by Mr.1/72 » Fri Mar 15, 2013 8:29 am
For more than forty years I picked up pocket money building "quick and dirty" models from kits for the movie and television industry. Not as simple as it sounds.
First of all, it was always "we want it yesterday". Second, rarely could I do my beloved 1/72 scale. The models (mostly aircraft, but sometimes armor or even cars), especially for TV, had to be larger scale, which made it more difficult (there are currently over 15,000 1/72 scale kits and models of aircraft in the database). Third, and more positive, the sooner they needed it the more they paid.
The last major project I worked on was a dismal "Radio Flyer". First off was converting a paint store in Novato, CA to a 1960s hobby shop. That was good for several thousand dollars in a little more than two weeks. Every model in the shot, every display, magazine rack, paint rack, etc. were true to the year depicted. I only had to do the windows and about seven feet into the store, backdrop for the rest. The entire effort was for a single shot where the kid looks in the window and says "That's the new Revell 747! I gotta' get it". There was the anachronism as the first Revell 747 kit didn't come out until three years after the year depicted. When that filtered up to the director he asked me what to do and when I told him to change "Revell" to "Aurora" and that Aurora was long gone (read "no royalties") he jumped at that.
What followed was the fastest mail delivery ever as a hobby shop in Colorado got the model to me in 24 hours. Then an overnight build with no "United" decal (royalties) and it was in the window, wet paint and all! Then the letdown. Frantic call from the set designer. "It's too small!!!". Enter a damaged travel agency model with a wingspan of more than two and a half feet. "Tomorrow". "Impossible". "$500 worth of impossible?". It was in the window before the day's shoot.
Bottom line: $5500 and I got to keep the Aurora 747 and all of my stuff from the "hobby shop".
Oh, and the scene ended up being cut!!!!!!!
Hope that this hasn't been too boring.
Tom Young