"We deal in illusion". A camera operator on the film "The Midnight Man" told me after removing a false wall to get a shot from a different direction in a scene. Some movies are shot in less than a month. You can usually tell, because the quality of the films isn't very good. The ones I did took at least two months or more.
A movie is obviously quite different from a play. When doing a play, there is a lot of rehearsal time spread out over weeks. The reasoning behind a long rehearsal is that you are going to do the play live, and you don't have the ability to stop a scene because somebody messed up. In a film, the rehearsal time is much shorter. Maybe even just before shooting the scene. If someone messes up, like Halle Berry did in a scene for "The Program" (22 takes), the director can stop filming and reset the scene.
There is also a lot of waiting around while doing a movie. The cameras and lighting have to be set just right. They have to test the microphones before the actors arrive. It is a very laborious process. So, what do the actors do while waiting to film a scene? Some study their lines. Some sit around and tell stories about previous films they had done. Some take naps. It can actually be quite boring in between shots. "Hurry up and wait" is the mantra in film production.
The movies I did were not reliant on special effects. There were stunts that had to be choreographed so no one would get hurt, but realism was very important. No computer-generated effects. The only unusual special effect that was used in "The Program" was a camera mounted on the inside of a football helmet to have the audience see what the runner was seeing in a game. They said that was the first time that had ever been done on film.
An actor has no control as to how a film will turn out. That is the job of the editor. You might think might have been in the best movie of your career, but then it comes out, and it stinks. Some of your best work ends up on the cutting room floor. I was in two good scenes in "Chattahoochee" that didn't make it into the film. That's just the way it goes. Sometimes, those scenes are put back in the "director's cut" on DVD but not always.
All in all, a good movie is a joy to work on with very professional people (for the most part). There needs to be more independent films made without the big budgets. Money often times do not produce quality films. As an actor, I would much prefer to work with great actors and small budgets than terrible actors with huge budgets. I have been fortunate to do the former than the latter.
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