Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Sudden Death (1977) review
SUDDEN DEATH 1975 (released in 1977)
Robert Conrad (Harrison "Duke" Smith), Don Stroud (Dominic Elba), Felton Perry (Wyatt Spain), John Ashley (John Shaw), Nancy Conrad (Melissa Smith), Vic Diaz (street show peddlar)
Directed by Eddie Romero
The Short Version: Not to be confused with the 1995 Van Damme flick, this is a US-Filipino co-produced actioner from the man responsible for the BLOOD ISLAND trilogy and a slew of other low budget Drive In favorites. Eddie Romero's movie is modestly sloppy in places, but loaded with fights, gun battles, splattery blood squibs and a few scenes of outright nasty violence. The script by Oscar Williams is peppered with expletives and an almost non-stop barrage of memorable one-liners. It's arguably the manliest Filipino exploitation movie ever made with its bare, hairy chests and endless tough guy dialog. SUDDEN DEATH is essential 70s exploitation for lovers of the most wildly, lovingly uncouth decade in cinema history.
A board of ruthless shipping company executives hires assassins to take out Ed Nielson, the American corporate president and his family. Unfortunately for them, their main intended victim survives. He asks the aid of former covert operative Duke Smith to help him. Initially he refuses, but after Nielson is killed, he and his Karate fighting colleague team up to take on a corrupt syndicate, renegade agents and deadly assassins.
Eddie Romero (who passed away Tuesday, May 28th of 2013) is best known on these shores for an entertaining string of quick-fix exploitation movies that ran the gamut from bloody monster movies to violent action pictures. His films (whether as a producer or director) were prime examples of Drive In fare at its finest. SUDDEN DEATH (1977) is his last such passion pit flick of significance and one of the most fun examples of the buddy movie.
While many Philippine set exploitation movies focused a good deal of attention on women and their bodies, SUDDEN DEATH puts men at the forefront; and surprisingly, features very little female flesh. Bare hairy chests, dollops of testosterone and bad guys who rarely remove their sunglasses take center stage here. Compared with Hong Kong films, the martial arts moments (those with the participation of Felton Perry) fail to convince. However, Robert Conrad, who was no stranger to stunts and fighting, looks good in his scenes. His fight at the end against Don Stroud is somewhat brief, but bloody and brutal.
The package is topped off by one of those patented 70s 'wa-wa' soundtracks and kung fu movie sound effects. Romero's movie gets additional bonus points for some added local flavor with some scenes showcasing Filipino festivals and a street barker (played by perennial banana republic bad guy, Vic Diaz) huckstering a burly wrestler.
The streamlined script by Oscar Williams draws some gruff, aggressive good guys and sadistic, cold-blooded bad guys. This goes a long way in making an enjoyable movie. Even when the film gets wobbly with some strange, almost intrusive goofball moments, the characters are so likable or despicable, you can't help but be entertained. There's a slight political theme running through Romero's movie involving corruption in corporations and government, but it eventually drowns in a sea of fist fights and gun battles. The dialog is highly quotable and the many great lines are fired off as quickly as a machine gun clip.
Robert Conrad was a major player on American television, but did very few movies. He was never a great actor (and admitted to this, himself), but he did good enough in roles that rarely (if ever) demanded a whole lot of emoting. His most famous role is arguably as the Bond style Secret Service agent James West in the amazing, innovative THE WILD, WILD WEST television series that ran for four seasons between 1965 and 1969. What he lacked in thespian skills he made up for in a vigorous determination to outdo himself in action sequences. He was notorious for doing his own stunts on that series (as well as being a wild card offscreen, too) till a serious injury shooting a season three episode (later moved to season four) got him a regular stunt double for the more dangerous stunts the remainder of the series.
Conrad retains that vigor in SUDDEN DEATH, and shows more life in the fight scenes than in the exposition. However, his line deliveries of some of the more obscene exchanges are pretty damn funny.
Felton Perry will be best remembered by some for his recurring role in the ROBOCOP trilogy. But others will know him better as Buford Pusser's deputy in the violent Southern crime drama, the original WALKING TALL (1973). Perry was no stranger to exploitation movies, either. You'll find him as one of the crazed soldiers in the obscure BRUTE CORPS (1971), New World's NIGHT CALL NURSES (1972) and Ivan Dixon's superlative TROUBLE MAN (1972).
Like everyone else in the cast, Perry seems to be having a grand time playing a trigger happy, Karate fightin', lady lovin' former agent. He gets his share of great lines, and these moments go a long way in allowing the viewer to overlook his painful attempts at performing martial arts. He gets in there and puts his all into it, but it comes off badly. The filmmakers edit his fight scenes in such a way to salvage what they can, but one can clearly see that Perry is no Karate master.
Don Stroud is one of the big screens best loved tough guys. He could play either good guys or bad guys, but when he was a villain, he was one mean bastard. You'll find him as one of Ma Barker's youngins in BLOODY MAMA (1970), a racist deputy in ...TICK... TICK... TICK (1970), the good guy biker in ANGEL UNCHAINED (1970), one of the villains after Clint Eastwood in JOE KIDD (1972), an evil hitman in SLAUGHTER'S BIG RIP-OFF (1973), a psychotic rapist-murderer in DEATH WEEKEND (1976) and a kung fu killing machine in SEARCH AND DESTROY (1979). He also appeared with his friend, Robert Conrad again in LIVE A LITTLE, STEAL A LOT (1975) aka MURPH THE SURF. He worked in dozens of television shows throughout the 1980s and mixed up his repertoire between TV and low budget movies in the 1990s. He was MIA at the dawn of the new millennium, but has appeared in movies sporadically in the last several years.
Stroud's role as Dominic is, in this reviewers opinion, one of his best bad guy roles. He doesn't appear in the film till nearly an hour into the movie, but he makes his scenes count. His introduction (where we don't see his face while he holds a white cat in his lap!) exudes a Bond villain level of calculating evil. His accent and speech is as meticulous as his character is in pulling off his hits. He's given some meaty lines as well; a highlight of which is a scene where he and Duke (Conrad) meet in a public place. They walk down a hallway, their eyes never leaving each others face as they converse. His fight at the end against Conrad takes place in an ice warehouse and is well choreographed with a gory finish.
John Ashley was a Jack-of-all-trades in the film industry. He was something of a heartthrob in the late 50s and early 1960s and was, like Stroud, a close friend of Robert Conrad. Ashley also took a role in a WILD, WILD WEST episode from season two, 'The Night of the Watery Death'. He was also a singer and movie producer, later finding success in the Philippines acting in, and producing movies there and becoming friends with Eddie Romero in the process. Despite initially looking like an Elvis impersonator in this movie, his role as a crooked US agent/hired killer was a departure for him. He wasn't that great of an actor, but he had charisma to spare.
There's much to recommend in SUDDEN DEATH for exploitation fans. The cast alone holds a great deal of marquee power for this sort of picture. It benefits from plentiful (if not always successfully realized) action, splashes of sleaze and bloody violence, and is capped off with the sort of shocker ending that was indigenous to 70s cinema. If you're a fan of exploitation movies, and especially those with a Filipino flavor, Eddie Romero's star-studded action thriller provides an entertaining 90 minutes worth of popcorn and Coke escapism.
This DVD is representative of the Inception Media Group double feature DVD paired with MURPH THE SURF.
