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Filmmaker 'EXscapes' again to Watertown to make a scene

Sep. 16—WATERTOWN — Michelle L. DiBernardo, filmmaker, actress and president of the Syracuse International Film Festival, found herself helplessly tied up in her craft Tuesday night in a former city factory building.

"That was me in the bed with the straitjacket," DiBernardo said the next day, as she recalled one of the scenes filmed Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning at the former GLV Black Clawson Co. paper research center at 591 W. Main St., in back of the former ARC Jefferson-St. Lawrence building now owned by Credo Community Center.

DiBernardo, a resident of North Syracuse, is director and co-writer of the psychological thriller, "EXscaped," scheduled to premiere in Watertown in August. The movie's tag line: "Small town blamed her. But was she at fault?" DiBernardo also plays the main character, Veronica Gavin.

She said the long night of filming went well and she arrived back home in North Syracuse at about 5:30 a.m. Wednesday. She was especially glad to be out of that pesky straitjacket.

"Whatever straitjacket we got is a very nice Halloween costume," DiBernardo said. "We couldn't even figure out how to maneuver those straps. But aesthetically, it looks beautiful."

Other scenes for "EXscaped" were shot in the Syracuse area. But DiBernardo and her team returned to the former factory in Watertown after discovering it last year.

That discovery led to scenes being shot there for the horror film, "Brain Hunter: New Breed," co-directed by DiBernardo and Robert Resto. That film, which premiered at Pulaski's Kallet Theater last August, is now available on the ad-supported streaming service Tubi.

The former Black Clawson property, a brick building of about 17,000 square feet, was purchased by Watertown resident Raymond E. Worcester about seven years ago for $1,000. "I've been slowly fixing it up as best I can with my limited income," Worcester told the Times last year.

"I'm still doing stuff to it," Worcester said on Thursday. He's invested about $30,000 into the property, including adding office space.

For DiBernardo, the building is a mecca for filmmakers, and potentially not just for those in the horror genre.

"It's a big building," she said. "If you look at a sound stage, it's an empty space and then you build the set. You just need a big warehouse or facility to build those sets."

DiBernardo, CEO of DiBernardo Productions LLC, has become smitten with Watertown and the north country. In addition to planning more films in the area, she plans to host the fifth annual Creators Film Festival at the Watertown Fairgrounds on April 15. The festival was created by and is hosted by DiBernardo Productions. It will be the first in-person Creators Film Festival. The previous ones have been virtual. She plans to make Watertown the festival's permanent home.