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Brian Johnson prepares Artoo for his blast off! |
For the comedic sequence of Artoo swallowed and ejected from the Dragonsnake, a specially built lightweight droid shell was created and literally detonated like a cannon from a specially constructed hole at ILM, supervised by Brian Johnson. The hole would be covered with mist and the area around it with vines and foilage.
With the original filming of Artoo being ejected by the swamp creature shot at ELSTREE not looking right, Brian Johnson, now heavily involved with US ILM duties, is in charge of the re-shoots. He recalled in an internet interview to fan preservationist Brandon Alinger: “They tried to do it (the original scene) by pulling it out of the actual water, but you can’t suck an R2-D2 out on a cable. So I re-did the top of the lake, but we did it on a big table, about half the size of this pool. We made an oval hole through the top of the table, and I got a big air ram, relatively short. I had a spare R2-D2, and we put a tube inside the R2-D2, that went up the whole length of it, and blocked it off at the top. And then fitted that over the end of the air ram, with a seal in it, and I put tiny scalpel blades on the roof of R2-D2. And I had these silicone rubber sheets made which we stretched over the oval hole, and we covered the whole thing in liquid nitrogen, so there was all the mist, and reflected bits."
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Joe Johnston comes in to see the shoot. |
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Brian Johnson oversees the operation. |
"Richard Edlund lit it for me and I stood on
the stage with my little button in my
hand, and a compressed air bottle set
up, and R2 was loaded onto this
thing. We said right, let’s get ready to
go.
The cameras were set up, we had
three cameras on it, and the door
opened, and George Lucas walked in,
with Francis Ford Coppola, and half
of the Paramount chiefs, and FOX
people, and Christ knows what – it
was like a Garrison of producers and
everything else. So I said alright,
we’re ready to go. And I thought,
“holy shit, I’m standing with this thing behind my back.” And on the wall, we had this net
to catch the R2-D2. Because we knew we were going to
have to do it more than once. And there were about 12
of these skins, and I picked the one I liked, just prior to
the people coming.
So I stood there, cameras rolled at
high speed, 3- 2- 1- go… and on the
net, the boys had put up a bulls eye.
They asked me where they should put
it. I told them how high I thought it
would go, and they placed bets on
where the R2 would go, or whether it
would never even get there or
whatever. And it came out – and it
was perfect. It hit the net, and it the
bulls-eye right in the middle of the
net. It was perfect. Pure luck. Not
only that, all the suits went, “ oh,
great, thanks very much.” And off
they went. And I was thinking, “ oh shit, it worked the
first time, it doesn’t ever work the first time.”
And then we put another membrane on and tried it
again, and the membrane just stretched. It went
“twang!” We did it again and again. I didn’t know but
what happened was the guy in the
model department, who had been given
the job of molding, pouring, mixing the
silicone and pouring it out had run out
of the right stuff. He only made one
sheet out of the 12 that was the correct
consistency. So I had picked the one
out, just when there’s someone looking
over my shoulder, and that was the
right occasion wasn’t it? So we had to
have more made with the right mixture.
That would just stretch slightly and
then slap. I could have had this condom
like R2-D2, with this mass of
producers, and they’d be going, “oh…
bloody English.”
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And Artoo goes flying! |
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The final shot, which would be slowed down in later post production. |
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