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Everythings
been planned, down to the tiniest detail. Sketched. Built. Tested.
Tested again. Cameras roll
"Fire in the hole!"
You turn a key, sending an electric current from a briefcase containing
a battery to the explosive device, and then
KABOOM! A cheer
goes up from the crew.
The
place: the set of an upcoming action movie. You: the pyrotechnician,
a highly trained expert in the art of explosives technologies. In
short, the guy who blows things up for a living.
Okay,
so it isnt a Wile E. Coyote box of TNT with a two-mile fuse,
but what kid doesnt love playing with fireworks? Being a pyrotechnician
means your inner 12-year-old never has to grow up.
Tools
of the trade
Most pyros have extensive workshops where they tinker with every
kind of explosive device, experimenting with different substances
and ignition methods. Common household items often get drafted into
service, from tupperware to toys.
And
pyros rarely leave home without
condoms. Filled with gasoline,
they create small explosions; filled with fake blood, they become
squibs bullet hits on an actors body. Other
substances and quick thinking also come into play on set. Dominic,
a Hollywood pyrotechnician, tells the tale of a fire suit too tight
for an actor who had to walk through a wall of flame. A hapless
assistant had to go buy 20 tubes of KY Jelly to get him into it.
Still,
pyrotechnicians increasingly rely on sophisticated technology to
make things happen. Some complicated explosions for the film Armageddon
were triggered by the camera itself, via infrared cues, as it moved
along the asteroid at the end of a crane.
Sometimes
it blows or doesnt
The downside? Danger and unpredictability, those rare times when
something goes wrong, or doesn’t go at all. Its embarrassing
when everybodys ready and they call action and
you count it down and nothing happens, says Dom, whos
worked on movies as well as private fireworks displays. And
then somebody has to go in there and find the problem, and you dont
know if you have a live fuse or what. Frank, a veteran who
recently blew up a full-scale F117 Stealth bomber, agrees. Ive
been doing this for 22 years, but its still a little scary.
Believe it or not, I still say a prayer before each gag.
One
famous screw-up occurred on the set of Blown Away, a movie
about a Boston bomb squad. They were blowing up a yacht in Boston
Harbor, and they so underestimated the percussive effect that office
building and apartment windows were shattered 30 blocks away. Luckily,
the studios insurance paid for the damage; and because 14
cameras captured the explosion from every conceivable angle, the
mishap became the centerpiece of the studios marketing strategy.
Hazard
pay
Years of apprenticeship training, rigorous testing between levels
of classification, and stringent licensing laws ensure that the
person lighting the fuse really knows his or her stuff. The pros
earn $30 to $65 an hour, and when overtime kicks in, well,
thats a lot of bucks for the bang.
So
if you frequently dream of putting an M80 thats a quarter
stick of dynamite for you tyro pyros inside a cantaloupe
and lighting the fuse
dream on!
-
Lauren Sheppard, Salary.com Contributor
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