Chatty Hollywood

Chapter 468 The Girl in the Coffee Shop

When Evelyn, played by Rachel Weisz, first appeared, she was ascending a long ladder, sorting the bookshelves of the Antiquities Museum in Cairo, Egypt. \u00261t;/p\u003e

As a librarian, she knew everything about books. \u00261t;/p\u003e

However, in terms of movement, she is a somewhat clumsy girl. \u00261t;/p\u003e

She just wanted to use the long ladder to move directly from one bookshelf to another, but the long ladder didn't move the way she expected, leaving her stuck in the middle. \u00261t;/p\u003e

But when she finally completed the move without any danger, she suddenly bumped into another bookshelf. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Then, the fallen bookshelf knocked down the bookshelf next to it...\u00261t;/p\u003e

The bookshelves in the museum are like toppled dominoes, one after another, and they fall one after another. \u00261t;/p\u003e

And the stunned Evelin accidentally fell off the ladder and fell into the pile of books...\u00261t;/p\u003e

"When I was studying in Cambridge, I dreamed about the feeling of being crushed to death by a pile of books. Unexpectedly, I actually experienced it in a movie!"\u00261t;/p\u003e

Recalling the scenes where her character appeared, Rachel Weisz wanted to laugh a little. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Of course, the crew would not build a real library and knock down all the bookshelves for filming. \u00261t;/p\u003e

That would be too much trouble, and it would also be easy to lose books. \u00261t;/p\u003e

What they used were actually all scenery and props. There were even a lot of mechanisms installed on the fallen bookshelf, which were actually the steel wires in the entrance hall to control the speed and time of the bookshelf falling. \u00261t;/p\u003e

This part of the footage was actually shot in the UK. \u00261t;/p\u003e

After all, this is a shot inside the museum, not the outside scenery! \u00261t;/p\u003e

What really needed to be shot on location in Morocco were mainly the scenes in the desert. \u00261t;/p\u003e

For example, some time ago, they had been filming the scene where Evelyn took her brother Jonathan and O'Connor to excavate the ruins of Hamnut. \u00261t;/p\u003e

However, at present, they are mainly shooting some relatively small scenes. \u00261t;/p\u003e

The shot of a group of people, led by O'Connor, watching the ruins of Hamnut appear in the rising sun has not yet been filmed. \u00261t;/p\u003e

"This footage is essentially a phenomenon similar to a mirage. We considered this issue when we selected the location. At a specific point in time, with the help of sunlight, we can directly shoot a similar effect."\u00261t;/p\u003e

These are the original words of the director. \u00261t;/p\u003e

As a result, the entire crew was filming on location while waiting for what director Charlotte called "a specific point in time." \u00261t;/p\u003e

Rachel actually didn't quite believe this. \u00261t;/p\u003e

After all, things like mirages cannot be controlled by mastering certain scientific knowledge. \u00261t;/p\u003e

It is easy to explain mirages scientifically, but not so easy to create them. \u00261t;/p\u003e

If Director Charlotte could create a mirage, he should change his name to David Copperfield. \u00261t;/p\u003e

In contrast, Brendan Fisher, who plays O'Connor as Rachel's partner, is more confident in the director\u00261t;/p\u003e

"From the time of filming,

The director is very good at grasping the characteristics of some natural scenery, and shooting some real scenes that in our opinion must be created with special effects. Since he said so this time, it should be no exception! ”\u00261t;/p\u003e

When talking about this, Brendan Fisher looked like he knew the director very well. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Rachel occasionally wants to complain about this\u00261t;/p\u003e

She knew that Brenda Fisher had worked with director Charlotte before on the film and was in constant contact with some people at Spectre Studios. \u00261t;/p\u003e

This is also an important factor in his ability to become the leading actor. \u00261t;/p\u003e

But the problem is, according to Rachel's understanding, Brenda Fisher's role in the film is nothing more than a supporting role. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Is a character who dies within 30 seconds of the opening scene really worthy of such bragging? The most important shot is the face of the corpse after death? \u00261t;/p\u003e

It shouldn't be a fleeting role, and it shouldn't have received much guidance from the director, right? \u00261t;/p\u003e

Regarding Rachel's question, Brendan Fisher retorted confidently,\u00261t;/p\u003e

"The scene where I was thrown off the cliff after my death, we filmed for a whole day. At that time, my waist was almost broken by the Wia wire. That's why the scene at the beginning was so shocking. ."\u00261t;/p\u003e

"..."\u00261t;/p\u003e

Rachel, who had seen it, couldn't refute this. \u00261t;/p\u003e

However, she felt that since Brendan Fisher was so proud of the death role he had played, and now he played a role dealing with mummies, she might as well just call him "The Speaker of the Dead"...\u00261t;/p \u003e

As a sequel to Orson Scott Card's novel, it has been published for more than ten years. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Rachel read this science fiction work, which won the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award in 1987, so she was able to come up with such a nickname. \u00261t;/p\u003e

However, she didn’t know that the nickname she gave to Brand Fisher was, to a certain extent, the same name as Sean Bean, the real “Speaker of the Dead” in the future...\u00261t;/p\u003e

*********\u00261t;/p\u003e

Perhaps because she was enjoying her leisure time in the cafe, Rachel Weisz's mind was relatively scattered. \u00261t;/p\u003e

While she was eating dates, she was thinking so much that when she saw Charlotte and Charlize outside the cafe through the window, she didn't react for a moment. \u00261t;/p\u003e

"These two energetic guys!"\u00261t;/p\u003e

After reacting, Rachel immediately felt a curse similar to complaining in her heart. \u00261t;/p\u003e

If Rachel has any dissatisfaction with Charlotte as a director, it is this\u00261t;/p\u003e

This is not to say that Rachel had any objection to the director ignoring her beauty and only caring about having sex with her beautiful girlfriend. \u00261t;/p\u003e

After all, even if she is ready to "dedicate herself to art," it would certainly be better if she could not "dedicate herself to art." \u00261t;/p\u003e

Although this feeling that she had lost in femininity did make Rachel feel a little complicated. \u00261t;/p\u003e

The real problem is\u00261t;/p\u003e

While everyone was dying on location being scorched by the desert sun, Charlotte and his girlfriend were still so lively and lively that they made people jealous. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Every few hours during the break, the two would drive the crew's old open-top jeep to the deserted desert in the distance. \u00261t;/p\u003e

They said they were going to see the scenery and go sandboarding, but judging from the ambiguous atmosphere between them, they must have done something else along the way. \u00261t;/p\u003e

And this was despite the scorching sun in the desert. \u00261t;/p\u003e

This ability to adapt to the heat is enough to make Rachel and others who are afraid of the scorching sun jealous. \u00261t;/p\u003e

What's even more depressing is that after playing like this for more than ten days, the skin color of these two people has not changed at all, let alone darkened, and has not even turned red due to sunburn. \u00261t;/p\u003e

How is this done? \u00261t;/p\u003e

At present, this can be said to be Rachel's biggest doubt during the filming. \u00261t;/p\u003e

Although she soon had another doubt\u00261t;/p\u003e

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