VIP Viewpoint | On set of Horizon Part Two with Kevin Costner in Durango @VIP_Viewpoint | Uploaded May 2024 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
On set of Horizon Part Two with Kevin Costner in Durango
Hollywood actor Kevin Costner is directing and starring in the Horizon sagas, a new film series that will be released in the coming months.
I had a seat with the megastar on his Durango film set.
He said he always saw it as a movie, despite others trying to persuade him to turn it into a series due to its length and complexity. He claims it's an American film that belongs on a large, wide screen.
Finding undeveloped property and 1800s infrastructure is becoming more and more difficult, so Durango's steam train in our backyard seemed like the proverbial "needle in the haystack." In the end, the crew cast seventy background actors. Maryellen Aviano, the background casting director, informs Western Slope She put out a casting call for a sequence in the second Horizon film, and 700 residents of Durango and surrounding Colorado answered. Of them, 70 were selected to play train passengers and people strolling through vintage streets, and everyone received a specially made 1800s outfit.
It took 12 hours to film at the train station, starting at 4 p.m. and ending at 4 a.m. Employees of the crew inform Western Slope Considering that Costner filmed the majority of the first two films in Utah's La Sal Mountains, Moab, and other locations.
J. Michael Muro, who oversaw cinematography for films such as The Abyss, Titanic, and this Horizon series, assists Costner in bringing his vision to life. According to him, Kevin Costner is a very traditional filmmaker who doesn't use many camera techniques because he wants the viewer to believe that the film is true to life.
However, enormous blue screens, which resemble green screens, are one contemporary method used to simulate the vintage streets of Chicago.
When the first episode opens in theaters next month, you'll undoubtedly recognize a number of the sites.
On set of Horizon Part Two with Kevin Costner in Durango
Hollywood actor Kevin Costner is directing and starring in the Horizon sagas, a new film series that will be released in the coming months.
I had a seat with the megastar on his Durango film set.
He said he always saw it as a movie, despite others trying to persuade him to turn it into a series due to its length and complexity. He claims it's an American film that belongs on a large, wide screen.
Finding undeveloped property and 1800s infrastructure is becoming more and more difficult, so Durango's steam train in our backyard seemed like the proverbial "needle in the haystack." In the end, the crew cast seventy background actors. Maryellen Aviano, the background casting director, informs Western Slope She put out a casting call for a sequence in the second Horizon film, and 700 residents of Durango and surrounding Colorado answered. Of them, 70 were selected to play train passengers and people strolling through vintage streets, and everyone received a specially made 1800s outfit.
It took 12 hours to film at the train station, starting at 4 p.m. and ending at 4 a.m. Employees of the crew inform Western Slope Considering that Costner filmed the majority of the first two films in Utah's La Sal Mountains, Moab, and other locations.
J. Michael Muro, who oversaw cinematography for films such as The Abyss, Titanic, and this Horizon series, assists Costner in bringing his vision to life. According to him, Kevin Costner is a very traditional filmmaker who doesn't use many camera techniques because he wants the viewer to believe that the film is true to life.
However, enormous blue screens, which resemble green screens, are one contemporary method used to simulate the vintage streets of Chicago.
When the first episode opens in theaters next month, you'll undoubtedly recognize a number of the sites.