By Richard Verrier, L
A Times , December 24, 2006
The covert Special Forces team huddled in the Tactical Operations Center has
just spotted a submarine off the coast of North Korea when Col. Tom Ryan barks
a command.
Suddenly, he's fending off a surprise attack — of the giggles.
This drama isn't playing out in some top-secret military bunker, but on a
soundstage in one of Southern California's quintessential bedroom communities,
Santa Clarita. Ryan is actor Robert Patrick and, this time with a straight
face, he completes a clean take for a coming episode of the CBS drama "The
Unit."
In the shadow of the Magic Mountain theme park in north Los Angeles County,
Hollywood's version of magic is being created at a blistering pace. Thanks to
lower costs, heavy demand for TV programs and a film-friendly environment, the
170,000-resident community of youth soccer, shopping centers and family dining
is developing into an unlikely production hub.
"It used to be, 'I'm shooting in Santa Clarita' and people are like,
'Where's that?,' " says David Knoller, executive producer of the HBO
series "Big Love," which uses the area in part because it resembles
landscapes in Utah. "Now, it's like, 'Yeah, yeah.' You can't turn a corner
without seeing some other [filming] location sign pinned to a lamp post."
Next door to "The Unit" set at Santa Clarita Studios, a mansion that
looks like it was uprooted from the Deep South is being built for a new Minnie
Driver comedy, "The Riches." On another soundstage, casting sessions
are screening actors for the coming Fox road-race series "Drive."
Local shopping centers, the community college, City Hall and bowling alley
Santa Clarita Lanes often serve as makeshift sets. Shows regularly shot in
Santa Clarita include HBO's "John from Cincinnati," Nickelodeon's
"Zoey 101" and CBS hit "NCIS." Showtime's
"Weeds," Fox's "24" and NBC's "Heroes" frequently
use the area. And although its locations are seen mostly on TV, Santa Clarita
recently hosted such feature films as the Golden Globe-nominated drama
"Bobby" and a not-yet-released comedy, "King of
California," starring Michael Douglas.
The activity in Santa Clarita reflects a boon in original programming at
broadcast networks and cable channels, as well as a decline in the dollar's
value, which has made shooting more expensive in dollar terms. As Hollywood
studio lots fill up and pressure mounts to keep costs down, producers are
increasingly venturing to outlying parts of Southern California.
Santa Clarita's advantages over other communities region include an
infrastructure of soundstages and an abundance of movie ranches. It also has
post-production facilities and a film office that aggressively markets the
area's advantages.
On-location film shoots in Santa Clarita, which includes the communities of
Saugus, Newhall and Valencia, are up 30% in the last five months compared with
a year earlier and are heading for a record. That measurement doesn't take into
consideration the work on soundstages, which isn't officially tracked because
it doesn't require permits.
Santa Clarita created the film office in 2002 to help attract film productions,
lure entertainment companies to the area and to issue permits, a task that
previously had been handled by FilmL.A. Inc., a nonprofit group that handles
film permits for much of L.A. County.
The Santa Clarita office, with a staff of three people and a marketing budget
of $65,000, searches for locations and promotes the city as "film
friendly" via trade shows and advertisements in industry magazines, hoping
to get the attention of location scouts.
"We try to view ourselves as being on the same team as the film
productions," said Jason Crawford, the city's film administrator.
A key reason for the surge in production is cost. Renting stage space in Santa
Clarita is at least 30% less than at a major studio lot. Parking and hotel
rates also are considerably cheaper, as are film permits. Santa Clarita charges
$378 for a film permit (for two weeks of filming), compared with $450 for L.A.
Santa Clarita's varied geography, which includes desert area, pine forests,
meadows and mountains, was ideal for the "The Unit," produced by 20th
Century Fox Television. "The Unit" occupies four soundstages at Santa
Clarita Studios, but also shoots extensively at nearby "movie
ranches" that stand in for locations as varied as Afghanistan and
Paraguay.
