LIFESTYLE → ENDNOTE Issue 907 · April 12, 2022

A Day Is Shot

Sunshine is not always best when it comes to filming.

A Day Is Shot

Less crew means more physical effort from the producer/director himself. There is usually a gaffer, who takes responsibility for all the lighting, although Motty says he sometimes does both lighting and filming, while his friend and co-producer Rafi Barides co-directs and takes care of the props and all the nitty-gritty details.

With an outdoor shoot, a lot depends on the weather. Sunshine is not always best when it comes to filming.

“When we shot ‘Charosho,’ I really would have needed to order a lot of equipment to diffuse the sunlight over such a big set,” says Shlomo Rivkin. “I didn’t order it, but we davened and davened, and in the end, we had ten hours straight of cloud that day. All I needed was a little bit of light in the ‘kretshme’ scene, and at the time, I had no Plan B — and Hashem helped.”

During the entire shoot, the track plays loud, on speaker, so that the singer can sing along, essential for the all-important lip sync. If it’s not his own song, but, for example, original lyrics promoting an organization, the singer might not be fully fluent and comfortable with all the words. Moshe Finkelstein recalls that he was once hired by another director to film a shoot in a hotel some distance away, but the singers just didn’t know the words.

Continue reading with Mishpacha.

Create a free account to keep reading.

Everything you need to stay close to Mishpacha.
← Previous installment It’s in the Details Next installment → Location, Location, Location