
Look who it is! It's nerdboy me, Mike Browne TAD/PA (sneaky producer type), on the set of the BBC 1 docu-drama about the 1980 Mount St Helens eruption called "Fire Mountain". What's that beside me? Why a helicopter of course. No they didn't let me fly it although I did yell the Arnie-esque lines, "If you want to live, run to the choppah now!" many times throughout the day. Fire Mountain was written by, produced by, and being directed by up and comer, Matthew Wortman. This is his first big foray into the world of directing drama and he seems to be having a good time. He takes his tea - Earl Grey, milk, no sugar in case you're wondering.
I have more pics and video from yesterday after the jump.

basecamp = aka 'The Circus' in film lingo

Safety meeting and instructions prior to the first helicopter shot.
I took some video of a shot of David running running in, getting aboard the helicopter and it taking off. You can download right here: take-off.avi (7.24 mb file). It looks kind of weird as I took it with my Canon digital camera's movie feature and the FPS (frames per second) setting that the camera uses makes the 'choppah' blades look weird.

Next scene = A press conference on the runway

Me with 'the choppah' at our final location yesterday
One of the final shots of the day saw me (yes me) in wardrobe donning clothing worn by a character who dies in the film. Well his pants and boots anyway. I was the body/stunt double for the actor who wasn't present for the B-camera shots. You will see my panicked soon to be dead feet running through volcanic ash on the way to my demise. You can't escape mother nature... teehee. I should get a British Emmy for excellence in foot acting. Either that or one for sprinting through shot as another terrified resident during the evacuation just seconds before the mountain erupts! I'm sure I'm merely a blur as I was running pretty fast. Anyway, my thousands of dollars of acting classes are coming in handy.
Call time tomorrow is 7am. As I'm helping with Locations rather than AD'ing that means 6ish for me. Ugh! Nighty night.



