Ren: Teamwork Makes the Dream Work

This post first appeared on Ren’s Patreon page.

Where does the time go? As I write this, there is less than a week until we start shooting. And can you believe we are still looking for some locations, including the  mill which Ash went to reccie an option for way back in January? This is the nature of filmmaking, low-budget or otherwise. It’s very hard to get all your ducks in a row, but when you do, the results make it all worth it.

As well as reccies for the mill, we have been checking out woodlands. Soon after our first Making Weekend, Kate and I headed down to EyeLarp in Berkshire to scout out their beautiful woods. It was also our first chance to meet Olalla Negrete, our assistant director, who has a huge project getting familiar with everything from our script to our schedule, from cast and crew to catering requirements!

Another trip recently was to Surrey, where Nicky de Neumann of Equestrienne Stunt Shows took us around the locations for the horse chase. These had been up in the air for a while because of heavy rainfall waterlogging fields and ruling many of them out. Speaking of ‘up in the air’, Drone pilot Christopher Buckenham came along to figure out what flying he could do beneath the low tree canopy.

Back at the studio, things are now feeling pretty cozy! We managed to fill quite a substantial van – kindly driven by Interaxial’s Dan Sandford – with props and wood early in the month. With a make-up tent, a medieval cart and a whole market in the studio, it’s a far cry from the empty space we started with.

Our Easter Making Weekend was extremely popular. Amongst the many people who came along to help build sets and props was Eva Wörz, a fan of Season One who flew over from Germany! We also saw a lot of familiar faces from behind the scenes of that first season, including Michael Hudson, the Finn family, and James Malpas (Baynon) and his father Paul. Everyone got stuck in painting, sanding, sewing, sawing, drilling and gluing.

Kate and I worked on the final draft of the script the following week, ready for the big cast read-through the next weekend. Most of the Season Two cast came along and sat around huge tables in a stunning medieval barn, reading aloud for the first time the words that we are all going to commit to the screen. Everyone was very excited to meet each other, see the sets, and try on their costumes.

Becca Youngs also conducted make-up tests, including putting the mark on our new Ren, Oriana Charles, for the first time. The positioning had to be adjusted a little to fit her face, but the stencil which Becca and Michelle had prepared made things much easier. You’ve already seen one of the photos that we took of Oriana and Alexander Hackett (Hunter) in costume that day.

A few days later we were back in the studio with a small crew to experiment with a 6x6m blue-screen and Jake the Fake. This is the nickname of the phoney pony which Rose, Ross and Ian constructed to sit the cast on for their close-ups in the horse chase. A smaller, simpler version – Joel the False Foal – has been knocked together too, and we’re expecting yet another one courtesy of Mike Rudin this weekend. (In my mind, I have already named this third ersatz equus Clare the Reality-Impaired Mare.) The spirit of Season One’s Tony the Phoney Pony lives on!

I will try to post at least a brief blog during the shoot, but please forgive me if I’m a little too busy. Rest assured there will be plenty of updates after we wrap!

Ren: Teamwork Makes the Dream Work

Ren: Building the World

This post first appeared on Ren’s Patreon page.

A couple of weeks ago there was nothing in Ren Studio 2.0 but a few piles of a scrap wood and a couple of tables. Now there’s a market!

A few of the stalwarts like Rose, Ross and Michael had done days here and there getting things started in the second half of March. The farmer who owns the studio space very kindly gave us a lot of unwanted wood that he had around the yard, including some skate ramps which we disassembled and Ross used to make all the framework of the market stalls. Michael focused on building the bar for the tavern, which is finished now apart from the top surface.

Several volunteers came along to our first Making Weekend on April 1st and 2nd, and they quickly got stuck in making props and other set-pieces. Dale and Sanjay smashed out a set of ‘stone’ steps and tavern window shutters. The beginnings of a carriage have popped up on one side of the studio thanks to Sean, while a variety of fake foods, melted candles and other mysterious items have started to populate the other side thanks to Ash, Sarah, Kim, Carole, Gary, Rebecca and Jack.

Jonnie Howard, who you may have seen on social media was recently announced as the director of episode 203, paid his first visit to the studio. We discussed the tavern set as well as picking outdoor spots for his exterior scenes and even testing a drone shot with the help of our BTS filmmaker Christopher Buckenham. Gaffer Jeremy Dawson dropped in too, to start making a plan with me for lighting the emerging sets.

Meanwhile Suzanne and her team have been busy in London making toiles – ‘draft’ costumes using cheap fabric – and fitting them to some of our new characters. Our new Ren and Hunter have had their first fittings too, and Hunter has taken part in a fight choreography session of episode 204 with Sophie Black. And I’ve been holding lots of Zoom interviews with potential crew, as well as sorting out mundane but important things like insurance.

Ren: Building the World