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Big Noise on the Set of "Big Night"
'Millimeter September 1995'
"It's a relief," notes production sound mixer Billy Sarokin,
from the set at Chelsea Pier 62's Stage F, where he is wrapping a
six-week stint on `Big Night,' an indy feature from Timpano Productions
that is dialogue- and music-intensive. (The film is codirected and
costars actors Stanley Tucci and Campbell Scott; Isabella Rosellini and
Ian Holm are also in the cast.) "There are no guns, no car chases, no
violence -- and we're shooting three pages a day," Sarokin says.In
part, relief comes for Sarokin and his sound team -- boom man George
Leong and recordist/second boom man Rich Murphy -- as respite from the
"breathtaking" pace of working 22 episodes of the Universal Television
series `New York Undercover,' also lensed locally.
A true-blue proponent of digital recording for New York film work (Sarokin was one of the "early adapters" of the Swiss-made Stelladat DAT recorder),
Sarokin is taking sound with the Stelladat, for dailies and as a
mono-mix backup for multitrack segments; and an eight-track Fostex ADAT
RD-8, to enable a more flexible final mix in a production where
dialogue flies fast and furious. The critical party scene, where guests
pull up their chairs to an Italian feast, features 20 voices: all the
leads as well as "local color" cameos, like Jonathan Demme's real-life
cousin and rising film star, activist Episcopalian minister Robert
Castle.Also rack-mounted on Sarokin's sound cart, and built into boxes,
for safely cushioned deployment in about 10 minutes, are Sarokin's
prized Audio Ltd. UHF diversity mic system and his bulletproof power
source: a marine battery and inverter, which moves 12 volts into 110
volts AC and back to 12 volts. Both were developed to accommodate the
10-page/six-location-per-day schedule of `New York Undercover.' An
additional DAT (Fostex PD-2) recorder provided music playback; Sarokin
mixed on his own eight-channel LM-1 Soundcraft board, modified by
Soundcraft to provide pre-fadeouts for the ADAT.Location sound shot in
Keyport, New Jersey, which lacked only period vehicles to play as 1950s
Italy -- was first hampered by the dreaded "vintage muffler sound"
emitted by period cars; using a trick also deployed on `New York
Undercover,' Sarokin planted a Crown PCC (Phase Coherent Cardioid)
90-degree directional PZM mic on the dash, which he discovered doing
six nights of moving-car dialogue for `Hangin' with the Homeboys'. It
cured the typical echoey/fishbowl effect that results from sound
bouncing off the front and side windows. "Rumble" was removed with a
low-cut filter.Work on the soundstage presented its own challenges: the
daily dinner cruise departure of the Malcolm Forbes yacht, Highlander,
complete with tannoy and a blast on the ship's horn; helicopter flybys;
and emergency vehicles running up and down the West Side Highway. Some
things could only be waited out. "That's why they call it a
soundstage," quips a production exec, "you can hear sound from outside
on the stage." -- Beth Jacques |
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