matte shot - a tribute to golden era special fx january 201

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This blog is intended primarily as a tribute to the inventiveness and ingenuity of the craft of the matte painter during Hollywoods' Golden Era. Some of the shots will amaze in their grandeur and epic quality while others will surprise in their 'invisibility' to even the sophisticated viewer. I hope this collection will serve as an appreciation of the artform and both casual visitors and those with a specialist interest may benefit, enjoy and be amazed at skills largely unknown today. Matte Shot - a tribute to Golden Era Matte Shot - a tribute to Golden Era special fx special fx Wednesday, 11 January 2012 The Glass Art of Hammer Films I've been a long time enthusiast for Britain's Hammer Films, having pretty much grown up on these shows. There's always been a great sense of consistency within the Hammer production catalogue, where meager budgets and unbelievably compressed shooting schedules somehow always seemed to result in a solid, highly professional and polished finished release. The amazingly ingenious art direction of Bernard Robinson which somehow opened up imaginatively scripted scenarios to a far broader canvas than the extremely confined Bray Studios (really a converted old house) soundstage crew would ever have thought possible. The same could be said of the consistently high standard of scoring by composers such as James Bernard who managed to lend an air of elegance to the proceedings The common misnomer was that the little studio just produced horror pictures, whereas the truth of the matter was that many genres were tackled - mystery, film noir, desert adventure, dinosaur epics, comedies, war films and science fiction. Among the many films made by the studio quite a number still stand the test of time and are excellent cinematic entertainments. Some of my favourites are THE QUATERMASS EXPERIMENT, CAPTAIN CLEGG (aka NIGHT CREATURES), THE DEVIL RIDES OUT, CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF, TO THE DEVIL A DAUGHTER, TWINS OF EVIL, THE DEVIL SHIP PIRATES, the very under rated VAMPIRE CIRCUS and the deliriously wacky LEGEND OF THE 7 GOLDEN VAMPIRES (a particularly guilty pleasure) to name but a few. Being a matte shot website I'm going to primarily focus on the many painted mattes and some miniatures from a cross section of the quite extensive range of Hammer product from the material I have. I highly recommend the outstanding book Hammer Films - The Unsung Heroes by Wayne Kinsey which pays exhaustive tribute to so many of the technicians and creative people behind the studio, with an excellent special effects chapter chock filled with interviews, personality profiles and behind the Art in Movies: matte artists A-Z Art Renewal Centre-classical painting online museum Catastrophe in the Movies David Stipes - Visual FX Cameraman Dennis Lowe's UK Visual Effects site DVD Beaver: The best review site around Fred's Cinema Visual Effects Blog McTodd Animates Model Ships in the Cinema Movie Matte Painting blogspot Paul Lasaine - matte painter & conceptual artist Shadowlocked: 50 Best Mattes Steven Hill's Movie Title Cards A-Z The Ellenshaw fine art site Visual Effects History - a timeline Walter Percy Day - motion picture pioneer Wrong Side of the Art - Classic Genre Movie Posters Essential links NZPete The less you know the better. View my complete profile About Me Followers 2013 (6) 2012 (10) December (1) November (1) September (1) August (1) July (1) May (1) Archive 8 Share Share More Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In Matte Shot - a tribute to Golden Era special fx: January 2012 6/24/2013 http://nzpetesmatteshot.blogspot.com/2012_01_01_archive.html 1 / 27

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Page 1: Matte Shot - A Tribute to Golden Era Special Fx January 201

This blog is intended primarily as a tribute to the inventiveness and ingenuity of the craft of the matte painter duringHollywoods' Golden Era. Some of the shots will amaze in their grandeur and epic quality while others will surprise intheir 'invisibility' to even the sophisticated viewer. I hope this collection will serve as an appreciation of the artform andboth casual visitors and those with a specialist interest may benefit, enjoy and be amazed at skills largely unknowntoday.

