Showing posts with label outlander. Show all posts
Showing posts with label outlander. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Outlander kilt

deleted kilt scene from Outlander:




tutorial on how to do it correctly:

Thursday, January 03, 2019

Outlander trivia

The next book planned for the Outlander saga is "go tell the bees I am gone".

The author explains:

Where did the title come from? Talking to your bees is a very old Celtic custom (known in other parts of Europe, too) that made it to the Appalachians. You always tell the bees when someone is born, dies, comes or goes—because if you don’t keep them informed, they’ll fly away.
I actually ran across this belief in the book Precious Bane, about life in Shropshire during the early 1800s...

she refers to an NPR article about ancient beekeeping, but this video from the Chicago Oriental Institute discusses the subject.




This video is a discussion of the use of herbs, and they actually mention Gabaldon: saying local Scots lasses are busy trying out the herbs used by Claire, and he notes she seems to use a lot of hellebore (which is a very dangerous herb).



Finally, the name Gabaldon is Spanish, and actually we have a town in the area with that name, and the town changed it's name to honor a local politician/businessman/patriot.

presumably the name Gabaldon from the Spanish town, but there is a lot of arguing on the internet if it is Basque origin or not.


Monday, December 31, 2018

you filmed it where?

TORN has an article about the problems of filming Amazon's new LOTR series in New Zealand. Apparently, the Wellington area is busy with the new Avatar, so they had to use Auckland. And then there is the question where they will film.



Film and TV productions are always having to research and locate interesting places that fit what the production needs, so the fact that so many locations in New Zealand have already been established as feeling like Middle-earth is a boon. But then, there are hundreds of beautiful places around the world, and with chunks of filming now happening in studios, does it really matter where those studios are? Is it possible that Amazon can do location filming in New Zealand and Studio work in London, Hollywood or Vancouver? Or why not film in British Columbia, or Northern Ireland or Slovenia for that matter?

part of it is price, and part of it is the availability of staff and logistics, which is why Groundhog day was filmed in Indiana, not in Punxsutawney, which is fairly isolated.

That quip about Slovenia is a quip, but the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe was partly filmed in eastern Europe:

Wikipedia writes it was shot mainly in New Zealand, though locations were used in Poland, the Czech Republic and the United Kingdom.

One of the items I find interesting is that the cinematography of some modern TV series is beautiful: up to the standard one once only saw on regular films.

Poldark is one example.

And so is Outlander: Did you know that this season's North Carolina locations are filmed mainly in Scotland? Radiotimes article discusses.

well at least they did use "first nation" actors: They flew them in from Canada.

CNTraveler has an article on the various sites in past seasons. Uh, South Africa?


or as CNT writes:
The show—which has already taken its characters to France (via Prague and Scotland) and the Caribbean (psych, it's shot in Cape Town)—is now heading to the Carolinas' this season. Fun fact, they're actually on set in Scotland—though the sweeping shots of the Blue Ridge Mountains are green screen (if you couldn't tell already).

lots of nice photos at each link.

but they do spill the beans about the standing stones: they are Styrofoam fakes.

Oh well.

actually, standing stones are all over the place (something noted in the later books, where they travel back in time from the islands off the coast of NCarolina.) and the later books have a theory that they only work for you if you have the right gene and carry a gemstone. So Jamie can't time travel, but Brianna can (and so can Roger, whose ancestor is Gellis the witch).

the film series Standing with Stones has this on the stones of Scotland: