List in the 2012 Tuolumne County Production Guide

When a film production company comes to town, they need a lot of help. They hire local people for cast and crew, require lodging, meals, transportation, construction materials – depending on the project, everything under the sun – maybe even the kitchen sink!

2012 Tuolumne County Film Commission Production GuideA listing in this guide tells filmmakers you want their business! This guide will reach over 1000 film scouts, location managers, production houses, and major studios. It will be distributed to an exclusive list of film professionals via mail and at trade shows. Anyone who sets foot in Tuolumne County and inquires about filming will be handed this guide upon arrival at the film commission office.

If you have a business or have experience working in film, this is the guide for you. For more information, contact us.

Tuolumne Location: Railtown 1897 State Historic Park

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Railtown is truly a one-of-a-kind facility. Not only does it have the oldest roundhouse this side of the Mississippi, it houses three steam locomotives, the oldest a 1891 Rogers class locomotive known as “The Movie Train”. Sierra #3 has been seen in over 200 productions, including the very fist ‘talkie’ filmed on-location, 1929s The Virginian, the Western classic High Noon, TV classics Rawhide, Petticoat Junction, and Wild Wild West, Clint Eastwood’s Pale Rider and Unforgiven, and Back to the Future III. All can be run along the 40+ miles of the Sierra Railroad between Jamestown and Oakdale, featuring varying terrain from plains, rolling hills, oak savannah, the high chapparal badlands called the Red Hills, and into the pines. If you’d like to visit Railtown, do it quick and visit this website.

Tuolumne Location: Columbia State Historic Park

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Columbia State Historic Park is the best-preserved California Gold Rush town, with six blocks of original brick buildings (30 in all) dating back to the 1850s and 1860s.

TV Alert — ‘Knights of Mayhem’ Premiere and Sonora Episode Tonight

NatGeo is launching this new series with back-to-back hours tonight. Knights of Mayhem is about a group of jousting enthusiasts attempting to transform the medieval competition into a full-fledged professional sport. Meet the team in the première on the National Geographic Channel at 6pm PST, then watch their first competition in Sonora, California at 7pm PST. This episode filmed at the Sonora Celtic Faire @ the Mother Lode Fairgrounds last March.

NatGeo Gets Medieval in Sonora for “Knights of Mayhem”

Will full-contact professional jousting be the next extreme sport? For some, it is a real-life passion and thrives outside of the movies and Renaissance fairs. Reigning Heavy Armor Jousting World Champion Charlie Andrews leads the “Knights of Mayhem,” a group of modern-day Lancelots and Galahads dedicated to transforming this medieval sport from a staged act to a professional sports phenomenon that will sweep the globe. For these “knights,” jousting is no dinner show. Donning 130 pounds of steel armor, they mount 2,000-pound horses and charge at each other with solid hemlock lances at speeds up to 30-mph, while peering through a quarter-inch eye slot in their helmets. When lance and knight collide, riders struggle to control their horses and absorb devastating impacts with potential for concussions, broken bones and far worse.

In Episode #2 entitled “The Harder They Fall”, Andrews puts two rookie knights through a crash course in training for the first major tournament of the year. The Sonora Celtic Faire hosted the event this last March and the crew from Nat-Geo filmed for five days in the Historic Gold Town of Sonora, California.

The series premieres on the National Geographic Channel on November 15th. Episode #2 is presumably the following week; we’ll let you know if that changes.