Matte Shot - a tribute to Golden EraMatte Shot - a tribute to Golden Eraspecial fxspecial fx

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

The Glass Art of Hammer Films

I've been a long time enthusiast for Britain's Hammer Films, having pretty much grown up on theseshows. There's always been a great sense of consistency within the Hammer production catalogue,where meager budgets and unbelievably compressed shooting schedules somehow always seemed toresult in a solid, highly professional and polished finished release. The amazingly ingenious art directionof Bernard Robinson which somehow opened up imaginatively scripted scenarios to a far broadercanvas than the extremely confined Bray Studios (really a converted old house) soundstage crew wouldever have thought possible. The same could be said of the consistently high standard of scoring bycomposers such as James Bernard who managed to lend an air of elegance to the proceedings

The common misnomer was that the little studiojust produced horror pictures, whereas the truthof the matter was that many genres were tackled- mystery, film noir, desert adventure, dinosaurepics, comedies, war films and science fiction. Among the many films made by the studio quite anumber still stand the test of time and areexcellent cinematic entertainments. Some of myfavourites are THE QUATERMASSEXPERIMENT, CAPTAIN CLEGG (aka NIGHTCREATURES), THE DEVIL RIDES OUT, CURSEOF THE WEREWOLF, TO THE DEVIL A

DAUGHTER, TWINS OF EVIL, THE DEVIL SHIP PIRATES, the very under rated VAMPIRE CIRCUS andthe deliriously wacky LEGEND OF THE 7 GOLDEN VAMPIRES (a particularly guilty pleasure) to namebut a few.Being a matte shot website I'm going to primarilyfocus on the many painted mattes and someminiatures from a cross section of the quiteextensive range of Hammer product from thematerial I have. I highly recommend theoutstanding book Hammer Films - The UnsungHeroes by Wayne Kinsey which pays exhaustivetribute to so many of the technicians andcreative people behind the studio, with anexcellent special effects chapter chock filled withinterviews, personality profiles and behind the

Art in Movies: matte artists A-Z

Art Renewal Centre-classical paintingonline museum

Catastrophe in the Movies

David Stipes - Visual FX Cameraman

Dennis Lowe's UK Visual Effects site

DVD Beaver: The best review sitearound

Fred's Cinema Visual Effects Blog

McTodd Animates

Model Ships in the Cinema

Movie Matte Painting blogspot

Paul Lasaine - matte painter &conceptual artist

Shadowlocked: 50 Best Mattes

Steven Hill's Movie Title Cards A-Z

The Ellenshaw fine art site

Visual Effects History - a timeline

Walter Percy Day - motion picturepioneer

Wrong Side of the Art - Classic GenreMovie Posters

Essential links

NZPete

The less you knowthe better.

View my completeprofile

About Me

Followers

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scenes info. Beware though of some erroneousinformation with regards to the matte paintingwork for WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH.

Without a doubt the most recognised SFX name readily associatedwith Hammer from the early fifties through to the mid seventies isLes Bowie. As I have a Bowie blog retrospective due out soon I'llnot delve too deeply into Les here other than to say that Bowie'scontribution was immeasurable. Les must have invented the term'multi-tasking' as he was adept in all facets of special effects: mattepainting, miniatures, pyrotechnics, prosthetics, special props andatmospherics.

I'll cover Les's career in a subsequent article, though it'sworth outlining the many visual effects technicians who gottheir start under Les on Hammer films. Bowie's long timeassistant, matte painter Ray Caple started with Les whenjust 15 and learned the artform under Bowie's tutelage.Future Gerry Anderson effects wizard Derek Meddings alsogot his start under Bowie at Hammer as an uncreditedtrainee matte artist along side Caple.Eventual two time Oscar winners Brian Johnson and KitWest featured prominently in this era as well, as did RoyField.

Bowie on miniature set of MOON ZERO TWO

Hammer's 1957 film THE ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN. I'm not sure who was effects man on this show?

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BRIDES OF DRACULA (1960) effects supervisor Syd Pearson, with matte work by Les Bowie and Ray Caple.

