I have been shooting my short film in almost all one location, and almost done. The location is a big house, and the woman living there, lived alone, and promised me a nice quiet set, when I explained to her that quiet is important when recording dialogue. She said that's fine and she will be quiet, which she has had no problem being.
Halfway through production, a new tenant has suddenly moved in downstairs with her daughter, and have been making a lot of racket, and constantly interrupting shooting, in other ways. Such as turning the appliances back on, after we turned them off for silence, and costing us dialogue time, and more dubbing possibly after it's all over.
Asking her nicely hasn't done much good, and this last scene which was suppose to take only 12 hours, has now been delayed to two more days at least, cause of her delays. My actors are looking at me as director, do something about this problem. It's costing me more food for the actors as one, cause of the delays.
I know it's her home now, but I have to look at this from a filmmakers point of view. I entered into a verbal contract with the house owner, then this new person arrives by surprise, and ambushes the contract. If for example, James Cameron had spent good money and/or effort, on renting a location and promised silence, then while shooting, some stranger and her daughter arrive on set, and start making racket, and said that the location was where they lived, would he take that? No, he would say that he had made a contract, and that they are not part of it. He would then snap his fingers, and his security would physically escort them from the set.
I am going to have a nice talk with her about how important and serious this is (but I don't think it would help since the two previous nice talks have done nothing). If it doesn't help by the next shoot, I am going to have to take drastic action, but if I physically remove her and her daughter from her home, and in the freezing cold winter for half a day, she would very likely call the cops.
I'm not a cold heartless person at all but my actors are looking to me to do something and I don't want to have any quit on me again for this production. So how do I deal with this problem. How can I be a successful director who can get the job done, if I take no control? I feel that the only thing left to do is to make serious verbal abusing threats, next time, but if that doesn't work, then I have to physically remove them. I will talk to the owner I contracted with, but not sure if it would do any good, and I have hopefully the last shoot coming up. Thoughts?
Halfway through production, a new tenant has suddenly moved in downstairs with her daughter, and have been making a lot of racket, and constantly interrupting shooting, in other ways. Such as turning the appliances back on, after we turned them off for silence, and costing us dialogue time, and more dubbing possibly after it's all over.
Asking her nicely hasn't done much good, and this last scene which was suppose to take only 12 hours, has now been delayed to two more days at least, cause of her delays. My actors are looking at me as director, do something about this problem. It's costing me more food for the actors as one, cause of the delays.
I know it's her home now, but I have to look at this from a filmmakers point of view. I entered into a verbal contract with the house owner, then this new person arrives by surprise, and ambushes the contract. If for example, James Cameron had spent good money and/or effort, on renting a location and promised silence, then while shooting, some stranger and her daughter arrive on set, and start making racket, and said that the location was where they lived, would he take that? No, he would say that he had made a contract, and that they are not part of it. He would then snap his fingers, and his security would physically escort them from the set.
I am going to have a nice talk with her about how important and serious this is (but I don't think it would help since the two previous nice talks have done nothing). If it doesn't help by the next shoot, I am going to have to take drastic action, but if I physically remove her and her daughter from her home, and in the freezing cold winter for half a day, she would very likely call the cops.
I'm not a cold heartless person at all but my actors are looking to me to do something and I don't want to have any quit on me again for this production. So how do I deal with this problem. How can I be a successful director who can get the job done, if I take no control? I feel that the only thing left to do is to make serious verbal abusing threats, next time, but if that doesn't work, then I have to physically remove them. I will talk to the owner I contracted with, but not sure if it would do any good, and I have hopefully the last shoot coming up. Thoughts?
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