The Threat of the Mummy

 

PRODUCTION

A public casting call in June for the six major characters and dozen other speaking parts produced over 90 hopefuls during the three nights of videotaping auditions. Jacobs was so impressed with the quality of the turnout that he wrote several new roles into the script and expanded others. He rehearsed the actors the last half of June, and they shot the bulk of the movie in 16 days, spread over about three weeks in July. Much of the picture was shot at the University of North Dakota, with close cooperation by the UND Department of Theatre Arts (whose scenic designer built the replica sarcophagus). The lack of free access to an adequate editing system, however, and then the start of the school year, slowed down postproduction until Jacobs ordered his own computer editing workstation. He then spent about 20 to 40 hours every weekend of November and December getting the movie put together in time for a “sneak preview” test screening of the first roughcut in his Intro to Film class on December 11th, with an encore screening December 17th.  The 116-minute roughcut was trimmed to about 111 minutes by the first week of January 2002, and a 110-minute version by mid-January with the separately-recorded (and cleaner sounding) digital dialogue track painstakingly dubbed on shot by shot to replace the original camcorder sound. Jacobs tweaked some more of the editing and audio levels in February, resulting in the 109-minute version that premiered at the Empire Arts Center in April. After a few more revisions, the final 106-minute version was released on video in August. He hopes ultimately to produce a DVD version with an audio commentary, deleted scenes, outtakes, and other “bonus” materials.