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Band pens response to Hollywood using Glasgow as an 'every city'
Band pens response to Hollywood using Glasgow as an 'every city'

The Herald Scotland

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

Band pens response to Hollywood using Glasgow as an 'every city'

Now, with Glasgow being transformed into New York to accommodate filming for the latest movie in the Spider-Man franchise, The Tenementals have felt it the perfect occasion to reemphasize the central message of their song 'Post Production'. One of the nine tracks to feature on Glasgow: A History (Vol. I of VI), the song responds to both Glasgow's status as a post-industrial city and to how the city is increasingly used as an 'everycity' in film production. READ MORE: I'm fed up – what's the point in Spider-Man taking over Glasgow? "As is well established, in the last few years, Glasgow has stood in for Gotham City in Batgirl and Batman, and the city has also been utilised to represent numerous other locations, including in The House of Mirth, World War Z, Baar Baar Dekho and Indiana Jones 5. Govan Graving Docks even became a First World War trench in 1917. "We had to keep updating the lyrics for Post Production when we sang it live to keep up with the latest Hollywood film being shot here. When we recorded it in 2023, we sneaked in a line about Indian Jones 5 being shot here because it had just been shot here. If we were recording it now, Spider-Man would have to get a mention." The Tenementals use music to explore the radical history of Glasgow (Image: Holger Mohaupt) The Marvel movie, set for release next year, has been filmed in several parts of the city, including Blythswood Street, Pitt Street, Wellington Street, and Bothwell Street. US flags and banners have been draped on the sides of buildings, and Big Apple-style street furniture have lined the Glasgow streets alongside New York Police Department cars, buses, and now-iconic yellow taxis. Prof Archibald added: "Spiderman has dominated the city centre as crowds gather to catch a glimpse of the Marvel man moving magically through the city. And these stories feature large in newspaper and social media reports. "Of course, cinema is transnational, and on one hand, these films make an exciting and interesting addition to the city. In constructing a sense of the city in what we might call the 'Glasgow imaginary', the danger is that these transnational productions function as a stand in for local productions. Large crowds of onlookers have gathered in Glasgow to watch the filming of the new Spider-Man movie (Image: Colin Mearns/The Herald) "Where are the local films being made by local filmmakers that are being screened in the GFT or Cineworld? Why is it that when cinema features in newspapers it's about the city as a setting for other stories other than our own? "Post Production's lyrics deal with the impact of the erasure of an actually existing Glasgow through this process. "It's not about being narrow-minded or seemingly parochial. It's about the need to have a rich and diverse film culture where people who live here make films about our concerns, our dreams, our hopes, our fears, again, in all their rich diversity. That's what a film culture worthy of a name would be developing. "Film policy is caught between the tension of developing a Scottish cinema and developing filmmaking in Scotland. A policy which leans towards the city standing in for various other locations favours the latter; however, the stress must surely be on developing the former." A spokesperson for Glasgow City Council responded: 'While Glasgow's ability to attract major productions to the city speaks volumes and brings a welcome economic boost, it should be understood that the majority of productions filming here are the steady stream of UK-based TV dramas and local TV content shooting throughout the year, and these employ crews that are almost entirely local. These productions provide the best training and employment opportunities for those locally-based people working in the sector, which has continued to develop in recent years.' A Screen Scotland spokesperson said: 'As we provide a confidential locations service to Film & TV productions looking to film in Scotland we can't unfortunately comment on discussions about specific productions until or unless we're able to. 'That said, Scotland's competitive Film & TV funds, world-renowned talent, crews, facilities and locations and the UK's attractive tax breaks continue to drive strong international interest in Scotland as a filming destination."

Art reviews: Nathalie Vucher
Art reviews: Nathalie Vucher

Scotsman

time31-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scotsman

Art reviews: Nathalie Vucher

Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Nathalie Vucher: From Milsey Bay, A Scottish Story in Portraits, Freemasons Hall, North Berwick ★★★★ Holger Mohaupt: To Think of Time, 82 High Street, North Berwick ★★★★ Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad While the biggest, craziest Fringe in the world gets under way in Edinburgh, North Berwick's Fringe by the Sea goes from strength to strength. Beyond the performance programme, several exhibitions and open studios around town provide a visual art element. John, by Nathalie Vucher | Nathalie Vucher At the Freemasons Hall, French photographer Nathalie Vucher has created an unusual collection of portraits. Vucher, who likes to made candid images with a long lens, put out an open call for redheads to come to North Berwick's Milsey Bay and, on a blustery day in June 2024, captured a collection of local men, women and children. Eve, by Nathalie Vucher | Nathalie Vucher While her subjects knew they were being photographed, the images lack the static nature of some formal portraits. Rather, there is a brief exchange with the camera in which something of themselves is revealed. An artist's talk on 2 August will be accompanied by the screening of a film about the project by local writer and filmmaker Matt Thompson. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad E-Train by Holger Mohaupt | Holger Mohaupt Meanwhile, North Berwick-based artist and photographer Holgar Mohaupt shows a collection of photographs of New York in the offices of Sutherland Roper Architects at 82 High Street. Taken while visiting the city in 2023, it's hard not to read them in light of the current political moment. A sign proclaims Times Square a gun-free zone; two Muslim women chat on a bench; the Mexican chefs in a food truck serve that most Manhattan of foods, the poppyseed bagel. City Hall, Brooklyn Bridge by Holger Mohaupt | Holger Mohaupt Mohaupt seeks out the unusual image: a tattooed runner, a shot through the window of the E Train bound for the World Trade Center, a shelf of Statue of Liberty souvenirs. In New York Library, visitors study their mobile phones under a large painting of newspaper makers. No collection of pictures could sum up New York, but these photographs show how a collection of fragments begins to make a portrait of a city.

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