If you type 'Salt Flats' into YouTube, you'll find 100 amazing videos that were shot out there, but you won't find any that were shot in the rain.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I had wanted to place the Eye-in-the-Sea at an oasis on the bottom of the ocean, in some site rich with life that was likely to be patrolled by large predators. The first time I got to test the camera at such a place was in 2004, in the north end of the Gulf of Mexico, at an amazing location called the brine pool.
I've been to Sundance before, but I'd never seen a lot of screenings.
You should not see the desert simply as some faraway place of little rain. There are many forms of thirst.
Sundance is just a great place for your work to be seen. Not much more to say about it than that.
I don't care about the quality of the film as a whole, but I loved 'Salt.' I loved it!
I've been kind of submerged in my own little geographic location for a really long time in Venice Beach.
I suppose the most daring thing I've ever done is try to water ski. And that was not successful.
It rained a lot in New Hampshire, and when I skied, the snow was icy and hard, and the mountains were small.
I can tell you, if you shoot in the rain you're going to have a lot of voice ADR to do after the movie and voice looping, stuff like that.
The looters are using Google Earth, too. They're coming in with metal detectors and geophysical equipment. Some ask me to confirm sites.
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