Labels:
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Sudden Death (1977)
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Cult Film Faves Not On DVD: Sweet Sugar (1972) review
SWEET SUGAR 1972
Phyllis Davis (Sugar Bowman), Ella Edwards (Simone), Timothy Brown (Mojo), Angus Duncan (Dr. John), Pamela Collins (Dolores), Jackie Giroux (Fara), Cliff Osmond (Burgos), James Whitworth (Mario), Darl Severns (Carlos), Albert Cole (Max), James Houghton (Rick)
Directed by Michel Levesque
***WARNING! This review contains images of nudity***
The Short Version: The man who brought you WEREWOLVES ON WHEELS (1973) pours some sugar on the exploitation audience with this sweet and savage Drive In trash obscurity that is crying out for a legitimate DVD release. New World rival Dimension Pictures knew well the market their opposition catered to, and they could churn out equally entertaining clones, such as this picture that apes Corman's WIP flicks. The abundance of sleaze substitutes nicely for a plot and its many underdeveloped characters -- most of whom are never overdressed. The ultimate Phyllis Davis showcase, SWEET SUGAR satisfies.
After being set up and arrested for drug possession, the sexy Sugar is given an option to avoid a drawn out trial -- spend two years in a Central American prison working the vast sugar cane fields. She agrees and and it isn't long before her libidinous ways get her and her fellow inmates into serious trouble. Torture, rape, cannibalism and death ensue when the girls are at the mercy of the sadistic Dr. John and his bizarre sexual experiments.
Before Jack Hill's THE BIG DOLL HOUSE (1970) incarcerated the contents of paying customers wallets, WIP pictures were few and far between. At one time the biggest moneymaking independent picture of that time, the Jack Hill directed, Corman produced, Philippine lensed exploitationer gave birth to a slew of clones including the classicks THE BAMBOO HOUSE OF DOLLS (1973) and ILSA, SHE-WOLF OF THE SS (1974). Dimension Pictures (New World's rival), did their own version with SWEET SUGAR (1972).
Michel Levesque's movie is an amalgamation of Corman's trashy trinity of banana republic travesties -- THE BIG DOLL HOUSE (1970), WOMEN IN CAGES (1971) and THE BIG BIRD CAGE (1972). The one major difference is that those movies took place in the Philippines and Dimension's picture is located somewhere in Central America. Incidentally, both SUGAR and DOLL HOUSE share the same scriptwriter in Don Spencer.
As portrayed by the incredible Phyllis Davis, Sugar Bowman is essentially Anitra Ford's character from THE BIG BIRD CAGE. She's perpetually horny and repeatedly tries to escape, albeit unsuccessfully. Her libido and dedication to busting out (haha) lead to all sorts of harrowing and nasty situations that do little to endear Sugar to her fellow captives.
In typical 70s exploitation fashion, the picture has a bevy of funny lines, and Davis gets a lot of them. She carries the entire movie on her bosom and sports one helluva 'come hither' look when she's feeling frisky (which is often).
Davis's Drive In career was short-lived, but she did lend her talents to numerous television programs such as her role on VEGA$ (1978-1981), and frequent guest spots on THE LOVE BOAT (1979-1984) and FANTASY ISLAND (1979-1983). BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS (1970) and Dimension's TERMINAL ISLAND (1973) are among her handful of big screen credits.
Since these jungle sleaze movies garnered a share of their attention because of the talents of Pam Grier, this one invokes her memory in the form of Ella Edwards. Sadly, Edwards never manages to exude enough charisma to rival the presence of Davis. Still, she has a few memorable moments. Edwards can also be seen in Arthur Marks's excellent cop thriller DETROIT 9000 (1973).
Fans of THE HILLS HAVE EYES (1977) will welcome the appearance of James 'Papa Jupiter' Whitworth as Mario, one of the nasty prison guards. He appeared in a similar capacity in Dimension's TERMINAL ISLAND the following year in 1973. If you ever wanted to see him play a good guy, he has a co-starring role in the SciFi monster movie PLANET OF DINOSAURS (1978).
