete lack of common sense! Again, I don’t want to cite specific projects we have worked on but my favourites are sentries smoking cigarettes at night and soldiers silhouetted against the skyline. For years military units around the world have been developing monocular vision goggles – a modern equivalent for the red dot you see in sniper movies at the intended point of impact except only visible to the sniper because the laser is at a frequency which can only be seen through the specific goggle he is wearing… All of this becomes irrelevant if a sentry is smoking at night because the heat of the cigarette creates an orange dot on his face! No professional soldier would risk his life for a smoke!

I’ve had conversations about soldiers on the horizon with directors on several occasions. Yes, it looks great on camera to have a silhouette of a soldier on the skyline at dusk, but he is breaking a fundamental rule of camouflage and concealment! The outline of a human shape lit from behind on a skyline is visible for miles. This may look artistic on film but it also means that the enemy can see him and his life expectancy just plummeted to about three seconds!

AH: In action films, characters often pull back the chamber of their pistol when preparing for a gunfight. Is this accurate or just Hollywood nonsense?
JA: It depends on the scenario. The weapon would almost certainly have been readied in advance and if silence is important then obviously a serious soldier would be confident enough not to check the chamber. However, once a firefight begins, it can be reassuring to check that a round is definitely loaded into the chamber and the weapon is ready to fire before exposing your position… and it does make a great noise!

AH: What other projects do you have coming up?
JA: We recently provided a military advisor to a feature titled Mark of Cain which is set during the most recent Iraq conflict and which is due for release early this year. Without giving too much away, we’ve also been asked to become involved in a film about the origins of the SAS; my production company Cowboys & Indians has two projects in development set in World War II; and as ever I will be attending the Berlin Film Festival next month and Cannes later in the year so hopefully this might be another busy year!

If you want to find out more about Universal Combat (or even hire them) just go to their website at www.universalcombat.co.uk

Universal Combat logo

 

{ 1 comment }

The Oscar Nominations in full

by Ambrose Heron on January 23, 2007

Here is the full list of nominees for the 79th Academy Awards. They will be held on Sunday 25th February at the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles:

Best picture
Babel
The Departed
Letters From Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
The Queen

Best director
Clint Eastwood, Letters From Iwo Jima
Stephen Frears, The Queen
Paul Greengrass, United 93
Alejandro Gonzales Inarritu, Babel
Martin Scorsese, The Departed

Best actor
Leonardo DiCaprio, Blood Diamond
Ryan Gosling, Half Nelson
Peter O’Toole, Venus
Will Smith, The Pursuit of Happyness
Forest Whitaker, The Last King of Scotland

Best actress
Penelope Cruz, Volver
Judi Dench, Notes on a Scandal
Helen Mirren, The Queen
Meryl Streep, The Devil Wears Prada
Kate Winslet, Little Children

Best supporting actress
Adriana Barraza, Babel
Cate Blanchett, Notes on a Scandal
Abigail Breslin, Little Miss Sunshine
Jennifer Hudson, Dreamgirls
Rinko Kikucki, Babel

Best supporting actor
Alan Arkin, Little Miss Sunshine
Jackie Earle Haley, Little Children
Djimon Hounsou, Blood Diamond
Eddie Murphy, Dreamgirls
Mark Wahlberg, The Departed

Best foreign language film
Efter Brylluppet (aka After the Wedding), Denmark
Indigenes (aka Days of Glory), Algeria
El Laberinto del Fauno (aka Pan’s Labyrinth), Mexico
Das Leben der Anderen (aka The Lives of Others), Germany
Water, Canada

Best animated feature film
Cars
Happy Feet
Monster House

Best adapted screenplay
Borat
Children of Men
The Departed
Little Children
Notes on a Scandal

Best original screenplay
Babel
Letters from Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
The Queen
Pan’s Labyrinth

Best music (score)
Babel
The Good German
Notes on a Scandal
Pan’s Labyrinth
The Queen

Best music (song)
I Need to Wake Up - An Inconvenient Truth
Listen - Dreamgirls
Love You I Do - Dreamgirls
Our Town - Cars
Patience - Dreamgirls

Best documentary feature
Deliver Us From Evil
An Inconvenient Truth
Iraq In Fragments
Jesus Camp
My Country, My Country

Best documentary short subject
The Blood of Yingzhou District
Recycled Life
Rehearsing A Dream
Two Hands

Best visual effects
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Poseidon
Superman Returns

Best cinematography
The Black Dahlia
Children of Men
The Illusionist
Pan’s Labyrinth
The Prestige

Best art direction
Dreamgirls
The Good Shepherd
Pan’s Labyrinth
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
The Prestige

Best animated short film
The Danish Poet
Lifted
The Little Matchgirl
Maestro
No Time for Nuts

Best short film
Binta and the Great Idea
Eramos Pocos (One Too Many)
Helmer & Son
The Saviour
West Bank Story

Best costume design
Curse of the Golden Flower
The Devil Wears Prada
Dreamgirls
Marie Antoinette
The Queen

Best make-up
Apocalypto
Click
Pan’s Labyrinth

Best sound mixing
Apocalypto
Blood Diamond
Dreamgirls
Flags of our Fathers
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

Sound editing
Apocalypto
Blood Diamond
Letters from Iwo Jima
Flags of our Fathers
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest

Best film editing
Babel
Blood Diamond
Children of Men
The Departed
United 93

> Find out more about the nominated films at Wikipedia

{ 0 comments }

Oscar Nominations to be announced

by Ambrose Heron on January 23, 2007

Later today the Oscar nominations will be announced by Salma Hayek and Academy President Sid Ganis.

