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COMBAT READY GUADALCANAL RE-CREATED AT AGUA DULCE FILM RANCH.


Byline: Naush Boghossian Staff Writer

AGUA DULCE- A local ranch owner has saved a Sherman Oaks production company a trip to the South Pacific to film a re-creation of combat in WWII WWII
abbr.
World War II


WWII World War Two
.

The Sanna Movie Ranch A movie ranch is a ranch that is at least partially dedicated to being used as a site for the production of motion pictures.

Movie ranches first came into use in southern California in the 1920s when westerns had become increasingly popular.
, a 50-acre spread of canyons, woods, bamboo forests, a lake, lagoon lagoon

Area of relatively shallow, quiet water with access to the sea but separated from it by sandbars, barrier islands, or coral reefs. Coastal lagoons have low to moderate tides and constitute about 13% of the world's coastline.
 and a river owned by John Sanna, was a godsend god·send  
n.
Something wanted or needed that comes or happens unexpectedly.



[Alteration of Middle English goddes sand, God's message : goddes, genitive of God, God
 Saturday to the Digital Ranch television production company, which provides programming to The History Channel.

``It's a tribute to the veterans to get it right, and not to romanticize ro·man·ti·cize  
v. ro·man·ti·cized, ro·man·ti·ciz·ing, ro·man·ti·ciz·es

v.tr.
To view or interpret romantically; make romantic.

v.intr.
To think in a romantic way.
 or degrade TO DEGRADE, DEGRADING. To, sink or lower a person in the estimation of the public.
     2. As a man's character is of great importance to him, and it is his interest to retain the good opinion of all mankind, when he is a witness, he cannot be compelled to disclose
 the story,'' said Rob Lihani, executive producer of the project and a self-professed buff of military history.

For its latest ongoing project - shooting reenactments for the ``Suicide Missions'' series currently running on the channel - Digital Ranch had to shoot a detailed re-creation of WWII combat in the South Pacific between Japanese soldiers and U.S. Marine Raiders - a special unit of the marines that underwent commando commando, small, elite military raiding and assault unit or soldier. Although the word was coined in the Boer War (1899–1902), the role is as old as battles themselves. In 1940, when the British organized a number of such units, the term came into wide use.  training. Filming included a beach landing and various battle scenes in the jungle.

Initially, the company looked into filming on location in Guadalcanal, but the enormous production costs quashed the idea, officials said.

Allan Duffin, co-producer of the 42nd installment of the series called Marine Raiders, which will air in the fall, contacted Santa Clarita's Chamber of Commerce, and the filming commission recommended one of the newer filming ranches, Sanna Ranch.

Digital Ranch, which has been in business since 1993, took painstaking measures to make the reenactments as realistic as possible - and judging from the reactions of the veterans on the set, they succeeded.

Bill Lansford, a Marine Raider from 1940 to 1945 who was stationed in Guadalcanal for one month, was on the set to observe the filming and said the jungle was no different from what he remembered in the South Pacific.

``It's as close as you're going to get to it,'' said Lansford.

John Sanna got the idea to turn his 50 acres into a movie ranch from his day-job as a bodyguard to Hollywood stars The Hollywood Star was an idiosyncratic gossip tabloid published on an erratic schedule in Hollywood, California by William Kern, who wrote much of the magazine under the pseudonym "Bill Dakota. .

``I would see certain sets and think, `They could've done this at my place,''' he said.

For Saturday's shoot, the production company relied on re-enactors who not only act in the scenes, but have the outfits, equipment and weapons, and research for the project. Even the guns used for the shoot - Thompson 1928 - were authentic, officials said.

Glenn Harlan, a military coordinator who also acts in the film, put together the hand-picked group of actors for this shoot because of their knowledge of that period in history.

Five of the seven actors portraying Japanese soldiers came from Japan to help provide the right look.

``The actors have to not only look the part, but they also have to know the period if you want to do it right,'' said Harlan.

Harlan said he and the other actors make their equipment and outfits as authentic to the time period as possible - checking E-bay, swap meets swap meet
n.
An informal gathering for the barter or sale of used articles or handicrafts.
, military shows and private collectors for items.

The History Channel episode they were filming will include interviews with veterans, historical footage and reenactments of the events, for which organizers said there is no archival footage.

CAPTION(S):

5 photos

Photo:

(1 -- color in Verb 1. color in - add color to; "The child colored the drawings"; "Fall colored the trees"; "colorize black and white film"
color, colorise, colorize, colour in, colourise, colourize, colour
 SAC edition only) Actor Lloyd Squiers, right, waits to film a scene for The History Channel's ``Suicide Missions'' series in Agua Dulce Agua Dulce is Spanish for "sweet water". It also refers to various locations:

In Mexico:
  • Agua Dulce, Veracruz
In the United States:
  • Agua Dulce, California
  • Agua Dulce, El Paso County, Texas
  • Agua Dulce, Nueces County, Texas
.

(2 -- color in SAC edition only) A scene involving Japanese soldiers at Guadalcanal during World War II is shot at Sanna Movie Ranch in Agua Dulce.

(3 -- 5; 3 -- 4 ran in SAC edition only) Actors portraying Japanese and American soldiers, top, face off in filming a scene Saturday. Above, actors portraying Japanese soldiers re-create World War II history as they move through a landscape reminiscent of Guadalcanal. Below, former Marine Raider Bill Lansford, right, who was at Guadalcanal in WWII, checks an actor's uniform during Saturday's filming.

David R. Crane/Staff Photographer
COPYRIGHT 2001 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 29, 2001
Words:645
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