Miniature castle and a wonderfully atmospheric windmill model from BRIDES OF DRACULA

The very good WWII P.O.W story CAMP ON BLOOD ISLAND (1957). Matte by Les Bowie. Matte camera Roy Field.

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Inexplicably retitled to make it more accessible to the American market, CAPTAIN CLEGG (1961) remains one of my top Hammerpictures with a wonderfully atmospheric story filled with eerie imagery and top notch direction. Many terrific matte shots and other

clever effects shots of the night horsemen on the moors. Great little film.

Les Bowie-Ray Caple matte painted island: CAPTAIN CLEGG.

Before and after Bowie-Caple matte composite: CAPTAIN CLEGG (1961). Original plate with perennial screen baddie Milton GaylordReid shot at Bray's quarry pits - a site used in many a Hammer show.

The incredibly creepy 'Marsh Phantoms' for CAPTAIN CLEGG created with highly reflective Codit paint which was used for roadsignage, manufactured by the Minnesota based 3M Company - the forerunner of front projection reflex screen material, and quitepossibly the first application of such. The paint was applied to hessian costumes on both the horses and the riders, with two stronglights directed at them directly from the camera position. The technique would be used many years later on SUPERMAN, which alsofeatured Bowie as an effects supervisor and may well have been his idea.

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Eerie, moonlit marsh matte painted by Les Bowie.

More frames of the Marsh Phantoms double exposed against Les Bowie's full frame paintings.

The Scarecrow on Romney Marshes from CAPTAIN CLEGG - a full matte painting executed on hardboard by Les Bowie, with twoearlier test paintings shown above. Beautiful work.

Part of an extremely wide pan across Romney Marshes to the village for CAPTAIN CLEGG. The shot commences during the openingtitles and the lettering obscures the first half of this elaborate shot which was painted on hardboard - around 12 feet wide - by LesBowie. According to budding effects assistant Ian Scoones "Les did these wonderful paintings on hardboard, and cameraman KitWest panned across them. One was the village of Dymchurch which I think Les painted in a phenomenal 48 hours non stop". In aninterview for the journal Hammer's House of Horror Scoones told of coming up with a suggestion of putting a small moving figure intothe shot: "We drilled two holes and made a tiny cut out figure, put it on nylon, and just pulled it from the back so it appeared to bemoving, but you hardly see it in the film because all the lettering was superimposed over the top". As a beginning assistant,Scoones also helped in adding a third dimension to this magnificent matte painting by arranging foreground vegetation and bits andpieces in front of the painting. I think this is one of Bowie's best matte paintings.

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pieces in front of the painting. I think this is one of Bowie's best matte paintings.

The break through film which put Hammer on the map, although by no means it's first film by any stretch - CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN(1956) featured these two mattes by Les Bowie. The cropping from academy frame ratio to a pseudo 1.85:1 video formatunfortunately destroys Bowie's original composition for the top frame of the castle in the mountains

The under rated 1960 CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF was an excellent film in all departments, supplemented nicely with these moodynight skies courtesy of Les Bowie and Ray Caple.

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'Twas a full moon on that fateful night'

Beautiful multi-plane glass shot of the clouds parting to reveal the full moon from CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF.

So you thought Hammer only made horror pictures? ... Well think again. Here is a glorious glass painting for DON'T PANIC CHAPS(1959) by Albert Julion, a former Poppa Day artist, who was one of Shepperton's top matte men.

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I generally love old time movie ad art and posters, but the British quad shown above is one I dislike very much. Anyhow, DRACULAHAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE (1968) was pretty good and for reasons unknown utilised the services of freelance matte artist PeterMelrose instead of the usual Bowie Films crowd, who would hire the equipment and facilities at Wally Veevers' Shepperton effectsshop to take on projects such as this and others. Nice work.

More excellent Peter Melrose glass shots from DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE with very extensive artwork required onseveral shots as well as a wonderful multi-plane moonlit cloud shot which would ultimately be recycled for subsequent Hammer

films. Matte cameraman Peter Harman with John Grant as assistant.