There are always a few surprises but here are my predictions for the main categories:

BEST PICTURE
The Departed
Dreamgirls
Babel
The Queen
Little Miss Sunshine

BEST DIRECTOR
Martin Scorcese (The Departed)
Bill Condon (Dreamgirls)
Paul Greengrass (United 93)
Stephen Frears (The Queen)
Alejandro Gonzalez Innarritu (Babel)

BEST ACTOR
Forest Whitaker (The Last King of Scotland)
Leonardo DiCaprio (The Departed)
Peter O’Toole (Venus)
Will Smith (The Pursuit of Happyness)
Ryan Gosling (Half Nelson)

BEST ACTRESS
Helen Mirren (The Queen)
Penelope Cruz (Volver)
Kate Winslet (Little Children)
Meryl Streep (The Devil Wears Prada)
Judi Dench (Notes on a Scandal).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Jack Nicholson (The Departed)
Eddie Murphy (Dreamgirls)
Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine)
Jackie Earle Haley (Little Children)
Djimon Hounsou (Blood Diamond)

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls)
Cate Blanchett (Notes on a Scandal)
Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine)
Rinko Kikuchi (Babel)
Adriana Barraza (Babel)

They will be announced at 13.30 GMT and 05.30 PST.

> Check out more Oscar predictions and news at Oscarwatch
> CNN think the nominees are easy to predict

{ 0 comments }

DVD Pick for Monday 22nd January

by Ambrose Heron on January 22, 2007

Little Miss Sunshine is the real word of mouth success of the past year. Since it debuted at the Sundance Film Festival (almost exactly a year ago) it has won audiences and critics over with its charming brand of bittersweet comedy. It follows a dysfunctional family from Albuquerque as they drive to California in order to take their young daughter (Abigail Breslin) to a beauty pageant. A pushy father (Greg Kinnear), a stressed mother (Toni Collete), a depressed Proust scholar (Steve Carell) and a foul mouthed grandpa (Alan Arkin) all form the rich bag of misfits in the film.

First time directors Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris manage to create a genuinely charming comedy whilst avoiding easy cliches and schmaltz. It also neatly breaks a taboo of US pop culture in that it actually celebrates losers, rather than turning them in to bland success stories. Watch out for it at the BAFTAs and Oscars - it might not be this year’s Crash but it could certainly be a strong dark horse candidate.

> Check out reviews of the film at Metacritic
> Buy the DVD from Amazon

{ 0 comments }

Cinema Picks for Friday 19th January

by Ambrose Heron on January 19, 2007

A really busy week at UK cinemas sees the release of no less than four major films. So if you can brave the extreme weather conditions you may find something worthwhile, especially if you are a fan of multi-layered dramas, boxing underdogs, Truman Capote or plucky Dutch girls in World War 2.

Babel is a thoughtful multi-layered drama from Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez Innarritu. It bears many similarities to his previous two films (Amores Perros and 21 Grams) with its use of intertwining narratives but is more ambitious in scope and theme. A US couple in holiday in Morroco (Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett), a Mexican nanny and two children under her care and a Japanese teenager in Tokyo who are all connected by a single gunshot. The acting is first rate (watch out for a startling turn from Japanese newcomer Rinko Kikuchi) and the cinematography and editing is superb. A moving and intelligent film whose themes of miscommunication and clashing cultures are sadly all too relevant in today’s world.

Incredibly Rocky is back for his sixth film in Rocky Balboa and Sylvester Stallone returns as both star and director. Here Rocky is persuaded to come out of retirement when ESPN stage a simulated fight on computer between Rocky and current World champ Mason “The Line” Dixon. His promoters think an exhibition match could be a money spinner so they persuade the aging Italian Stallion to fight in Vegas. Although the Rocky series should really have ended years ago Stallone wisely infuses this with the understatement and low key charm that made the first one such a hit.

Infamous is the ‘other’ film about Truman Capote writing In Cold Blood was unfortunate to go in to production around the same time as Bennett Miller’s Capote that came out last year. That film was widely acclaimed and Philip Seymour Hoffman won an Oscar for his brilliant central performance. This film is not as good, but there is still much to admire, especially the acting which is uniformly excellent. Toby Jones stands out with a performance that certainly merits comparison to Hoffman’s portrayal and Daniel Craig gives killer Perry Smith a brooding intensity that wasn’t in the other version. Its not as technically accomplished as Capote but still worth a look.

Dutch director Paul Verhoeven returned to his native country to direct Black Book, a World War 2 drama about a Jewish woman who joins the Resistance in Holland as it endures Nazi occupation. When her family are killed she goes undercover but has to deal with double crosses and intrigue from both sides. Carice van Houten in the lead role gives an impressive performance and the film is well paced. However, beneath all the well staged action the film doesn’t really grapple with any deep issues. It is more interesting than Verhoeven’s recent Hollywood films but could have been something really special.

FILM OF THE WEEK: Babel

> Get cinema showtimes for your local area via Google Movies

{ 0 comments }