and shot all his scenes back to back. You’ll notice he has a sizeable role. We were able to get six or so scenes with him in the final cut. The shoot went fairly smooth, but it was an intense marathon to get the footage we needed.
When you watch London Betty notice how many locations, action scenes, quick cuts and crane shot there are, and then think of trying to get that done in two weeks! To make shooting even crazier we only had the crane for one day, so every time you see a crane shot keep that in mind. We also shot the end war scene during the day and then all smoke filled and dizzy we went back the “mansion basement set” and shot for another three hours. Most days we like that…long and frantic 14-hour days.
Originally my character, Billy, did the narration, but when I had the rough-cut done I realized how the onscreen Billy was not the kind of guy