Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan

 
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Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan 

[ DVD ]

Release Date: Wednesday 20 November 2013

Rated: PG - Films, Videos, and Publications Classification Act 1993PG No Notes

PG: Violence & coarse language. The definitive documentary film about Ray Harryhausen. Aside from interviews with the great man himself, shot over five years, there are also interviews and tributes from Peter Jackson, Tim Burton, John Landis, Nick Park, Guillermo Del Toro, James Cameron, Steven Spielberg and many more.

One of cinema's most admired and influential special-effects gurus, legendary movie magician Ray Harryhausen has enthralled film goers with his wild and creative visions, with over 60 years of groundbreaking screen wizardry under his belt.

Leaving no doubt as to his seminal influence on modern-day special effects, RAY HARRYHAUSEN: SPECIAL EFFECTS TITAN digs deep in the vault and features enlightening interviews with the man himself as well as creative greats Peter Jackson (The Lord of The Rings Trilogy), Nick Park (Wallace & Gromit), Phil Tippett (stop-motion animator of Robocop & The Empire Strikes Back), Terry Gilliam(Time Bandits), Dennis Muren (Oscar winning effects supervisor for Jurassic Park), John Landis (An American Werewolf In London), Guillermo Del Torro (Hellboy), James Cameron (Avatar), Steven Spielberg (E.T-the Extra Terrestrial) and many more.

Paying tribute to a pioneer of Stop Motion animation (alongside legendary Willis 'King Kong'O'Brien), Harryhausen's ex­traordinary films such as The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, It Came from Beneath The Sea, The 7th Voyage Of Sinbad, Mysterious Island, Jason and the Argonauts, The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad and of course the original Clash Of The Titans are testament to his great ingenuity behind the camera - creating all manner of monsters, mayhem and inspiring generations of filmmakers to dream big.

Special Features

Interviews with Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg, Peter Lord and Rick Baker
12 interview outtakes with Joe Dante, John Lasseter, Nick Park and more
A message to Ray
Deleted Scenes
On the set of Sinbad
Paris Cinematheque Q&A
London Gate Cinema Q&A
Audio Commentary with the filmmakers Original trailer
Ray Harryhausen trailer

"A modest, amusing, articulate man, Harryhausen is the animator as auteur, a craftsman and artist of genius, whose work is superbly illustrated in this riveting film by a French movie historian and rightly celebrated by a roster of distinguished admirers, among them Steven Spielberg, Terry Gilliam, Nick Park, Peter Jackson and Tim Burton. A continual delight." The Guardian, UK

"This career-spanning tribute to the stop-frame titan may be conventional in approach (a collection of talking heads) but gets by on the heavyweight bonces (Spielberg, Cameron, Jackson) shedding light on Harryhausen's en­during influence. The man himself emerges as a genial subject and the film is enlivened by stunning test footage and genius clips. There is trivia galore - the octopus from It Came From Beneath The Sea only had six tentacles to save budget - but it is wrapped up in interesting debates around visual effects craft and the future of spectacle. A fascinating and loving look at one of cinema's true greats." 4/5 Empire

"Told with affection and unprecedented access, this is the definitive word on the career of one of cinema's most authentic geniuses. A privileged insight into a pioneer with as much presence as his creations." Total Film

"An auteur of special effects, Ray Harryhausen's fan­tastical monsters are the stuff of movie legend. Now the subject of filmmaker Gilles Penso's latest documentary, Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan (2011) pays homage to the 92-year-old, who has influenced some of today's greatest living mainstream directors, including Steven Spielberg, Guillermo del Toro and Peter Jackson (who all contribute here). Starting with 1949's Mighty Joe Young (1949), we chart the visual artist's work across the decades, culminating in 1981's Clash of the Titans. As a youngster, Harryhausen meticulously studied early SFX marvels such as King Kong (1933) and the work of Georges Méliès, evolving their processes whilst developing his own techniques. This trajectory is accompanied by a glut of heartfelt talking head interviews from contemporary sci-fi and fantasy directors (with the notable absence of George Lucas), who point to various scenes from their own movies that have been influenced directly by Harryhausen; the Tyrannosaurus Rex in Spielberg's Ju­rassic Park (1993); the mechanical arms of Dr. Octopus in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man 2 (2004); the scurvy skeletons of Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003). For many, Harryhausen's stop-motion creations - which he affectionately dubs as his 'creatures' - immediately kindle memories of childhood wonder. Classics such as The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958), Mysterious Island (1961) and the iconic Jason and the Argonauts (1963) all bear his distinctive mark. Once seen, it is almost impossible to forget the terrifyingly serpentine Medusa, the duelling skeleton warriors and droning giant bees that now have earned iconic status within the fantasy film genre. Penso's documentary crucially allows us to see these creatures out of context, often no bigger than a foot tall. This provides a chance to appreciate the level of detail and care the artist put into his creations, the shots of his London workshop - where the beloved characters are now stored - showing off the tremendously prolific out-pouring of clay beings of all shapes and sizes that Harryhausen created (each of which could be manipulated at a painstaking pace to create the desired effect). Riding very much on the nostalgic affection audiences have for the majestic Harryhausen's work, Penso's Special Effects Titan is a standard issue documentary in form, yet something very special in terms of content. It may not be lavishly produced (unlike many of the films RH worked upon), but above all it functions well as a thunderous round of applause for the career of a much-loved movie magician, who filled our childhoods with so much wonderment and spectacle." 4/5 Cinevue.com

View the trailer (via YouTube)