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THE NEED FOR SPEED WITH MOVIE CAR CHASES SHOWING NO SIGNS OF STALLING, HOLLYWOOD LOOKS AT WAYS TO BOOST THEIR APPEAL.


Byline: Bob Strauss Film Writer

In every James Bond movie, the reckless spy gets outfitted with a sleek new luxury car - complete with nifty gadgets and armaments - that he will inevitably smash up Verb 1. smash up - damage or destroy as if by violence; "The teenager banged up the car of his mother"
bang up, smash

damage - inflict damage upon; "The snow damaged the roof"; "She damaged the car when she hit the tree"
 after a death-defying chase.

Audiences never tire of this ritual. It's like visiting a fancy auto showroom and getting permission to drive the shiny expensive toy irresponsibly and in the process wreck a bunch of other cars.

``Nobody is ever going to come out of a movie theater going, 'Oh, that was stupid,' as long as they crash stuff,'' notes veteran stunt coordinator and lifelong racing fanatic Artie Malesci, who oversaw the good bad driving in ``2 Fast 2 Furious.'' ``That's why people go to stock car races and demo derbies; they just wanna wan·na  
Informal
1. Contraction of want to: You wanna go now?

2. Contraction of want a: You wanna slice of pie? 
 watch the crashes.''

But doing nifty stunts and smashing up cars is no walk in the park - it has become a delicate cinematic art form. After all, cameras have been aimed at crazily careening The careening of a sailing vessel is laying her up on a calm beach at high tide in order to expose one side or another of the ship's hull for maintenance below the water line when the tide goes out.  cars since everyone from D.W. Griffith to the Keystone Kops Keystone Kops

the slapstick film comedians specializing in wild chases (1912-1920). [Am. Cinema: Halliwell, 399]

See : Zaniness
 saw their cinematic appeal in the last century's teens.

In fact, there have been so many chases since then most of them blend into a high-speed memory blur of Bond sequels, Joel Silver-produced buddy movies and weekly episodes of ``Miami Vice,'' ``The Dukes of Hazzard'' and kindred TV fuel-burners.

Some chase aficionados have fond memories of such films as ``Two-Lane Blacktop,'' ``Smokey and the Bandit bandit: see brigandage. ,'' ``Death Race 2000,'' ``The Driver'' and various incarnations of ``Gone in Sixty Seconds,'' but they are not necessarily landmarks on Hollywood's road map.

Certainly, a turning point in car chases came with ``Bullitt'' and ``The French Connection,'' two films that seemed to put the audience in the middle of the action.

In ``Bullitt'' - the 1968 Steve McQueen film - hand-held cameras were used to film the near crashes through the streets of San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden . William Friedkin in his 1971 Oscar winner ``The French Connection'' mounted cameras in the back seat and on the front of the car that Detective Popeye Doyle used as he careened through Manhattan in pursuit of a drug dealer.

Since then there have been other memorable chase films - ``The Vanishing Point,'' ``The Road Warrior'' and ``Ronin'' - but making car stunts seem new and exciting is proving a harder and harder assignment.

Fast thinking

``Certainly, the last couple of generations of moviegoers have loved the thrill of the ride,'' notes ``Italian Job'' director F. Gary Gray. ``But because we are so used to seeing car chases in films and on television, it was important for me to offer something unique. And that's tough when you can turn on 900 channels and see a car chase on every other one.''

Not that this summer's filmmakers didn't try. Diametrically di·a·met·ri·cal   also di·a·met·ric
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or along a diameter.

2. Exactly opposite; contrary.



di
 opposed philosophies aside, they really tried.

For ``The Matrix Reloaded's'' laws-of-physics-defying freeway shootout Shootout

Venture capital jargon. Refers to two or more venture capital firms fighting for the startup.
, for instance, the most advanced digital movie technology yet developed was employed to create impossible jumps and ridiculous wrecks.

``In the freeway, there are a number of shots in which a percentage of the frame is virtual, for getting stunts and cars to occur,'' explains the sci-fi franchise's visual effects supervisor, John Gaeta. ``And some of the shots are 100 percent virtual, like when we do a corkscrew corkscrew

a deformity in which the affected part is spiraled like a corkscrew.


corkscrew claw
a probably heritable defect of the lateral claw, usually of the front feet, of cattle causing serious lameness.
 down to Laurence Fishburne Laurence John Fishburne III[1] (born July 30 1961) is an American Academy Award-nominated, Emmy- and Tony Award-winning actor of screen and stage, as well as playwright, director, and producer.  as he's about to fight an Agent on top of a speeding truck.

``The truck collision is 100 percent CGI CGI
 in full Common Gateway Interface.

Specification by which a Web server passes data between itself and an application program. Typically, a Web user will make a request of the Web server, which in turn passes the request to a CGI application program.
,'' Gaeta continues. ``With that, suddenly, you're given this freedom not to do it realistically. We don't have to do explosions and destruction that way; we want it to be absurd to the point of almost funny. Like a comic book comic book

Bound collection of comic strips, usually in chronological sequence, typically telling a single story or a series of different stories. The first true comic books were marketed in 1933 as giveaway advertising premiums.
: Is it serious or is it not?''

The original ``The Fast and the Furious,'' directed by Rob Cohen cohen
 or kohen

(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
 in 2001, pioneered the marriage of extensive computer-generated effects with street car grittiness. For the sequel, director John Singleton (``Boyz N the Hood'') wanted to throttle back throttle back
Verb

to reduce the speed of a vehicle or aircraft by reducing the quantity of fuel entering the engine: throttling back the engine failed to bring the plane under control 
 on the digital assists and, whenever possible, rely on real drivers risking their lives on real Florida thoroughfares.

``Actually, I divorced myself totally from the first one,'' Singleton says. ``I watched it over and over again and said, 'OK, they used these types of lenses in the film, so I'm going to use all really wide lenses and get in real close on the subjects so they kind of spread out and are more dynamic.''

Malesci adds: ``It's hard to break any new ground these days, but what we tried to do was not use as much of the computer generated issues like the first movie had. We definitely had some, there's no way to get around it, but we tried to do a lot of things with some really great drivers at high speeds, and the camera coverage was very innovative.''

Not that Singleton was uninfluenced Adj. 1. uninfluenced - not influenced or affected; "stewed in its petty provincialism untouched by the brisk debates that stirred the old world"- V.L.Parrington; "unswayed by personal considerations"
unswayed, untouched
 by the latest high-tech developments in entertainment.

``I started thinking in terms of other media like Japanese anime movies and video games See video game console.  like 'Gran Turismo,' '' Singleton explains. ``It was thinking about, through that, how to make it exciting by the way that I shot it and, also, by the juxtaposition of certain images, like going from the eyes to the speedometer speedometer, instrument that indicates speed. A cable from an automotive speedometer is attached to the rear of the transmission of an automobile; the cable turns at a rate proportional to the speed of the car.  to the tailpipes to the zooming. In that way, you have some type of montage that makes a speed gestalt Gestalt (gəshtält`) [Ger.,=form], school of psychology that interprets phenomena as organized wholes rather than as aggregates of distinct parts, maintaining that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. .''

An older model

Others have taken a more radical, old-school approach. ``The Italian Job,'' like its 1969 British model, climaxes with three Minis scooting scooting

a form of behavior limited largely to dogs. Sliding along on the ground while sitting on the perineal area and with the hindlimbs extended forwards. Caused usually by irritation in the perineal area, chiefly anal sac irritation.
 away with heist loot through parts of a traffic-jammed city where conventional-size cars wouldn't fit.

``We didn't rely on CGI or visual effects for our action,'' says producer Donald De Line. ``And we figured, in the marketplace today, that this would really be like a new discovery for our audience because they've been so conditioned otherwise.''

Of course, doing it this way meant teaching the film's stars - Mark Wahlberg, Charlize Theron and Jason Statham - how to drive like stunt pros at Willow Springs race track outside of Lancaster. It also required complex negotiations with city and state officials (not to mention local merchants) that enabled the production to shut down Hollywood Boulevard outside the Hollywood & Highland complex for a week. The never-before-filmed location became the key traffic jam location (the original film, more appropriate for its title, gridlocked grid·lock  
n.
1. A traffic jam in which no vehicular movement is possible, especially one caused by the blockage of key intersections within a grid of streets.

2.
 Turin, Italy). And the Minis' main avenues of escape were actual Metro Rail tunnels beneath the city's clogged surface streets.

All of which sounds interesting. But how do you make it exciting?

``What I wanted to do with 'The Italian Job' was to put the audience in the driver's seat,'' says director Gray, whose team configured many of the 32 Minis BMW BMW
 in full Bayerische Motoren Werke AG

German automaker. Founded as an aircraft engine manufacturer in 1916, the company assumed the name Bayerische Motoren Werke and became known for its high-speed motorcycles in the 1920s.
 provided into tricked-out stunt and camera cars. ``I felt like the best way to do that was to tie the actors into the stunts. That would make the danger very visceral for the audience.

