'Big Fish' actors here already
By Rick Harmon
Montgomery Advertiser
In Montgomery on Wednesday afternoon, Albert Finney and Jessica
Lange held hands and smiled for the cameras. They were followed
by Ewan McGregor, who posed with a young boy.
The stills, taken in front of the closed Cloverdale Junior High
School that is now the film company's headquarters, were merely
the preamble to a much larger shoot. Director Tim Burton's "Big
Fish" begins shooting Monday in Wetumpka and will continue
filming in and around Montgomery through the end of April.
While Finney, Lange and McGregor posed for shots that will be
used as photographs in the film, they are far from the only stars
who are already in Montgomery preparing for the beginning of the
shoot.
Billy Crudup and Helena Bonham Carter, two of the movie's previously
announced stars, are here, as well as former "Benson"
star Robert Guillaume and French actress Marion Cotillard, who
have just joined the cast.
Guillaume and Carter are here temporarily for wardrobe fittings,
but will fly back later for filming, as will other stars, such
as Danny DeVito, Steve Buscemi and Alison Lohman, who starred
in "White Oleander."
Not only were new stars mentioned Wednesday, but so were new locations.
Eileen Peterson, production publicist for the film, said that
while most of the film will be shot in the Montgomery and Wetumpka
areas, the company will spend several days shooting in Tallassee
and at Auburn University.
"The entire film will be shot within about a 40-minute radius
of Montgomery," Peterson said.
And she means the entire film. When it was announced in August
that the movie would be shot here, it was believed that Burton
would do location shooting and then finish many of the inside
scenes at a Hollywood sound stage. But Peterson said the entire
production will be shot in Alabama.
Shooting for "Big Fish" will begin in Wetumpka and continue
there throughout the week, and then will move on to Tallassee,
Peterson said.
Alabama Film Office Director Brian Kurlander has called the Columbia
Pictures film a redefining event for the film industry in Alabama.
And financially, he said the film would have an estimated $25
million economic impact on central Alabama.
Burton, the 43-year-old who has directed such films as "Edward
Scissorhands," "Batman," "Ed Wood," "Sleepy
Hollow," "Mars Attacks" and "Planet of the
Apes," is adapting the movie from former Alabamian Daniel
Wallace's novel "Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions."
The story concerns a son (Crudup) who returns to a small Southern
town to get to know his dying father (played by both Finney and
by McGregor in flashbacks). It is through his father's tall tales
that the son begins to understand the elusive man.