A publication of Brunico Communications Ltd

Archive: Jun 11, 2001
News
Fall launches: the battle ...
Industry plays down grim ...
Red Green goes from tape ...
Quebec production budgets ...
B.C. gov't. revamps film ...
New media industry fetes ...
New docs, animation and a ...
Loren shooting Italian ...
Correction
Jumpcuts
Jump TV and the secret ...
MythQuest a travelogue of ...
Cuppa opens broadcast ...
Que. prods support Super ...
Out of the Fire sizzles ...
APFTQ elects board
People
Banff Television Festival
BTVF is a marketplace of ...
Jewison on directing
Haddock: toward a new ...
Pick proposes ode to ...
Doc tells stories behind ...
The River traces the ...
The Secret Language of ...
The dark side of genetics
The 'invention' of teens
Working on Sunday
Orchard envisions New ...
Hawk plumbs Native ...
Hamburg hopes his love of ...
A movement in three parts
Major changes in both ...
Formats: the Euro-wave ...
Cautionary perspectives ...
Five Canadians vie for a ...
Production Technology
Wished you were there: A ...
A Walk through Canuck ...
Film & Television
AAC MOW tells story of ...
Hippo ready to make a ...
Don't get any ideas (you ...
Protection latest to ...
Cinematography
Century Hotel's Greene ...
Production in Western Canada
WTN provides a different ...
Funding apps up, biz ...
Tax rebate may bring B.C. ...
Docs helping local prod ...
Prairie prodcos link for ...
"The globe is our ...

Advertising

Featured Careers
Red Green goes from tape to film
by: Jun 11, 2001 Print

Rockwood, Ont.: It's the last weekend of the 25-day shoot for Red Green's Duct Tape Forever, a feature film out of S&S Productions, Toronto, producer of cult hit TV series the New Red Green Show. Despite the drizzle, the weather has been smooth throughout production, with indoor shots fortuitously planned for this misty Friday.

Executive produced by David Smith, Duct Tape Forever follows the gang at Possum Lodge as they try to save their treasured meeting place by raising $10,000 to pay for repairs to a limousine damaged outside the lodge. To raise the money, the lodge brothers enter a duct-tape sculpting competition where the third prize is $10,000, and "go for the bronze" with an oversized duct-tape goose.

Producer Sari Friedland (Degrassi, Riverdale), with typical Possum ingenuity, has been dealing, in turn, with a family of raccoons, swarms of black flies and the duct-tape goose flipping over and being dragged along the road. According to Friedland, on this set "the new urban myth is goose-flipping, not cow-tipping."

The lodge set is a bustle of activity as director Eric Till, cinematographer Phil Earnshaw and actors Patrick McKenna, Graham Greene and Steve Smith work amidst a slew of extras and observers. Greene has the room in stitches with his inspired improvisations.

The rain outside the lodge is disguised by the sunshine-style lighting. Only the occasional drip of water, visible on the brightened window, betrays the cinematic illusion.

All around, people seem in awe of the goings on. But these aren't your typical extras. The lodge members in this scene are mostly winners of a PBS contest. Max Smith, producer of The Making of Duct Tape Forever (and son of Steve Smith) explains: "Every year The Red Green Show offers a pledge program to PBS, and this year the program was built around the movie. The main premium was the opportunity to be an extra in the movie."

Also on set and appearing in the film is the winner of a duct-tape sculpting contest sponsored by 3M Canada, makers of - your guessed it - duct tape. Victoria, B.C. artist/Red Green fan Tom Snell describes the experience as "excellent."

Lunching on pork chops, creamed corn and pasta, Steve Smith, a.k.a. Red Green, discusses his first big-screen venture. "I was concerned that I would have to adapt to this huge machine. But in fact, the machine has adapted to the gang," he says.

Writer/star Smith, who wants the movie to appeal to both established fans of the TV show and new ones, was careful to pen a script that didn't read like "a couple of episodes watched back to back."

"There was some skepticism as to whether or not I could write a movie script, because they think I'm a guy who just writes jokes: setup - punch line. But I think we got over that hurdle okay," he says.

When it came to a director, Smith had only one name in mind. "From very early on, if Eric [Till] wasn't going to direct this movie, I wasn't going to do it," he says. "I didn't want a wacky comedy director, I wanted somebody who respected the material and the relationship we had with the audience. And I'm getting all that. What I didn't expect is that Eric is a funny guy. So I've ended up with the whole package."

Page 12

Advertising

© 1986-2008 Brunico Communications Ltd.

® Playback is a registered trademark of Brunico Communications Ltd. Use of this website is subject to Terms of Use. View our Privacy Policy.

Close
Match:
By DATE:  TO  
In these publications: