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By GARY PERILLOUX
Advocate business writer
Published: Nov 15, 2009
Not every job at Celtic Media Centre exudes glamour.
Take the pump truck supplied by Baton Rouge-based Hollywood Trucks LLC,
which collects sewage from trailers and multi-stall honeywagons on regular
rounds through the studio lot.
Yet it’s one of many jobs generating business across a spectrum of
industries.
Hollywood Trucks, just two years old, began as a vision of industry insiders
Andre Champagne and Doug Dovichi, with a big assist from Baton Rouge auto
and truck dealer Mike Hollingsworth.
The business has grown its truck inventory
from two to 200 in two years.
“We’re swamped,” said Jarred Coates, who manages the firm’s Baton Rouge
headquarters at Celtic. Hollywood Trucks also operates in New Orleans and
Shreveport.
From Teamsters-driven tractor-trailers to Ford 450 Super-Duty pickups and
small four-wheel, all-terrain buggies, Hollywood Trucks met a movie industry
demand for quick access to a flexible fleet of vehicles.
“It was just seeing a need,” Coates said. More than 75 vehicles were
dispatched for filming by “Battle: Los Angeles” in Baton Rouge while still
more trucks supported other productions in Shreveport and New Orleans.
Because such fleets are here now and are tailored for the film business,
producers don’t have to spend more to ship trucks from out-of-state and
incur greater fuel and driver costs, Coates said.
And the expenses can be considerable.
“You’re really looking at a transportation department being about 10 percent
of a (movie’s) budget,” Coates said.
Cost-savings are principally what drove the industry to Louisiana in a
bigger way, with film production tax credits reaching the 30 percent level
this year, with no expiration date. Another 5 percent credit is available to
filmmakers on wages paid Louisiana residents.
Paying wages in the film business can be a taxing exercise in itself.
Cast and Crew Entertainment Services LLC, a 33-year-old business based in
Burbank, Calif., opened an office at the Celtic Media Centre two years ago
to help filmmakers navigate payroll issues.
Because multiple unions work in the film business and benefits can vary,
depending on the crew members’ home states, Cast and Crew can deal with more
than 30 different union payroll scenarios on a single production, said Joie
Hauschild, who manages the company’s Baton Rouge office and film payrolls
statewide.
“You have to make sure that everybody is in compliance with their
agreements,” said Hauschild, a native of Grand Rapids, Mich., who formerly
worked for a film production company in California.
Cast and Crew exchanges payroll data with film production companies in
remote locations through a proprietary software system. The convenience
becomes more valuable when productions shift into unexpected workloads.
“They want to make sure they’re not blown away when they go into overtime,”
Hauschild said. “They have to know the actual hard costs of what everything
is going to be, including taxes.”
Celtic officials hope one day to have major filmmakers open permanent
offices at their studio. In the meantime, filmmakers already reside at
Celtic.
Launch Media, which merged owner John Jackson’s GreenScreenTV and Panoramic
Productions companies this year, operates a 2,000-square-foot studio space
that specializes in TV, commercial video and green screen applications —
those that place lifelike backdrops behind actors. Launch Media also has a
2,000-square-foot office in the Oak Tree Building on the corner of Celtic’s
lot.
Jackson said the company has developed treatments for a TV series it’s
shopping in California. Meanwhile, its bread-and-butter commercial and
industrial video work continues in Baton Rouge and elsewhere.
In Texas, Launch is setting up a broadcast set inside a large refinery
that’s under construction, part of a two-year project in which the company
will help its customer keep thousands of employees apprised of the
construction progress.
The company has four full-time employees at Celtic, two contract employees
in Texas, and Jackson envisions operating four divisions focused on
broadcast commercials; TV production; corporate marketing and industrial
videos; and new media.
“We’ve got people in place that can help take on that work, and I’ve got
people I would love to hire if we get to the point I can bring them on
board,” said Jackson, who also works with another Celtic tenant, Films in
Motion, on projects.
“If there’s something outside the scope of our normal employees, we’re able
to take advantage of the skills of an animator or an editor across the
hall,” he said. “That enables you to expand the scope of your projects.”
Films in Motion LLC owner Jason Hewitt handled production services on eight
feature films in 2008 and recently completed “Wrong Side of Town” for Lion’s
Gate Entertainment Corp., the first in a four-picture deal. He’s also
filming “The Mortician,” a 3-D project, in New Orleans.
Hewitt has six full-time employees at Celtic but staff rises by 80 to 100
people during film production. Celtic is the premier movie studio in the
state, he said, but it likely will be booked with business soon, creating
additional demand in other parts of the state.
“I do see post-production as the next big movement,” Hewitt said,
“specifically unsupervised post (production), such as sound and visual
effects that do not require the director’s or producer’s constant
supervision.”
There are multiple businesses capable of providing quality post-production
services in Baton Rouge and the state, said Patrick Mulhearn, the director
of studio operations at Celtic.
“But post (production) is a tough nut to crack, because so much of it is
done in L.A.,” he said. “And so many of them, after it’s over, want to go
back to their families.”
Some of that trend is reversing. Haryl Deason manages Hollywood Rentals
fleet of lighting and grip equipment at Celtic with five employees.
A Detroit native, Deason worked for Hollywood Rentals more than two decades
in Los Angeles. For a large production such as “Battle: Los Angeles,”
Deason’s banks of lighting — from 100-watt bulbs to 18,000-watt lights — are
arrayed on sets with union crews of grip and lighting specialists — about 80
people for “Battle: Los Angeles.”
Coming to live and work in Baton Rouge represented, for Deason, what the
movie business has meant for many.
“This was an opportunity to come out here and start something up,” he said.
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