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"Gettin' Grown" was conceived and produced primarily in Wisconsin. |
| By Mark Metcalf Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Mark Metcalf |
| Published June 5, 2008 at 5:29 a.m. |
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(page 2)
The people who have formed Film Wisconsin have focused primarily on attracting big Hollywood films. That's understandable, because those films draw a lot of attention to themselves and thus to the state and it's many beautiful locations. But if the big Hollywood films are to come here and spend a lot of time shooting their pictures here, they are going to need two things in addition to the very attractive tax breaks.
One is bricks and mortar infrastructure. By that, I mean sound stages. Warehouse space that is big enough to construct a set, high enough to rig lights and scaffolding for a camera for those Hitchcockian overhead shots, and office and editing facilities. The beginning version of that need is being met by Lightening Rod Studios in St. Francis. They even have a green screen stage and computer imaging equipment for making monsters come alive in your living room, if your living room is where you like them.
But for now the big pictures will go back to Hollywood, or to Chicago, or New Mexico, New Orleans, or New York, or North Carolina where there are sound stages already built and powered up to do the bulk of their work. But that's all right. These are the kind of potatoes you peel one at a time. The sound stages will come and if you build them, as the voice said to Kevin Costner in the cornfield, "they will come."
The other thing that is necessary to attract the big Hollywood movies is "people infrastructure" -- the crew and cast to get 'er done. A movie company spends a huge portion of it's budget housing and feeding a crew that it has to bring all the way from Hollywood or New York, or Chicago or Dallas, where such crews already exist. Having produced a feature, I know that you are liable to spend $200 per man per day for a hotel room and $100 per man, per day for food allowance.
Now look at the credits for any big budget Hollywood movie and count the number of people on the grip, electric and camera crews alone. There are anywhere from 12 to 15 people, not including the key people, in those crews. Now if there were people here who knew how to light a set, move cable and dollies around, and focus and load a 35mm camera, the movie company could hire them and save all that per diem and hotel expense. That goes for actors, too. But if Johnny Depp lived here, no one would get anything done because they'd be down at the supermarket trying to get a sighting.
But there are some very good actors here right now who would be happy to take a shot at Depp as he runs from a bank robbery or what ever he is doing in "Public Enemies."
And this us back to "Gettin Grown." If the state and Film Wisconsin could bring a more passionate level of support to the small, independent, local filmmaker, like the people who made "Gettin' Grown," then that "people infrastructure" would begin to grow and exist here instead of draining away to the cities offering more work. And there are quite a few local, independent filmmakers and more and more throughout the Midwest.
I have worked with several in the few years I have lived here. And many of them work with me educating local high school students in the craft of screenwriting and filmmaking through the Milwaukee International Film Festival's Student Screenwriting Competition.
There is a lot of talent here and a real desire to share their knowledge and skills. But they need support. The Film Festival tries to support Midwest filmmakers with its Midwest Filmmaker Competition, which has grown tremendously in the three years that they have offered a cash prize.
They also focus on local filmmakers in their Milwaukee Shorts program each year, when they screen the short films of local filmmakers, or when they pick films like "Getting' Grown" or "Reeseville" or "Chump Change" to headline the Festival in September each year. All three of those films are quite good and my imaginary "Homegrown Films" production company could have made all of them. The latter two imported some actors, but "Gettin' Grown" is entirely home made.
Another reason why this film is important is because it takes place in the core, in the economically depressed part of town, the part that gets Milwaukee described as one of the most segregated cities in America. But it is not about gangs, not about drugs, not about broken homes, violence or dysfunctional people.
It is about family, about young men trying very hard to remember what the right thing is and to keep on track and do it. It is about parenting in the best way, with the awareness that there are distractions, and distortions and dangerous choices to be made that can change your life forever and that there needs to be eternal vigilance from a parent to guide and protect the child.
I think a lot about the walls between the races here in Milwaukee and applaud the people who are working to take down those walls, even if only brick by brick. The people who made "Gettin' Grown" are now developing a film called "Fruit of the Tree."
"Fruit of the Tree" is the story of James Cameron, who was lynched but survived in 1929 in Marion, Ind. He had been arrested and charged with a crime that he was only tangentially involved in, but men and women broke into the jail, took him and his two friends to a tree in the middle of town and hanged them. Cameron was the last to be hanged and someone interceded before he died and he was spared.
He went on to be a very active supporter of the NAACP, moved to Milwaukee, and eventually started America's Black Holocaust Museum just south of North Avenue on 4th Street. It is a very powerful story and one that I think all people of the United States should be aware of. As we can see by the current Presidential campaign, racism is not a thing of the past. It may have changed its shape a little, but it is still a force.
Fran Kaplan, the producer, and Aaron Greer, her son and the director of both "Gettin' Grown" and "Fruit of the Tree" have written a wonderful script that won some recognition at the Tribeca Film Festival and is now being read by well known film actors. It will be made soon and may well be the first film under the new tax legislation to be made in Milwaukee, by people from Milwaukee, about people who live in Milwaukee.
They are working very hard to make a truly homegrown or homemade product because they believe in this city and they believe in its people. All of its people.
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1 comment about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by citykid on June 5, 2008 at 12:12 p.m. (report)
Very thoughtful piece, Mark. I hope the film on James Cameron gets made. His story is remarkable; he was a passionate and articulate advocate for social justice until the day he died. It is sad that the American Holocaust Museum that he created to remind us of the nation's shameful legacy of slavery doesn't attract more visitors and financial support. I guess people prefer getting freaked out by corpses than facing up to the evil that amounts to a secular version of an Original Sin. By the way, did you catch Karen Allen in the new Indie movie? Boy, it's been awhile since she (and Donald Sutherland) mooned us in Animal House, eh?
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