"In our show we have to portray a different part of the world every week,
and being in L.A. would have probably made it difficult for us to do a lot of
the exteriors that we need to do," executive producer Shawn Ryan said.
"You've got a lot of space to breathe and do your thing."
Santa Clarita Studios, which added two soundstages in 2004, has been a
cornerstone of the area's film business. Built in 1989, the facility has been
the home of such TV shows as "Melrose Place" and "CSI: Crime
Scene Investigation." Today, it also houses post-production facilities and
rents lighting and truck equipment, making it a kind of one-stop shop for
filming.
"This is the busiest the studio has ever been," said company
president Mike DeLorenzo, noting that all 10 soundstages were full.
About 30 of the 120 crew members from "The Unit" already lived in the
area and consequently save commuting time on Interstate 5. Regina Taylor, who
plays Molly Blane, rents an apartment near Santa Clarita Studios and is
considering buying a home or condo close by.
"I plan on putting up stakes here," Taylor said. "I like the
community. The people are laid-back and friendly."
In all, filming contributed about $10 million to the city and local businesses
from July through November, said Crawford, who based the estimate on how much
money film productions spent at local restaurants, hotels, equipment rental
companies and other vendors such as Newhall Hardware.
"Filming has been hugely successful for the city," Crawford said.
Film companies account for about 25% of Newhall Hardware's revenue, manager
Diane Vradenburg said. "When film crews come, we sure love to have
them," she said.
Her only complaint: When crew members take up parking spaces in front of her
store in downtown Newhall.
Vradenburg did brisk business selling hinges, nuts and bolts, antique frying
pans and old-fashioned saws to the producers of HBO's acclaimed Western
"Deadwood," which recently wrapped shooting at the nearby Melody
Ranch Motion Picture Studio.
Melody is the best known among more than 10 movie ranches in the Santa Clarita
Valley, with deep ties to Hollywood. Once owned by singing cowboy Gene Autry,
Melody served as a setting for such Western TV classics as "The Lone
Ranger," "Wyatt Earp," "Gunsmoke" and "The Cisco
Kid."
Renaud and Andre Veluzat, who are brothers and longtime Newhall residents,
purchased the ranch from Autry in 1990 and restored its Western town, which had
been badly damaged in a fire in 1962. The set was a major selling point for the
producers of "Deadwood," which is set in a lawless South Dakota town.
Producers remodeled the set to give it a grittier look and shot the entire
third season there. The 22-acre ranch, which includes three soundstages as well
as screening and editing rooms, was big enough to accommodate an entire
production team.
"In the end, I don't think we could have done this anywhere else,"
said Gregg Fienberg, the show's executive producer. He's planning to shoot two
"Deadwood" movies to conclude the series, and is now shooting
"John from Cincinnati" on the ranch.
To keep pace, the Veluzat brothers added a 23,800-square-foot soundstage at
Melody this year. They also own a 225-acre ranch in Santa Clarita, which
features a Spanish town and military barracks getting heavy use from "The
Unit" and other shows.
"The business is booming," Renaud Veluzat said.
As often happens in popular shooting locations, residents sometimes tire of all
the activity. Several residents of Stevenson Ranch, a subdivision just outside
the city limits, complained last spring that crews from "Weeds" were
cluttering the streets and creating excessive traffic.
FilmL.A., which handles permits for Stevenson Ranch, urged the producers to
limit the number of trucks and the amount of equipment they were using in that
area, said Mike Bobenko, senior vice president of operations for the group.
Still, producers say complaints are relatively uncommon and praise locals for
being cooperative.
"We very rarely find a curmudgeon out there, and that's not necessarily
the case in Los Angeles," said Mark Horowitz, co-executive producer of
"NCIS."
He noted that homeowners in one neighborhood recently agreed, for a fee, to let
the crew decorate their houses and shoot late into the night for a Halloween
scene.
"They had a block party," Horowitz said.
richard.verrier@latimes.com
see also the first film clip on the
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