The Matrix

Interview with Jack Friedman (Boom Operator) from The Matrix (1999)

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

Archival interview with Jack Friedman, from the now defunct official Matrix website.

MATRIX: What is your role within the production of this film?

JACK: As the boom operator I operate the microphone. I like to see this as the vision side of the sound department, I operate the microphone like a camera. It is directional, and if an actor moves away from the camera I try to keep it in perspective, make it sound like the angle of the shot. But from the camera department’s point of view, my job is to keep the microphone out of their shot. From the sound department’s point of view my job is to keep the microphone as close to the edge of the shot as possible without throwing shadows, and collect good, clean dialogue. The boom is the stick that the microphone is attached to.

MATRIX: I just saw you with a boom over a shot that had no dialogue. What was the point of that?

JACK: We recorded the effect in case the sound effect was good and usable. In this case the effect was ordinary, just a splash. A type of whoosh may have happened as he came out of the hole. It was a scene that cost a lot of time and money to set up, so we rolled some tape because it is something you cannot reconstruct to get that sound again.

MATRIX: Do have any interesting stories about scenes that you have worked on with this film?

JACK: Most of my work on this project has been straight forward because most of the dialogue is covered with close ups. The exciting part for me is getting the job done without throwing shadows or being in shot. But I have done some pretty weird things: I have been flat on my back under a desk between an actress’s legs when, unfortunately, that is the only place I can be.

MATRIX: What other films have you been involved with?

JACK: I have been stringing boom for 25 years, so I have done 50 plus movies. I do like my job, I think it is the second best job on the set after the camera operator because we are a department unto ourselves.

MATRIX: You are involved in all the takes?

JACK: We are totally involved. A lot of the excitement of being a boom operator has to do with being out in front of the camera with the actors, away from the rest of the crew. This means that I am privy to a lot of the conversations between actors and directors, or between the actors themselves which I really like. I like to hear a director directing and wonder how they come up with that sort of stuff.

MATRIX: What is your sense of Larry and Andy?

JACK: I think they are fantastic, their vision is very clear to everybody, aside from being a pair of real gentlemen. What they are achieving on this movie is a first for me. I have never seen this kind of stuff while working on $2 or $3 million Australian movies. They are at the cutting edge, have a lot of perseverance and marvelous patience. Neither of them have ever lost it. I think this is a pinnacle for most of our careers.

MATRIX: Do you feel that they work well with the actors?

JACK: Yes I do. When I listen to Larry and Andy speaking to them, sometimes the actors ask very hard questions, “Why this word?” or “Why do I turn around?”, and they will try and give them an honest answer that has to do with their vision, rather than just because they had said so.

MATRIX: Have you put radio microphones on Carrie Anne, Keanu and Laurence?

JACK: Yes I have, we use radio microphones a lot. This is another area where the boom operator has to have people skills, sometimes actors don’t want to have a radio microphone, and it is up to me to get them to wear it. It is often a case of being sensitive to their wants and knowing that maybe I can come back in five minutes and try again or realizing that I should forget it. Someone like Keanu is very intense when he comes on set, you can see he doesn’t want to be disturbed, so I try to mike him as discreetly as possible, hardly touching him, almost levitating around him. Carrie Anne is a different kind of person, she keeps talking all the time and fixes my hair while I am attaching the microphone. Laurence will sometimes tell me a joke and other times he would not want to talk to me or make eye contact, which I appreciate and respect. Over the years we have developed techniques of attaching radio mikes so you don’t have to undress the actor to hide it because they are much smaller and more sensitive. So we need to build up some sort of rapport as we come in physical contact with the actors, not to mention personal hygiene. And hopefully I gain kudos from them for that respect I give them because they feel that I am understanding. The sound department is just two people here in a crew of 500, one of us to operate the microphone, the other the tape, sometimes a third to manage the cable; so there are 498 people working to create the visual, and only two for the sound. You are negotiating virtually all day with everybody: “Can you move that lamp it is buzzing, that lamp is making me cause a shadow, would you mind putting carpet here?”… it is never ending, but it is part of the job.

MATRIX: Is this the largest picture you have worked on?

JACK: Yes. Although I did ‘The Island of Doctor Moreau’ a couple of years ago. I don¹t get involved in post production at all. When it wraps I am on to a commercial or another movie. I am usually hired by the sound mixer. They will choose someone who they enjoy working with who understands how they want to work, and who understands their microphones because all microphones have different patterns.

MATRIX: How did you come to be working on ‘The Matrix’?

JACK: I came in half way through because the original boom operator did not think the film would be going this long, and he had to go off to work on another movie.

MATRIX: Was that a problem?