``To do that, we created camera mounts like the slider A block of material that holds the read/write head of a magnetic disk. See flying head.  rig, which is mounted to the car but is also remote-controlled. You could look at the point of view of the driver and then, all in the same shot without cutting, pan and reveal the actor driving at 100 miles an hour. That's very real for the audience.''

Singleton believes the attraction is also philosophical.

``Life is like a chase, so it's a very simple tenet of moviemaking mov·ie·mak·er  
n.
One that makes movies, especially professionally.



movie·mak
 that two objects chasing each other makes people feel a rush. It puts people in the moment.''

Stunt maven Malesci sums up. ``I think car chases will be there forever, or at least until we start running around in rocket ships.''

Bob Strauss, (818) 713-3670

bob.strauss(at)dailynews.com

From 0 to 60 ... and beyond

--Films featuring the Keystone Kops, Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton put their stars into dangerous situations involving automobiles. No one can pinpoint the first car chase, although film historians point to the D.W. Griffith or early Mack Sennett era.

--``The Matrix Reloaded'' filmmakers build a 2 1/2-mile freeway in Alameda, Calif., in order to create the film's car-chase centerpiece.

--The original ``Gone in 60 Seconds'' (1974) ends with a 40-minute sequence through Southern California that destroys 93 cars.

--Parts of John Frankenheimer's stunning car chase through the tunnels of Paris for his 1998 film ``Ronin'' were shot around the area where Princess Diana would later lose her life in an auto crash in August 1998.

--Steve McQueen and cars are almost synonymous, and the amateur auto racer put his skills to use in 1967 by driving his own car during parts of ``Bullitt's'' famed chase, which many consider the most influential in cinematic history.

Thrill of the chase

You may have noticed that movies are looking more and more like car ads these days. Check out these summer blockbusters for some fancy rides.

Bruce Almighty: When Jim Carrey is blessed with God's own powers, one of the first things he does is give himself a half-million-dollar Saleen S7 sports car (you can buy one at Galpin Motors). Now playing.

The Matrix Reloaded: GM contributed millions of dollars' worth of late- model Cadillacs for the film's centerpiece freeway chase sequence. Now playing.

X2: X-Men United: The upcoming Mazda RX-8 gets a test drive. Now playing.

The Italian Job: A showcase for BMW's British-made Mini Cooper. Now playing.

2 Fast 2 Furious: The sequel to 2001's street racing hit is another start-to-finish ode to souped-up Japanese imports. Opens Friday.

Hollywood Homicide: A Cadillac Eldorado takes on a customized Mustang with Harrison Ford and Josh Hartnett behind the wheels. You guess who drives what. Opens June 13.

Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle: The bad girls join the bad boys in Ferraris. June 27.

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines: The female Terminatrix gets behind the wheel of a Lexus SC hardtop hard·top  
n.
An automobile designed to look like a convertible but having a rigidly fixed, hard top.

Noun 1. hardtop - a car that resembles a convertible but has a fixed rigid top
 convertible and Arnold's cyborg, sans Hummer, climbs into a new Toyota Tundra crew cab. July 2.

Bad Boys 2: Will Smith and Martin Lawrence tear up Miami in a Ferrari 550 Maranello. July 18.

Johnny English: The redoubtable re·doubt·a·ble  
adj.
1. Arousing fear or awe; formidable.

2. Worthy of respect or honor.



[Middle English redoubtabel, from Old French redoutable, from
 Mr. Bean, Rowan Atkinson, trades in his beloved Mini for a more Bond-ian Aston-Martin in his secret agent spoof. July 18.

Lara Croft, Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life: Angelina Jolie leaves the Land Rover behind and switches to a Jeep. July 25.

- Bob Strauss

CAPTION(S):

4 photos, 2 boxes

Photo:

(1 -- cover -- color) Driving the box office

Car chases and shiny new autos keep luring audiences - and this summer's movies pull out all the stops

(2) In his remake of ``The Italian Job,'' director F. Gary Gray shunned digital effects for the film's Mini Cooper chase scene, some of which takes place in the L.A. subway.

(3 -- 4) Coming soon to a crosswalk near you: A Ford Gran Torino burns some rubber in ``Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle,'' above; and at right, wanton destruction of police cars fuels the action in ``Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.''

Box:

(1) From 0 to 60 ... and beyond (see text)

(2) Thrill of the chase (see text)
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jun 1, 2003
Words:1819
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