Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles"
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990)
Timing: 1:33 (93 min)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - TMDB rating
6.705/10
1934
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - Kinopoisk rating
7.047/10
43305
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - IMDB rating
6.8/10
112000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Simon Fields
Producer
David Chan
Producer
Kim Dawson
Producer

Executive Producer

Graham Cottle
Executive Producer

Casting

Lynn Kressel
Casting

Editor

James R. Symons
Editor
William D. Gordean
Editor

Art Direction

Gary Wissner
Art Direction

Costume Design

John Hay
Costume Design

Stunts

Chiang Chi-Wai
Stunts

Production Design

Roy Forge Smith
Production Design

Stunt Coordinator

Pat E. Johnson
Stunt Coordinator
Bill Lui Tak-Wai
Stunt Coordinator

Set Decoration

Brendan Smith
Set Decoration
Barbara Kahn
Set Decoration

Original Music Composer

Photo John Du Prez #76409
John Du Prez
Original Music Composer

Stunt Double

Photo Kenn Scott #334780

Kenn Scott

Kenn Scott
Stunt Double
Photo Yuen Miu #96456

Yuen Miu

Yuen Miu
Stunt Double
Chiang Chi-Wai
Stunt Double

Director of Photography

John Fenner
Director of Photography

Screenplay

Todd W. Langen
Screenplay
Bobby Herbeck
Screenplay

Story

Bobby Herbeck
Story

Characters

Music

Photo John Du Prez #76409
John Du Prez
Music

Action Director

Pat E. Johnson
Action Director

Martial Arts Choreographer

Pat E. Johnson
Martial Arts Choreographer
Photo Brandy Yuen Jan-Yeung #125249

Brandy Yuen Jan-Yeung

Brandy Yuen Jan-Yeung
Martial Arts Choreographer
Bill Lui Tak-Wai
Martial Arts Choreographer

What's left behind the scenes

  • Judith Hoag was not approached with an offer to reprise her role as April in the sequels to this film because she constantly complained on set about the six-day work week and the abundance of violent scenes in the film.
  • To conceal how bulky the turtle costumes actually were, dialogue scenes were filmed at 23 frames per second, so that when played back at the normal speed of 24 frames per second, they would appear sharper. For the same reason, fight scenes were filmed at 22 or 23 frames per second.
  • The script originally stated that the boy died from the beating, but objections were raised by the ratings board, and sounds of breathing and lines about the boy recovering were added to the scene at the last moment. In the French version of the film, the boy still dies.
  • Initially, director Steve Barron wanted April's jumpsuit to resemble those seen in the early comics and the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" animated series (1987-1996). It was intended that her appearance would be more similar to April's in the cartoon (a yellow jumpsuit and a large cap of red hair, as opposed to a green jumpsuit and chestnut hair). Actress Judith Hoag, who played April, criticized the idea of such a jumpsuit, and it was abandoned. At the beginning of the film, April is shown wearing a yellow cloak (this is a reference to the yellow jumpsuit from the cartoon).
  • According to Corey Feldman, he was offered only $1,500 for the voice-over work. Feldman accepted the offer, trusting the producer who told him it was a low-budget independent film that would achieve at least relative success after its release on video cassettes. The film grossed a huge amount of money in theaters.
  • Splinter the puppet was operated by three people. Kevin Clash generally controlled the movements, while a second puppeteer remotely controlled the facial expressions, and a third controlled the hand movements.
  • The Turtles themselves were created by Jim Henson's workshop in London. They were initially made from fiberglass, then sculpted from clay, and finally made from latex. The entire process took 18 weeks.
  • After sketches were completed, some sets were created on the studio grounds. There were some problems with the manholes leading to the Turtles’ lair, as the room had to be built directly under the sets, and water began to seep in from below.
  • Some scenes were filmed in New York City among the city’s landmarks – such as Times Square, the Empire State Building, and the Hudson River, but a significant portion of the filming took place on a studio lot in North Carolina, where sets depicting New York rooftops were created. The film’s artists, Ray Forge Smith (1929-2017) and Gary Wissner (1964-2001), spent four months in New York City before filming began, photographing rooftops and other locations. They were also allowed to descend into an abandoned subway branch in Brooklyn, as they were not permitted to enter the city’s sewer system. In addition, they visited a hydraulic tunnel from which enormous diameter pipes emerged.
  • At the end of the film, Sam Rockwell's character tells the police they will find evidence in a building on Lairdman Island. This is a reference to the creators of the Turtles – Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird.
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