The director James Hawes narrates a sequence from his film.
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A glass-bottom pool that straddles two buildings can make for quite a luxurious swim, as long as nobody tries to blow it up.
The fate of one high-rise swimmer doesn’t look good in this scene from the spy thriller “The Amateur,” in which Rami Malek plays Charlie Heller, a C.I.A. cryptographer out to avenge his wife’s death. But more than guns and fists, he’s using intelligence and craftiness to get the job done.
Here, Charlie encounters one of his targets, Mishka Blazhic (Marc Rissmann), who has been given solo access to a hotel pool for a night swim. Interrogating Mishka, Charlie informs him that he is holding the remote control to a device that is decompressing the air between the sheets of glass at the base of the pool. If he triggers the device, the glass will shatter.
Narrating the sequence, the director James Hawes said that there were few locations in the world with pools that sit between two buildings.
“We were lucky enough to find a location in London that gave us that,” he said, “but they weren’t going to let us blow it up.”
Hawes said that he and his crew used it to shoot a portion of the scene, but then they built a life-size section of the pool in a studio, which allowed them to fill the pool with water and explode it. They even rigged up a stunt person to be sucked back as the bottom gave way.
“So a lot of the work is done in camera,” he said, “and only then does VFX start to take over.”
Read the “Amateur” review.
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Source: Movies - nytimes.com