Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Indiana Jones

I've been distracted away from blogging by many things including a chauffeur job, returning to full time illustration, and Indiana Jones. More on the first two later.

Within a day of the Arts and Ideas Festival ending, the same New Haven streets were taken over by Paramount Pictures filming the fourth Indiana Jones. Being addicted to spectacle I couldn't stay away from it. Chapel Street was turned into the 1950's, from the removal of parking meters, to the rebuilding of facades, down to the smallest details of the window displays. Dozens of old cars, hundreds of extras in period costume, and a whole city of crew, trailors, trucks and equipment comfortably settled in all around town. A casual stroll through the city might have brought you a motorcycle chase being filmed, or one of Indiana's many doubles, or the real Steven Spielberg walking down High Street for a paper.

What was even more interesting then the filming was watching New Haveners take everything in stride with the most laid back sort of curiosity. The few aggressive gawkers I met in my extensive wandering turned out to be out of town professional autograph hunters, who were also fascinating with their intricate network of watchers stationed at key locations, passing valuable information on to each other. If you wanted to know the best place to see something, follow one of these people, though information from them directly is certain to be intentionaly false.

First photo: College Street filled with 1950s cars and trucks. Next photos: Chapel Street transformed into a movie set, and it's steady stream of onlookers who were never kept too far away by the crew. All the shops stayed open behind their facades, with vinyl signs of their true identity displayed while filming was on hold. The promanade went on day and night for a couple of weeks. My favorite hunters who professed to have obtained autographs from Spielberg, Lucas, and Shia LaBeouf, but were out for the elusive great white whale: Harrison Ford.







6 comments:

Anonymous said...

the cars in the first photo just look like the ones here in Vermont . . . and so does the woolworths!

me

Linda S. Wingerter said...

It's the crunched one that really makes it look like Vermont. They should have just filmed up there!

Linda S. Wingerter said...

It's the crunched one that really makes it look like Vermont. They should have just filmed up there!

Libby Koponen said...

I heard a story about this on NPR, I'm thrilled to see what it all looks like....and YOUR story is a lot more interesting than theirs.

Dawn Alice Rogers said...

wow. this is soooo cool! i am jealous!

Linda S. Wingerter said...

I just missed the end of that NPR story, Libby, thanks for reminding me to find it.

Dawn! There were a couple movies shooting in Bridgeport too! 10 movies total in CT just this summer thanks to a movie tax break that just passed.