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PART
TWO: The Shoot
GREYWIZARD: How
was George Kennedy signed up to play Bill
Crafton?
JIM BERTGES: Our casting agents found
that he was available and willing to do the
part, with one stipulation, we had to find a
part for his real life daughter
in the film as well. Shannon Kennedy played
Tara, one of the two sunbathing
bimbos. I was told later that George was unhappy
that his daughter was the
one who had her head pulled off by Bigfoot, but
she wouldn't do the topless
scenes like Michelle Bauer would, so that had to
be her fate.
G: What was George Kennedy like to
work with? Did this Oscar-winning actor show any
negative feelings that he was down to appearing
in movies like this?
JB: He was likable, affable and fine with
the work. He didn't put a lot into it, but he
got a check and his daughter got a part and
that's all he was
thinking about. He did a number of "movies like
this" at that time and I'm
sure he was glad to have the work.
An interesting note about George involves his
stuntman, Bob Terhune. This
was George's regular stunt double who matched
him in size and
stature, but
their hair was quite different. As Bob put it,
"George has really unique hair." We didn't have
money for a George Kennedy stunt wig, so the
problem was solved with a yellow hat. Which
leads us to George's ad-libbed lines about why
he wears that yellow hat out in the wilderness.
Also, during the shoot, George forgot his watch
on his last day of shooting. Since he'd been
wearing the watch in all his previous scenes he
needed one to wear for that last day.
Fortunately our special effects director, Mark
Wolf, was wearing an identical watch and
"loaned" it to George for the shoot. George
finished his work, bid everyone farewell and
left with Mark's watch. To this day Mark Wolf
swears that George Kennedy owes him a watch.
G: How much was George
Kennedy paid for how many days of work?
JB: Getting a star with a name to sell
your movie on doesn't come cheap. George was
paid $5000 a day for three days work.
G: What was the budget of
Demonwarp, and how long was the
shooting schedule?
JB: Remember this was 1987 and the money
came from a home video company. The entire
budget for Demonwarp was $225,000.
That included the previously mentioned $15,000
for George Kennedy's services and another $6000
to John Beuchler for his foam rubber monsters
(only one of which was used) and an additional
undisclosed sum to Beuchler for his original
script. As I recall, we shot Demonwarp
in 10 to 12 days which didn't include a couple
of extra days for pick up shots.
G: Where was the movie
shot?
JB: Our outdoor locations and the cabin
were at a location in the Santa Monica mountains
in Topanga Canyon called Kelly's Gulch. The cave
sequences (both interior and exterior) were done
at Bronson Caverns in Hollywood. The spaceship
interiors with the alien were done at a dinky
little studio in the middle of Hollywood. And
the shots of the zombies making repairs to the
ship were done at a still photographer's studio
on Sunset Bl. in Hollywood.
G: What factors dictated the major
changes to the locations and events that had
previously been set by the script?
JB: As you can imagine, our biggest enemy
was the budget. As a writer, I knew I was
working with a limited amount of money and was
purposely cautious about going overboard. So
there weren't too many major changes. We
couldn't afford to dig stake pits for Crafton's
traps, so we rented bear traps and made do with
them. There was a spot at the location that was
to be used as a pond for the girls' skinny
dipping scene, but when it was further
investigated it was discovered that the "pond"
wouldn't hold water. We didn't have enough money
to line it with plastic, so the scene was
re-written. So, Bruce came up with the marijuana
patch idea and re-did the scene.
In the script, I wanted to hint that Bigfoot was
out in the countryside gathering up items to
help repair the crashed space ship. This was to
be shown where the SUV was trashed, the dash
board was supposed to be ripped out and wires,
switches and gauges were to have been removed.
In the cabin, light fixtures and other
technological items were to be removed. And,
finally, when Jack enters the cave he was
supposed to pass a variety of discarded
technological items from various time periods.
Stuff was to range from mining equipment to car
parts to the guts of old radios and TVs. This
was supposed to show that this stuff was being
collected for a long period of time for the
repair of the ship. All we could afford to rent
were some old circuit boards, we weren't allowed
to tear the cabin apart and the SUV was borrowed
so the best we could do was to lay some odd
wires over the engine.
Of course, the spaceship sets left something to
be desired. And our alien,
well... The Beuchler creature that was
originally intended to play the alien was a
squat, tentacled Invaders from Mars
reject that was supposed to be used in a forced
perspective shot to make it look huge. We went
another route. Our make up guy, Bruce Barlow,
had an existing alien mask in his bag of tricks
that looked pretty nice and I think he also had
one alien hand to go with it. Once again, we
didn't have enough money for Bruce to make the
rest of the alien suit, so our alien ended up in
a podium like structure with his "scorpion like
tail" protruding from a hole in the bottom and a
jerry-rigged mechanical claw on his other hand.
Nobody ever asked why the alien never came out
from his podium or why he had that garden tool
for a hand, so I guess that worked. Our
explanation was that the alien was injured in
the crash those many years in the past and lost
his hand.
The one other major change involved substituting
a real actor for Beuchler's
mummy puppet. The role of the Priest or Preacher
in current time was to be
played by the puppet which consisted of a head
and torso. His hands and arms
were to be played by an actor and his head
operated by a puppeteer. It was
just plain easier to put a live actor in that
role and John Durbin had a great time hamming it
up.
One other illustration of just how low a budget
this movie had is our exciting climax. We didn't
have the money to stage an explosion at Bronson
Caverns to show the destruction of the evil
space ship. However, our production manager had
just finished a job for Fred Olen Ray where they
had staged just such an explosion. We were able
to buy stock footage of the blast from Fred.
It's really low budget when Fred Olen Ray has
more money to make his movie than you do.
[As well], in the script I just
wanted the movie to end. These people had been
through an ordeal, it was over and I wanted that
to be the end. No zombies popping out of the
bushes, no Bigfoot in the back seat as they were
driving home, no alien popping out of Jack's
chest. It was just supposed to be "Are you all
right?" and "I'm glad that's over." Then Jack
and Carrie walk off into the sunset. Movie done.
Well, that was not to be. Our director, "One
Take" Emmett Alston, allowed David and Pamela to
improvise their last lines in the film. They
decided it would be funny to bicker over who got
them into this mess. "You're the one who wanted
to go camping......etc.." and they argued as
they walked out of the scene. OK, that's fine,
IF, you shoot coverage of the ending the way it
was written, but no, there was only one take. We
couldn't use the end. We couldn't go back to the
location to re-shoot. We couldn't dub over their
dialogue. It was all crap. So, I had to come up
with something to wrap it all up. Yes, the "it
was all a dream" is a bad cliché. That was not
meant to be the meaning of that scene. It was
not that the whole preceding story was just a
dream, but that Jack was re-living it in his
dreams. I probably didn't make that clear in the
dialogue, but Jack does say "I can't stop
thinking about Tom and Cindy and what happened".
Then, to be clever, I tossed in two more waking
up from a nightmare bits. At least I tried. The
whole thing kind of balances out the movie. We
have three beginnings; the preacher, the cabin
with George and his daughter and the kids in the
car. So we have three waking up from a dream
endings as well.
G: What was the atmosphere like at the
shoot?
JB: From what I understand it was pretty
good. For all his faults, Emmet was a
workman-like director, he got things done and
kept things moving. He let his
actors work out things for themselves and the
were happy about that. We had
a competent cast of young actors who had a good
time, that is except our leads. David O'Neill
was very serious about his acting played his
role in that manner (this made him a kind of
anchor for the movie because he was so
serious in such a ridiculous situation).
Although he never said it to her face, he hated
acting with his co-star Pamela Gilbert. Her only
claim to fame at that point was her appearance
in Playboy and David referred to her as "that
housewife" when talking about her acting
ability. Watch their "love" scene with this in
mind and notice how David scrupulously avoids
doing anything pleasurable. Other than that it
was a fun set and a quick shoot. Even George
Kennedy had a good time.
G: Here's a question most people
probably don't think about in low-budget
productions: What was the catering like? Cheese
sandwiches and generic cola?
JB: Our Production Manager was in charge
of the Craft Services table and she
made many trips to the wholesale grocery store
to keep it stocked. We didn't
have tons of expensive food, but it was there
when people were hungry or
thirsty. I think they even sent out for lunches
a couple of days. Low budget
is low budget, we had "real" sodas, but no
catering company.
G: What did you manage to contribute
to the movie during the shoot?
JB: Not much really. I was still working
at Design Projects, getting the type
set for all those other guys low budget
projects. I was able to visit the
set several times, but as anyone knows, the
writer is never consulted. I
made more contributions later, during the
editing process.
So what happened after the shoot? Find out in
part three!
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