You don't seem to be familiar with Gray's work. If you were, you would have no concerns. He's a stickler for detail and insists that everything be as authentic as possible. If you'd read this, you'd be excited rather than anxious.
SO Film article about the production of The Lost City of Z, titled “The Art of War” excerpt:
It could have been his great movie cursed, and then not. After The Immigrant, James Gray prepared his great adventure movie: The Lost City of Z. And yet, before going to sink his boots into the Colombian jungle, the New Yorker is planted in the mud, in the green Irish countryside, to reconstitute the battle of the Somme with Charlie Hunnam and Robert Pattinson. An adventure movie, it does more. The story:
…on this Sunday morning, September: on a surface that seems to cover a whole farm estate, green pastures have all been trashed, mangled, massacred by a bulldozer. A network of trenches, heaps of debris and a maze of mud and barbed wire is what remains. On sections of the meadow, one that tilts toward the sky and brand the horizon, vaguely distinguishable helmets can be seen, typical of German soldiers, through the smoke. On the other, in the quagmire of the trenches, dozens of British troops waiting for their commanding officer to give them the signal to charge no man’s land, towards a likely death.
It is the 25th day of filming of The Lost City of Z, the sixth feature film by James Gray and from what one can see, his most ambitious film to date: an impressive production, ”independent,” that today requires 240 technicians, 10 actors and 100 extras. All have the same goal: restore the horrors of the Battle of the Somme during the First World War, where more than a million men died within five months.
Electricians, gunsmiths, stunt, the teams sound, machinists, assistants and at least three cameramen continually come and go in the mud, gathered around a huge 35 mm camera to watch the Brits rushing on arid lands that separate the two armies, then fall back when the ‘Pan! Pan! Pan! “enemy fire the mowing on the spot. Amid the widespread chaos and the strong smell of smoke, Gray (in gray sweater, black scarf to the neck and too big thigh high fisherman boots already smeared with mud) passes from one group to another: he gives specific guidance to each team before returning to the most important plateau where the main team and players are preparing for the next scene.
At the time where the soldiers are ready for filming, an assistant calls Gray: he must return to “A“ camera, they are ready to shoot the Hunnam/Pattinson scene from a different angle. Frustrated at not being able to watch all at the same time, he hurries back to the bunker, trying to avoid deep holes and piles of debris that litter the muddy ground. And then it starts to rain. “This is like a meeting between 'effing Barry Lyndon and Apocalypse Now.”
Everything, this incredible expenditure of energy, all these men for probably, at best, between five and ten minutes of film in the final cut. In many respects, however, the Battle of the Somme is a key sequence in the film, to understand both the life and times of Percy Fawcett, and why Gray wanted to bring them to the screen.
Regarding the removal of the modern day narrator in the adaptation of the book to film, Gray says,“Deconstruction as a method of implementation has been fashionable over the past twenty or thirty years. But I wanted to try another route, because there is nothing more difficult than to succeed with a linear narrative that is both elegant and moving.”
In 2010, Gray completed the scenario and spent two weeks tracking the Amazon in Brazil, to find the ”density and variety”of the jungle that would account for the places crossed by Fawcett. With Pitt in the lead role and a budget of $ 80 million, The Lost City of Z looks like a blockbuster “arthouse” – the kind of epic films that Hollywood produced in arm circumference in the 1970s. Except that Pitt withdrew from the role, and financiers also withdrew. They managed to find other sources of funding… and they choose Charlie Hunnam (from the series Sons of Anarchy), an actor who Gray says has “the intensity and the savagery” of the real Percy Fawcett, with Robert Pattinson and Sienna Miller in their roles, respectively, right arm and wife of explorer.
The budget is revised downward, to $30 million for ten weeks of shooting, first in Belfast (for the scenes in England and those of the First World War) and then in Colombia. After six years of false starts, the laborious birth of the book to film is about to be accomplished.
As for complicating things for himself, Gray refuses to use synthetic images if it is not absolutely required, so everything must unfold ‘live’ before the camera. He also refuses to shoot digitally – which delights Khondji, one of the few cinematographers to work in 35 mm. Why this requirement to shoot on film? For Gray, the answer is simple: “it would look like crap on video.”
“I want you to feel the heat”, he said as he inspected the explosive charges that day… as three teams worked simultaneously on the battlefield. Around “camera A,” Gray directs stars Hunnam and Pattinson for a long very, uninterrupted sequence inside a crowded bunker. The “camera B,” a 2nd team, shoots various action scenes, with the stuntmen and extras that assault this no man’s land. And the 3rd team, ‘camera C,’ ensures that they will catch what the others do not have time to do.
The filmmaker begins to run through the trenches and then goes back on the field of battle and joins the team ready to shoot Fawcett and his men charging the Germans. The smoke is already thick, however this plan requires the use of explosives, lots of blood, and in addition, real flame-throwers.
“Fawcett sought where to shelter his men, but it was impossible to protect these soldiers advancing under a hail of bullets, shells of nine pounds and jets of liquids by a flamethrower… The injured slipped in the shell holes screaming. This time, Fawcett called "Armageddon,” said the book’s author, David Grann.
Gray acknowledged that there are not so many movies that describe the first world war with the level of realism without concessions that he wants for The Lost City of Z. This is why the team looked rather two very different war films: Ran by Akira Kurosawa, and Requiem for a Massacre by Elem Klimov.
Back in the bunker, Gray remains glued to the monitor… watching another angle of the long dialogue scene. After another take, they are ready to move on to the next scene. Hunnam and Pattinson get out of the bunker to take the air. Assistants hold an umbrella over their heads: the downpour is stronger than before. After giving a few instructions, Gray returned on the battlefield to inspect every detail before filming the next shot. Authenticity, as it concerns location, acting or the underlying emotional tone, is the cornerstone of his cinema.
In the car that drives us back to Belfast, Gray sprawls in his seat and long keep eyes closed. “I have the impression of having conducted eight rounds against Muhammad Ali”, he said, half laughing, half seriously, before he closes his eyes again, leaving silence. If the first part of the filming of The Lost City of Z is akin to Kubrick or Fuller production, the Colombian part will be rather Coppola or Herzog.
“I thought, what brought me back to Fawcett and this generation of men who had gone to war, or for other reasons, and who returned home two or three years later. Maybe if they had spent more time with their sons, well, their sons might not have grown up and committed the mass destruction that marked the 20th century. Perhaps a bloodbath of the first world war would not have taken place. Who can ever say?”
This will be his last comment after what has been a very long (maybe longer) day, referring us to a recurring motifs in his films: dangerous, often deadly, links between fathers and sons. The Lost City of Z will also be a story of fathers and sons. Given what finally happened to Percy Fawcett and his child, Jack (played here by Tom Holland, the next Spiderman star), it is difficult to imagine how this film could have with a happy ending.
Gray headed for his hotel by sketching what might resemble a smile, and it looks like he momentarily forgot the journey that awaits him: a trip that will take them, him and his team, into the heart of darkness that have defied many directors in the past. Seen in this light, the war has not even begun.
http://www.robertpattinsonau.com/2015/10/18/print-so-film-the-art-of-war-on-set-photos-and-james-gray-interview-rob-mentions-only-for-robert-pattinson-lost-city-of-z/
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