A stunning Ray Caple matte painting for EVIL OF FRANKENSTEIN (1963) which would be used in at least four other Hammer filmsover the years.

An out take test frame of the Caple matte temporarily married to the plate.

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Upper frames are both enhanced with Caple's matte art to expand limited exterior set. Lower frame is a partial miniature partialpainting by Ray Caple and Ian Scoones, photographed by Kit West.

The end is high - EVIL OF FRANKENSTEIN's explosive finale. Miniature and painted backing split screened with actors

Day and night views from the dire FRANKENSTEIN AND THE MONSTER FROM HELL (1973). Ray Caple mattes.

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THE GORGON (1963) would see the same castle miniatures reused, with some additional painted enhancements by Ray Caple.

Fantastic poster artwork for HANDS OF THE RIPPER (1971) - some of the best ad art from the studio - though sadly a fairly dull film. For these interiors of St Pauls Cathedral producer Aida Young called on the services of Cliff Culley at Pinewood. Apparently front

projection was used in this lengthy sequence.

DRACULA or HORROR OF DRACULA (1957) as it's known in many locales had Sydney Pearson as effects designer and I thinkpossibly Derek Meddings painting mattes - although I'm not certain.

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Before (Bray backlot) and after composite of same setting with alternate sky and time of the day.

The 1962 KISS OF THE VAMPIRE had some nice effects sequences involving bats, with the lower right matte by Ray Caple enhancedby hundreds of cel animated bats which were supplied by an outside contractor who did effects shots for 'Top of the Pops'. Oh,

and there's that castle yet again.

A rare photo of that Hammer castle miniature as well as an original glass painting.

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A favourite of mine on so many exploitation levels it isn't funny! Shame about the dismal glass shot though which would haveworked far better with the painting extending partway down the mountain range and married with a soft blend.

Hammer meets Robin Hood - THE MEN OF SHERWOOD FOREST (1954) - one of around three such RH flicks.

One of only three Dennis Wheatley adaptations that I'm aware of (and the least effective by a long shot). As a teenaged collectorand reader of Wheatley's books in the 70's I was always surprised more screenplays didn't come about as a result of his prose.

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No mattes that I could spot, but several nice miniature sets in a pretty wacky off-the-wall show.

Miniature from THE LOST CONTINENT (1967) with effects by Cliff Richardson and creatures by Robert Mattey.

Although I saw MOON ZERO TWO (1968) around 40 years ago I've not got a copy nor any frames - just a few behind the scenesstills such as this. Effects D.O.P Kit West setting up a miniature shot at Bowie's Slough studio. Of course many years later Westwould move out of matte and model photography and into physical effects on many, many huge films.

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The very effective HammerScope thriller NIGHTMARE (1962) opened with this wonderful pull back shot of the asylum - a Ray Caplepainting mounted behind an Ian Scoones foreground miniature of gatehouse and trees, all photographed by Kit West at Bowie Films.

The Caple-Scoones-West set up for NIGHTMARE.

Ray Caple's perfect matte painting of the asylum split screened with minimal set.

For Ray Harryhausen's epic ONE MILLION YEARS BC (1965...A.D) Bowie films would be called upon to supply matte paintings byBob Cuff and Ray Caple in addition to the big 'porridge' lava eruption prologue.

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Another entertaining 90 minutes from Hammer, the 1961 PIRATES OF BLOOD RIVER with this Bowie glass shot.

Excellent, provocative sci-fi THE QUATERMASS XPERIMENT (1954) was filled with terrific effects shots and some genuinelydisturbing Phil Leakey make up effects. Les Bowie was in charge of the special effects, with a crew which included his thenassociate in his FX company, Vic Margutti who's specialty was travelling matte photography. Others on the fx crew were a veryyoung Ray Caple and Margutti's optical cameraman Roy Field.

