'Atlanta': When a city loses the authenticity that made it cool in the first place
Walking into Vintage Barber Shop in downtown Atlanta is like stepping into history. The smell of blade oil and the buzzing of clippers mingles with news reports coming from a ceiling-mounted flat-screen TV. Black folks, ranging from high school boys to middle-aged businessmen, occupy barber chairs or sit on benches waiting their turn.
There’s an old-school feel to Vintage that goes beyond its name. It sits on the ground floor of the Healey Building, one of several imposing turn-of-the-century skyscrapers along Forsyth Street in Atlanta’s Fairlie-Poplar district. This historic area is filled with art deco and neoclassical architecture, which is out of place in a city seemingly committed to erecting sleek, modern high-rises in every available space.
A few streets over, yellow signs with black arrows directing crews to film sets are taped to traffic cones, and a parking lot nearby is filled with white equipment vans and trailers. By nightfall, the area will become a maze of thick black cables, cameras, and spotlights. Fairlie-Poplar’s architecture has made it attractive to film crews that transform the area into anywhere in the world at minimal cost. Captain America: Civil War, Spider-Man: Homecoming, and Fast 8 were all recently shot, here.
Hollywood has a love affair with Atlanta.
Hollywood has a love affair with Atlanta. Due its popularity for film productions and the popularity of locally produced television shows such as The Walking Dead, Being Mary Jane, The Real Housewives of Atlanta, Love & Hip Hop, and Donald Glover’s hit new show Atlanta, the city has become known as “ATLWood,” or “Hollywood South.” Tyler Perry is building a studio complex on the site of a former military base in Atlanta, while Pinewood Studios—home of the James Bond franchise—opened a production facility south of Atlanta.
Vintage’s owner, Herbert Williams, sports a full, neatly trimmed beard and has a relaxed but precise manner of speaking. When I asked for his thoughts on the filming in his neighborhood, Williams said he hasn’t had time to watch many of the movies shot locally, and added that he’s not a big fan of reality shows.
“I won’t say it’s buffoonery,” he told me with a deep laugh, “but I’m not crazy about them.”
Over at Atlanta City Hall, the love affair is mutual. Last year, Georgia’s film industry was the third largest in the United States. Passed in 2005 and amended in 2008, the Georgia Entertainment Industry Investment Act sparked this filming boom; it offers tax credits of 20% to 30% to productions filmed in the state. According to the Georgia Department of Economic Development, Georgia-based film and TV productions generated more than $6 billion in fiscal year 2015.
Atlantans have become so used to movies being shot around town that they pass by film sets with little more than a glance, and barely look up when someone famous walks into a restaurant. The booming industry is generally seen as an interesting diversion, but for some locals like Williams, Hollywood glamor isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be.
“This is a 9-to-5 area with a lot of one-way streets, and when film crews shoot here, it affects us,” he said. “I’ve had film companies offer us as little as $300 a day to close, and sometimes the crews are rude to people.”