Monday night, coming home from watching a movie, I walked into a movie being made in the Castro. They're filming Milk, the story of San Francisco City Supervisor and gay rights activist Harvey Milk who was assassinated in 1978.
Gus Van Sant is directing. Sean Penn plays Harvey. Emile Hirsch, James Franco and Josh Brolin also star.
It was a pretty funny scene with the Castro completely decked out in '70s nostalgia (as it has been for a couple weeks), hundreds of bell-bottomed extras, and the usual assortment of SF bums and bystanders. Right after I emerged from the subway, there was an AD or something on the mic thanking all the extras for braving the cold and then introduced none other than Princess Leia Organa (or Carrie Fisher). The crowd went crazy, and she gave this rousing, yet familiar speech - pretty much word for word:
Monday night, coming home from watching a movie, I walked into a movie being made in the Castro. They're filming Milk, the story of San Francisco City Supervisor and gay rights activist Harvey Milk who was assassinated in 1978.
Gus Van Sant is directing. Sean Penn plays Harvey. Emile Hirsch, James Franco and Josh Brolin also star.
It was a pretty funny scene with the Castro completely decked out in '70s nostalgia (as it has been for a couple weeks), hundreds of bell-bottomed extras, and the usual assortment of SF bums and bystanders. Right after I emerged from the subway, there was an AD or something on the mic thanking all the extras for braving the cold and then introduced none other than Princess Leia Organa (or Carrie Fisher). The crowd went crazy, and she gave this rousing, yet familiar speech - pretty much word for word:
"Years ago, you served my father in the Clone Wars; now he begs you to help him in his struggle against the Empire. [...] This is our most desperate hour. Help me, Obi-Wan Kenobi; you're my only hope."And as she ad libbed something about homos at the end of the speech, I started bonding with some Hawaiian teenagers over the spectacle. Just then an old preppy guy asked them for a light. The guy turned out to be Cleve Jones, and he spoke with pride how Emile Hirsch was playing him in the film. Very cool dude (he told us how 30 years ago he would be "on the megaphone, leading a mob of angry homos down the street, burning cars...").
I stood around with my friend for about an hour more watching them film the sequence Cleve described to us, with now a bespectacled Emile leading the mob. We even caught a peek at Gus himself and I was tempted to yell some adulation at him, but even amidst the excitement I realized I'm not much of a fan and didn't think, "I admire Elephant's ambition, but it was severely flawed" would go over that well.
Check out some photos of the time-machined Castro courtesy of Observd and Tristan Savatier (click to enlarge)...
[There's some footage on the tube as well... Here. And here.]
desperately looked for a mention of me, thanks for saying "my friend" in one sentence :) i really liked the post, by the way.
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