During filming at Langvann in Hakadal, Norway, due to ice melting quicker attributed to global warming, a set construction of a hytte (large cabin) started to sink into the ice, uncharacteristic for the time of year, and the film production had to act quickly to rectify the situation. Director Cary Joli Fukunaga told Norwegian newspaper 'Aftenposten': "-'A set we'd built began to sink down into the lake.' He described a race against the clock, with no opportunity to postpone that portion of the filming, 'since it was an unusually warm winter'.'' It added: ''the frozen lake scenes in Nittedal became a bit more exciting for the production crew than expected: A short winter characterized by the relatively warm temperatures linked to climate change resulted in the ice over Langvann melting much more quickly than expected.'' Production designer Mark Tildesley has said: ''We built that house on the lake and decided to put it in the middle of the lake. It was tricky because we didn't get our cameras in time and the ice began to melt. So, we had to support the house on stilts to keep it standing.'' Ironically, in Daniel Craig's first Bond movie 'Casino Royale' (2006) Bond is in Venice and has to escape a sinking house.
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05-03-2025 alle ore 07:36