Left -one of Phillip Leakey's horrific make ups, and at right a barely noticeable matte shot adding alot to the frame.

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The last 15 minutes of QUATERMASS XPERIMENT occurs in Westminster Abbey, where filming permission was denied. All interiorand exterior shots involved matte art by Bowie and Caple, with prcatically all of this frame paint.

More mattes from the excellent QUATERMASS XPERIMENT on which Bowie told interviewer John Brosnan that he received only 30pounds per week for his efforts!

Matte art plus a crude yet effective puppeteered monster on a partial model set with painted backing. Of the monster, opticalcameraman on the film, Roy Field said: "Les and Ray made that. They stitched up rubber and bits and pieces to make theseoctopus type tentacles. Oh dear, it was awful (laughter). They made three of them at different scales - the largest was about 8-10feet across and the smallest was 12 inches across"

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I've a soft spot for extreme perspective painting, and this is a very bold matte for the time, where such a shot design is most unusualindeed. Matte photography by Roy Field and Vic Margutti.

QUATERMASS fiery finale effects.

Not in the same league as the original, QM2 is nonetheless an interesting film with minimal effects input.

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Side by side comparison frames from the black and white release and what I first thought was a re-jigged colourised DVD release,though as it turns out were prepared as part of a parody article. Effects wise the tasks went to Pinewood's Bill Warrington withHenry Harris and Frank George.

Miniature pyro conclusion.

The 1958 REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN opened with this full painting by Les Bowie.

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Two miniature castle shots with a painted backing, and at left what I assume to be a multi-plane painted cut out.

A dizzying down view which upsets the equilibrium of your humble author. Probably a Ray Caple multi-plane matte shot with paintedclouds on moving glass on the foremost plane. Looks good.

Trashed by the critics, I liked SCARS OF DRACULA personally - certainly the best of the latter Chris Lee vampire pictures with Drac'sbest ever death scene by far. Effects supervisor was Roger Dicken who supplied numerous special props and make up effectsgags. I asked Brian Johnson who painted this matte shot and he couldn't recall but as he was close friends with Ray Caple it wasalmost certainly him.

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Although my frames are poor, SHE (1964) had many matte shots by Bob Cuff and Ray Caple. The film wasn't a patch on the old RKOversion though - effects wise or entertainment wise.

Broad tilt on full painting: SHE (1964)

Well assembled optical combo for Andress' demise. Kit West and Ian Scoones worked with Les Bowie.

Veteran miniaturist George Blackwell model set split screened by Kit West with actors in tilt down.

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Bold and generally effective mattes and model composites from SPACEWAYS (1952) - possibly Les Bowie's first foray into therealms of Hammer Films after his years at Rank. Vic Margutti worked closely with Les and they formed a professional partnership

which lasted some years.

SPACEWAYS (1952) miniatures by Les Bowie.

I saw this 35 years ago and recall it as being a really tight little 1960 film noir - TASTE OF FEAR (or SCREAM OF FEAR as it wasknown here) had this marvellous matte shot. Kit West told of this glass being painted by both Les and Ian in Kit's London flat, with

"Les painting the left side, Ian painting the right side - meeting in the middle with a spraygun".

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I'm pretty certain this cloudy moonscape was a Peter Melrose multi-plane shot lifted from DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE afew years earlier.

TASTE THE BLOOD OF DRACULA (1969) was a Brian Johnson effects show, with Les Bowie called in to provide this full multi-planepainting with the mist on a separate glass in front of the decrepid church-crypt.

Hammer's 1960 oriental thriller THE TERROR OF THE TONGS had this Bowie matte of steamer and Hong Kong hills.

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A sorely under rated horror film - and a very sadistic little number it is at that - VAMPIRE CIRCUS (1971) opened with graphicbloodshed and eroticism, followed by this seasonal montage of painted mattes showing the passage of time.

