In this parallel universe, it's all about the cars. Pops spends his time building race cars in his home workshop, often with the garage door open. The house across the street would make you believe that part of the film was shot in Palm Springs. Although Paterson and his team did tour the California desert and the Los Angeles area looking at midcentury architecture for inspiration for the Racer home, the cast and crew never filmed in Southern California. And despite appearances in the film, they never shot in Asia, the Middle East or North Africa, either. Everything was shot on the sets of Studio Babelsberg near Berlin.
"It was like we were working in a green goldfish bowl," Walpole says, explaining that most of the movie was filmed on minimal sets encircled by green screens.
Before physical production began, location scouts and photographers traveled the world taking 360-degree, high-definition photos of settings that later were dropped into the scenes using green-screen technology. By bringing the locations to the studio, the Wachowskis were able to get a European casino, the Brandenburg Gate, a Dubai skyscraper, Death Valley and much more into the film for a fraction of the cost of having cast and crew on location.
But using this technique to such a degree had its challenges. First, after studying the photographs of the interiors, Walpole and his team had to find or construct furniture that would look like it belonged in the varied locales.
The dimensions of the setting, such as a room in an elegant Moroccan residence, were chalked out on the green floor of the set in Germany.
Walpole and his team then positioned pieces of furniture within the imaginary confines of the room.
"There would be an island of dressing," says Walpole, using the British term for furnishings, "floating in a green space."
To help the actors know where a door or a window eventually would appear on film, simple green frames sometimes were erected. The rest of the room was inserted digitally in post-production. "It was quite confusing," Walpole admits.
But it works. For some in the audience, figuring out what's real and what isn't just might be more interesting than the story unfolding on-screen.
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