Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram in "Lady in the Lake." (Courtesy Apple TV+)
Natalie Portman and Moses Ingram in "Lady in the Lake." (Courtesy Apple TV+)

After traveling and moving 3D scanning equipment to work on high-profile films like Marvel’s “Avengers: Endgame,” “Deadpool” and “The Hunger Games,” Michael Raphael and his team got a chance to work much closer to home for a high-profile limited series. 

Raphael’s Owings Mills-based Direct Dimensions, which scans people, buildings and props for movies and shows, was one of the local businesses involved in “Lady in the Lake,” which debuted Friday on Apple TV+. 

The series, filmed in Baltimore and based on The New York Times bestselling novel by local author and journalist Laura Lippman, generated more than $100 million for the state and looped in 2,456 local businesses — including Direct Dimensions — according to the Maryland Department of Commerce. 

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