
PROPMAKER
GANG BOSS,
USA
MATRIX: What
is your background?
KATSUHIKO: I
do a lot of things. I’ve built a lot of houses in the Bay
area, over the last ten years I’ve worked on a lot of movies, and I do
some modelmaking. I have worked on the first Scream movie and Flubber, with
Robin Williams. I am actually a painter, but I do this as a job.
MATRIX: Which projects have you been involved with on THE MATRIX sequels here
in Alameda?
KATSUHIKO: I was the local in charge of the Park set, and I built the drum
set and barricade for the Zion Temple.
MATRIX: Talk a bit about the process you went through to build the drums.
KATSUHIKO: The
Art Department went shopping way before I started because they had the drawings.
If they found something that might work they got it, and
we got a lot of extra things too, all different kinds of drums and things.
When I got the drawings I sat down, looked at them, and put one piece here,
looked at it, cut this, looked at it, thought maybe not, then brought in another
piece. It was a matter of putting everything together, just putting the things
in the right place. When they went shopping they got such a great variety of
things it wasn’t hard, and I had a great drawing to work from.
When we were building we had good music on, so we got the feel of it and then
we stood in front each drum and pretended we were the drummer. Then we could
also see if visually something was missing, or if something didn’t fit,
then we took it off or moved it. We’d just go back and forth, back and
forth, until we thought each drum was right. Sometimes we’d just sit
and look at a drum wait to see if something inspired us.
MATRIX: How difficult was it to match the drawing?
KATSUHIKO: Actually
it wasn’t a case of matching, I didn’t want
the drums to be something that was really perfect, I wanted them to be something
funky, but functional. To make something funky is kind of hard, to make something
perfect is not hard - my feeling of what they wanted was something in between.
Ultimately it wasn’t that hard because I had good materials to work with;
the buyers went all over the Bay area to find junk and things. They had a good
picture and I think we all saw the same thing in what we wanted.
MATRIX: During the building, did you have much interaction with the Art Director,
Mark Mansbridge?
KATSUHIKO: The
Art Director came by now and then, but every time he came by we didn’t have much conversation because he always said it was great,
and to keep on going. We didn’t have any problems, everybody was very
helpful - I had good direction and good helpers. To build the instruments took
about two months for three of us. I worked with Wim [Wim Van Thillo, Propmaker],
Brad and Ron. We also had two great painters who did a marvelous job; they
painted the drums exactly how I saw they should be, which helped them come
out so great.
MATRIX: The materials that went into making the drums look very interesting.
KATSUHIKO: Most
of these are made from duct pipes and some bending board, some conveyor belts
from a factory and drum cans. There are also some latex, rubber
and plastic things, and there’s some steel heavy machinery. One piece
used to be a big cooking utensil with a pipe, so it’s very heavy, it
probably weighs two or three hundred pounds. To make it look heavier we added
PVC pipe and a bunch of sticks to it. Another one was a laundry drier, and
we’ve used all different kinds of drums: five gallon, fifty-five gallon
and twenty-five gallon.
MATRIX: How extensive was the work you did on the Park set?
KATSUHIKO: Building
the Park set was not hard at all, because we just went by the blueprint, and
everything is made exactly how the print said. There
was no special visual interpretation required, but for the drums we had to
interpret what people said and what the picture said, all that was taken into
consideration. That’s probably the hardest part, because sometimes what
you think something is can be totally different to what they want.
MATRIX: Of
all the projects you’ve worked on, on this production, what
was the most fun?
KATSUHIKO: Building
the drum set. Everything we worked on on this movie was not one of this or
two of that - we made a thousand of this and thousand of
that. The drums were a very unique project on this show, because each drum
has a character of its own, so it was very interesting.
MATRIX: Thanks
Katsuhiko.
Interview by REDPILL
June 2001
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