JACK: No. I have worked with David Lee before, we all know each other. I like working at this international level because you get exposed to top technicians who get it right first time, every time, like we all want to do. I am quite thankful I have had the opportunity to work on this film because I have learnt a lot especially about multi layered action and green screens.

MATRIX: With your ears so close to the production, what does the concept of the Matrix mean to you?

JACK: I love the idea of it, but I hate the idea of it as well. It is new. Someone still saves the world, but they are doing it for a different reason. I am really looking forward to seeing this picture.

MATRIX: Thanks Jack.

Interview by Spencer Lamm

Nicolas Cage was nearly in The Matrix

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Actor Nicolas Cage took part in a webchat with Empire Magazine while doing press for Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance.

terrence green says: I’m sure you have turned down films in the past, but is there one that you have thought “Damn, I wish I took it…”?

The only reason why I tend to pass on a movie is either I don’t think I’m right for the material and can’t play it honestly, or because of time constraints with personal things in my life. There were two movies that asked me to go to Australia or New Zealand for long periods of time. One was Lord of the Rings and one was The Matrix. But I was actively involved at that time raising my family and I couldn’t really take that time out.

This brings up a few questions: How far did he get in the casting process?  Who would he have played?  How different would the movie have been?

Interview with Nathan Anderson (Production Runner) from The Matrix (1999)

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Archival interview with Nathan Anderson, from the now defunct official Matrix website.

MATRIX: How did you find yourself involved with the Matrix production?

NATHAN: I was on another job and I got a phone call asking if I would like to come and work on this film. I thought I would check it out because I had heard a lot about it and that it was going to be the biggest film in Australia. After I thought about it, something instinctual told me it would be a good experience.

MATRIX: What other films have you worked on?

NATHAN: Quite a few movies for television. Before this I worked on the Australian movies ‘Never Tell Me Never’, ‘The Well’, ‘Fable’ and ‘Paradise Road’, so it has taken me two and a half years to get to this point. But I haven’t got anywhere yet, I am still the lowest of the low.

MATRIX: What are your aspirations?

NATHAN: My aspirations are changing at the moment, which is one of the reasons why I wanted to take this job. During university I wanted to be a director. I think I can still do it, but the way the industry is set up at the moment you have to do your time before people will start to take you seriously. If you are going to work your way up, it will take you until you are forty before you even get a shot at it. I don’t want to wait that long. The other way to do it is to start making your own films or to go to film school.

MATRIX: What has been your general take of the cast and crew?

NATHAN: Good. The best thing about production is the amount of people, there are so many opportunities because there are so many people, especially for a young person like me.

MATRIX: Could you describe what you do exactly?

NATHAN: I am called a Production Runner, which is not very descriptive, but my job is not very specific. Basically, I do anything and everything from picking up cast to shopping for the crew to having to get certain things for the camera department. For instance, today someone needs 5kg of vaseline, so I have to find out where to get it from, organize for it to be collected or go out and get it myself. I have to keep in touch with what the camera department are doing because sometimes I have to move cameras around between two units. Last Friday I ran the PA for an Aboriginal band during lunch time because there was no one else to do it. It is like an apprenticeship in certain ways because you do everything for every department, but it is bad in that way as well because your job is never done, there is always someone that wants something.

MATRIX: I got to hear you calling around this morning for the vasaline. It was funny hearing you explain what you needed, then have to explain again, ‘yes, I really need that much.’ Things like this must throw people.

NATHAN: Yes, and it happens all the time. It can be really daunting at the beginning. On some productions you get the oddest requests, people ask me for an obscure item which I will have no idea where it was made, and they try to explain what they want rather than show me. On every job there are a couple of items that take me a few months to hunt down.

MATRIX: What is the vaseline to be used for?

NATHAN: Lubrication for one of the stunt doubles to shoot down the sewage tunnel.

MATRIX: What does the Matrix mean to you? Do you have a sense by now of what it is all about?

NATHAN: I read the script before I started working and really liked it. It brought together a lot of the ideas that I have for the computer company I want to start. Although they portray computers as a malevolent force that is going to destroy us in the end, I think the way that they have integrated it in to show how it could affect society is very interesting. I think it will be a good film. The ideas they have are different; it is reality – but its not; it is futuristic – but its not; and it is not fantasy reality like ‘Dark City’. This movie is real, but then again it is very unreal. It represents a lot of the issues that become relevant to us regarding the future and technology, even the replacement of reality.

MATRIX: Thanks Nathan.

Interview by Spencer Lamm

This was Nearly the Cast of ‘The Matrix’

Saturday, February 4th, 2012

Neo: Will Smith

Morpheus: Val Kilmer

Trinity: Jada Pinkett Smith

That would have made for such a different movie.  Eventually, as we all know, Jada Pinkett Smith was cast as Niobe for the Matrix Sequels and the Enter the Matrix video game.  I wonder what the movies would have been like, though.

