google-site-verification: googlec7193c3de77668c9.html

The inside story of the wildest shoot in film history

P0lmnc9r.jpg

Advertisements

The harsh conditions were totally alien to most people there. “The crew complained a lot about the heat, humidity, hotel rooms, bugs, mosquitoes,” he says. “The mud – sometimes knee-deep – was a real challenge.” Damien Leake, who played a machine gunner in the film, was on set for three weeks and similarly remembers the physical as being unlike anything he had encountered. “The first thing I remember is getting off the plane and the humidity hits you like a wet mop,” he tells the BBC. “Having been from New York, I know humidity, but this was unbelievable.” The water was not safe to drink, geckos climbed the walls of the hut he stayed in, and the weather was biblical. “Every day it would rain,” he says. “It would rain like it was mad at you. It would rain sheets like I had never seen before.”


BBC News

Views: 0

See also  The radical manifesto hidden in Georges Seurat's 1884 masterpiece

Check Also

10 of the best films to watch this July

From Spider-Man: Brand New Day to The Odyssey BBC News Views: 1 Khamrah by Lattafa …

How a brutally tortured 3rd-Century saint became a gay icon

Because Sebastian’s gay icon status is so layered and deep-rooted, it has also proved malleable. …

10 of the best TV shows to watch this July

The hugely popular sitcom Big Bang Theory has already been spun off into two successful …

Leave a Reply

Available for Amazon Prime
This product has multiple variants.