| Shooting in Los Angeles
It was important to the filmmakers to shoot in Los Angeles for a variety of
reasons, not only because of proximity to home, but also with the desire to
help keep production in Hollywood. Despite a pack of naysayers at his heels,
Koch was able to create a cost-effective budget without sacrificing quality.
"My challenge was to make our film look like a 60 or 70-million dollar film
and not spend anywhere near that kind of money," says Koch. "I'm proud
that we could make a rich-looking movie, work decent hours and do it for a good
price. We owe thanks to our D.P., Kramer Morgenthau, who can light fast and made
every scene look exquisite. He's going to have a name as one of the best in the
business for a long time to come."
Hoblit likes to make movies that look as though they are set in Anywhere, USA
so that audiences can more easily identify with the characters. He credits production
designer Paul Eads and location managers Richard Davis and Mike Fantasia with
helping to make that happen.
Despite the fact that southern California is home for most of the production
team, shooting Fracture in Los Angeles presented many surprises and offered
Hoblit and his crew a new look at the city.
"L.A. is an amazing place once you get past the bias about its being flat,
sprawling and architecturally uninteresting," jokes Hoblit. "L.A. is
usually shot in harsh light, very washed out, but I loved giving it a three-dimensional,
rich quality, even in some of the more rundown sections of town. It has so much
color and personality."
"It's a bit of a forgotten city for the moment," says Ryan Gosling. "It's
rundown, but there's some amazing architecture and beautiful buildings that have
been ignored since they were built at the turn of the century. But it's beginning
to be renovated and re-gentrified, so it's an interesting time to be down there
because it's still a bit of a ghost town and it will never be like this again."
Gosling was particularly thrilled to shoot at Disney Hall because, try as
he might to find tickets to the any of the sold-out performances since the
hall's opening, he came up empty-handed. "I was so irritated because I could never
get tickets," he says in mock despair, "but not only did I get in
this time, I got to walk on stage, explore backstage, sit in the best seats,
see the view from the roof," he laughs. "I got a really unique tour,
so I feel pretty lucky."
Fracture was the first motion picture to utilize the main stage and auditorium
of the Frank Gehry-designed performing arts center, where the company filmed
mezzo soprano Vivica Genaux and her accompanist, Paul Floyd. They also shot
several pieces of the sequence where Willy and Nikki first meet in the foyer
area.
The Crawford home was another architectural wonder located in the Encino
area of the San Fernando Valley, where the company spent several weeks shooting
at a private estate. "The house sits behind these big gates like a cement
and glass bunker with abuttressing overhang," recalls Hoblit. "It
must be 80% glass, supported by struts, but you can see from one end of the
house all the way to the other, all the way through it, side to side, end to
end, anywhere you go. It would be a little unnerving to live in a house like that,
but fortunately it's pretty well-hidden."
The Sherman estate is protected on all sides by giant hedges, walls, gates,
and a formidable hill that leads to a guest house and tennis court which perch
high above the pool and backyard. It is also surrounded by a small orchard of
orange trees, rosebushes, lavender and blooming flora. It has been used in
films before, but has never been showcased to this extent.
Hoblit and Morgenthau particularly liked the reflections and double images
that occurred when shooting through the house and its many layers of glass,
a circumstance usually considered a mistake in traditional camera work. They
frequently placed their cameras outside the house to film scenes going on inside,
another rare occurrence for Hoblit, who calls himself a "stickler" when
it comes to being close to the action, but in this case took advantage of his
ability to use his cameras as the eyes of a voyeur.
Hoblit calls the house "camera-friendly" and says "it was just
made to order; a real gift," while Morgenthau believes the opposite, but
attests to how good the house looks on camera.
"It was very film-unfriendly, but it was worth every bit of effort and heartbreak
and stepping on top of each other," the cinematographer says. "It was
a classic, Schindler-influenced building, where the interiors and exteriors flowed
from one to the other, but it was not easy," he laughs.
Other locations used include the prestigious law firm, Jones Day, The Standard
Hotel Downtown LA rooftop bar, Los Angeles City Hall and the now-vacant women's
prison,Sybil Brand Institute. The company also spent time at a private residence
in Hancock Park, at RFK Medical Center in Hawthorne, in Santa Monica at the
Fairmont Miramar Hotel and at Steelcase Furniture Showroom and Sales Office,
and in Long Beach at St.Mary's Hospital and West Coast Aircraft Charters, among
others sites.
Hopes
Hoblit hopes Fracture entices the same audiences who loved Primal Fear. "I
think the film has wide appeal," he says. "It's entertaining, it's
got a brain, and it showcases a lot of wonderful actors who will probably expand
their fan bases because it's a different look into what they can do."
Anthony Hopkins agrees. "It's a well-made movie of the old school," he
says. "You want to know if Willy's going to nail Crawford, but you're more
fascinated by the process of getting there."
And even though executive producer Hawk Koch knows the ending, he vows, "I
still can't wait to sit in the theatre with my popcorn, watch the movie and
just escape for a couple of hours. Hopefully audiences will agree."
NEXT
Synopsis
When Ted Crawford (Anthony Hopkins) discovers that his beautiful younger wife,Jennifer (Embeth Davidtz), is having an affair, he plans her murder...the perfect murder.
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