The Matrix: The TV Series?

Sunday, January 22nd, 2012

I’m going through whatever sources I can find of my old MatrixFans.net site online, to repopulate the archives of the site.  As I do this, I stumble on to some very interesting things that have since gone forgotten.

One of those was this little story with a mention of a Matrix TV series.  The sentence in question is this: The article also mentions that the Wachowski brothers reportedly are working on a TV series, based on The Matrix.

Perhaps the writer of the original story that this came from (which is long since gone from the internet) was only talking about The Animatrix.  However, a series of any kind, at this point, would be pretty cool.

 

‘There is No Spoon’ – Spoon Boy actor Rowan Witt

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

Over the past few weeks, some friends of mine were having Matrix nights.  I missed the third one, unfortunately, but I hear that it’s pretty good.  After watching the first film, though, we were talking about some of the characters from the film.  I wondered what Spoon Boy was up to these days.

Here’s what I found.

Rowan Witt, who played Spoon Boy in The Matrix, took some time off from acting, from 2002 to 2010.  He’s been acting in mostly Australian productions since his appearance in The Matrix.  And for those that are curious, here’s a current photo of him to make you feel old.

-via

Everything is a Remix – The Matrix

Friday, October 7th, 2011

We’ve all known for a while that The Matrix was a mixture of a great many things.  The Wachowski brothers themselves are big anime and kung fu fans, so it makes sense that they would put homages to some of their favorites into their film.

Rob G. Wilson made this video examining the origins of The Matrix. It was written by Cynthia Closkey and most of the comparisons were crowdsourced by Everything is a Remix fans.

Everything Is A Remix: THE MATRIX from robgwilson.com on Vimeo.

Films

0:27 – Fist of Legend (1994)
0:38 – Tai-Chi Master (Twin Dragons) (1993)
0:44 – Fist of Legend (1994)
0:48 – Tai-Chi Master (Twin Dragons) (1993)
0:53 – Drunken Master (1978)
1:02 – Fist of Legend (1994)
1:09 – The Killer (1989)
1:19 – Fist of Legend (1994)
1:21 – Iron Monkey (1993)
1:31 – Once Upon A Time In China (1991)
1:36 – Fist of Legend (1994)
1:41 – Tai-Chi Master (Twin Dragons) (1993)
1:45 – Philip K. Dick Speech (youtube.com/watch?v=jXeVgEs4sOo&feature=related) (1977)
2:18 – Strange Days (1995)
2:24 – Akira (1988)
2:30 – Total Recall (1990)
3:24 – Alice In Wonderland (1951)
3:42 – The Killer (1989)
3:53 – A Better Tomorrow (1986)
4:05 – Ghost In The Shell (1995)
4:32 – Akira (1998)
4:39 – Koyannisqatsi (1982)
4:49 – Dr. Who: The Deadly Assassin (1976)
5:10 – Ghost In The Shell (1995)

Music

(All sourced from The Matrix Soundtrack)

0:20 – Rob Dougan – Clubbed To Death (Kurayamino Variation)
1:44 – Hive – Ultrasonic Sound
2:30 – Lunatic Calm – Leave You Far Behind (Lunatics Roller Coaster Mix)
3:38 – Propellerheads – Spybreak
4:39 – Rob Dougan – Clubbed To Death (Kurayamino Variation)

Phantasy Star Universe imitates Matrix Dojo Fight

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

The Matrix shows up in pop culture in many places.  Here’s another place that it showed up, that someone just pointed out to me: Phantasy Star Universe.

The Matrix in a Single Image – A Movie Barcode

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

What would The Matrix look like if you condensed every single frame of the film into a single image?  Now we know.  The image here is every frame, and you can see the progression of the film from left to right.

Check out other films at Movie Barcodes.

The Matrix Live coming to Royal Albert Hall

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Following on from the success of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, the Hall is promoting The Matrix with live score performed by the NDR Pops Orchestra from Hannover, Germany.

Starring Keanu Reeves and Laurence Fishburne, the Matrix played a groundbreaking role in the development of the science-fiction genre, dealing with the border between reality and the virtual world and taking cinema into the 4th dimension…

Relive the wonder of this visionary Oscar-winning film as over 85 musicians bring the score to life within the magical setting of the Royal Albert Hall.

NDR Pops Orchestra
Frank Strobel – conductor

Sunday 23 October 2011 – 7:45 PM

This film carries a 15 certificate. Suitable only for 15 years or over.

Click here for more information