Ray Caple glass shot from VAMPIRE CIRCUS (1971)

Local bobby 'pops a cap in Darth Vader's ass'. An example of Bowie's prosthetic work where a hole the size of a small car isblasted through David Prowse. The FX creases show in the freeze frames but in action it's very impressive.

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I've no idea just who did the effects work on THE VAMPIRE LOVERS (1970) as there are several mattes and a few decapitations -not to mention the utterly magnificent Ingrid Pitt - herself a special visual effect who sadly passed away last year. We miss ya'Ingrid.

The late Ingrid Pitt - why is her exquisite vision here? ... because it's my blog and I can, that's why!

Hammer's 1967 VENGEANCE OF SHE with effects by Bowie and future Oscar winner Nick Allder.

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With the success of Harryhausen's 1965 Raquel Welch dinosaur epic, Hammer knew they would hit paydirt if the formula wererepeated. WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH (1969) would be that film - or so they thought. American stop motion wizard JimDanforth was brought on board to produce the effects in England with dozens of effects shots outside of the animation cutsrequired. Above is one of Jim's multi part effects shots with stop motion, miniature rear projection, matte art and foreground glassart. At right the original glass painting by Jim Danforth can be seen on the effects stage at Bray. Jim's memoir Dinosaurs, Dragonsand Drama goes into considerable detail about the machinations of producing the many effects shots for this film and is well worthreading.

With Jim being bogged down with animation and 2nd unit work, some of the matte work was farmed out to a number of artists, withthis shot being a collaborative effort mostly painted by Ray Caple (who was personally recommended by Albert Whitlock) but later

completed by Jim. Effects creator Danforth wrote of "I enjoyed Ray Caple and I wish I'd have known about him from the beginning ofthe film. I remember Ray's work as being excellent".

The top left glass painting was initially done by Les Bowie, though producer Aida Young and effects designer Danforth found theresult unsatisfactory due to, among other factors, being painted in entirely the wrong colour scheme that were deemed toounrealistic. The only way of saving the painting and integrating it into the picture resulted in Danforth completely re-painting over thetop of that same huge glass. Bowie's assistant Mike Tilley in an interview said "Some of those matte glasses were about 6x4 foot,set in big hefty wooden frames, and Les would do one of those paintings in a day in his studio back in Slough". The middleright night shot is a multiple component trick shot engineered by Bowie with Caple, and is the only Les Bowie matte to feature in thefinal cut. Most of the shot is a large glass painting by Ray Caple with the people reflected into the shot via a small mirror in SchufftanProcess. The waterfall is falling salt. Other matte painters briefly engaged on the film included Doug Ferris at Shepperton and PeterMelrose at Bray. Though highly competent, none of Peter's work made the final film due to budget and scheduling issues. Bob Cuffwas approached by Danforth to paint on the film but his work in progress on the huge fx show MACKENNA'S GOLD was deemedstylistically not the look Danforth was seeking, so Cuff was passed over.

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Posted by NZPete at 00:57 12 comments:

At left is an unused matte by Jim Danforth, while the matte at right is Jim's second version, repainted to maintain a certain geographiccontinuity. These frames are from Jim's essential memoir Dinosaurs, Dragons and Drama - The Odyssey of a Trick Film Maker.

I've never seen this one - X THE UNKNOWN (1956). Effects by Bowie-Margutti Ltd with Ray Caple painting mattes and Roy Fieldcompositing them. In an interview Roy Field describes the lower left scene: "The pylon etc was all a Les Bowie matte painting. Themonster was filmed on a small set some 15 inches wide and the cables were photographed separately with heated tungsten wire tomake them glow and pyro for sparking . These were all shot separately then all the elements were combined in a bi-pack cameraby me to make a composite negative". Correction: bottom right is actually from THE TROLLENBERG TERROR - another Les Bowiefilm. Oooops!

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Labels: Bill Warrington, Bob Cuff, Brian Johnson, Derek Meddings, Ian Scoones, Jim Danforth, Kit West, LesBowie, Peter Melrose, Ray Caple, Roger Dicken, Roy Field

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