One of SWEET SUGAR's novel additions that deviates from the New World WIP template is the inclusion of a voodoo practitioner in the form of the muscular Timothy Brown. Like his colleagues Jim Brown and Fred Williamson, Timothy was a former football player. Unfortunately, he never quite achieved the level of big screen stardom of those two. If you're a fan of the innovative THE WILD, WILD WEST television program, you may remember Brown in the season three opener, 'The Night of the Bubbling Death'. He was more muscular in that show, but slimmed down a bit by the time he got around to SWEET SUGAR. He appeared alongside Alex Rocco as Digger, one of two hitmen in another Arthur Marks classic, BONNIE'S KIDS (1973). The third 'Ginger' movie, GIRLS ARE FOR LOVING (1973) and Al Adamson's THE DYNAMITE BROTHERS (1974) featured Brown as well.
Outside of the inclusion of voodoo rites, SWEET SUGAR goes deeper into the depths of derangement with the character of Dr. John. Initially, the acting of Angus Duncan never once clues you in on the mans lunatic potential till it flares up later in the movie. His sexual experiments masquerading as scientific research become increasingly bizarre as the film progresses. His first faux scientific breakthrough involves using the women as guinea pigs; injecting them with some tribal aphrodisiac -- their reaction being recorded on a mechanical device. Of course, Sugar is sent into an orgiastic frenzy that literally overloads the little machine. The picture is likewise injected with comical moments such as this from time to time and mostly revolve around two bumbling, but likable prison guards, Max and Ricky.
Towards the end, the lighter bits vanish completely. Dr. John becomes more creepy and even more disturbing. He's seen cackling gleefully when an unruly guard is shot some 9 times and kicked half a dozen times afterward(!).
Another of the bad doctors experiments sees him get the women back in line by tossing drugged up felines at them that bite, rip and tear at their flesh! Although it's obvious the cats are definitely not ripping the girls up, the scene is edited just well enough to be sufficiently believable.
Dr. John really goes off the deep end during the finale. Apparently the bump on his head he gets from Sugar's machete handle loosens a screw or two. Duncan's acting style radically changes turning into a full blown wacko laughing uncontrollably and vociferously uttering such lines in third person as "Dr. John is indestructible!" and "Dr. John is immortal!" It's really something to behold. This burst of unintentional hilarity complements the half-baked, but energetic mass gun battle that ends the picture.
Despite some sloppy moments here and there, SWEET SUGAR flies across the finish line with a multitude of nude scenes and sex that, others in the cast notwithstanding, showcases Davis's fabulous frame. There's also a high trash quotient that keeps things moving along at a relatively brisk pace. The film stumbles a bit till about 30 minutes in, but after that, it's an all access pass to depravity. Killer cats, cannibalism, torture and some lesbianism supplement the fact that there is zero plot holding it all together. The music is made up of library tracks familiar to fans of kung fu movies and low budget 'lake monster' flicks such as BOG (1978).
If you're hypoglycemic where pure exploitation and Drive In sleaze are concerned, than SWEET SUGAR is just the dose of lowbrow entertainment you're looking for.
You can buy the DVD HERE.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Stop-Motion Masters: The Age of Aliens, Dinosaurs and Monsters & the Artists Who Animated Them
DANFORTH AND THE DINOSAURS: PAINTING A VISION OF STOP-MOTION ANIMATED LANDSCAPES
While Willis O'Brien planted the seed of stop-motion animated visual effects magic, it was Ray Harryhausen who made the garden grow. Both men were pioneers in their field; and because of their arduous work and big screen accomplishments, many others followed a similar trajectory (with varying degrees of success) having been inspired by those two men.
This article is a companion piece to the Harryhausen three-parter, and highlights a few others who worked in stop-motion animation. Some of them went on to great things while others did not; but all grew up during a time when such effects technology were made by hand and with a great deal of ingenuity. Many stop-motion animated movies possessed a fantastic quality that the future computer generated graphics could never replicate.
Jim Danforth is among the top tier when it comes to established stop-motion animators (he was also proficient in other types of SPX trickery). He's one of a scant few who ever aided Ray Harryhausen, who had -- prior to CLASH OF THE TITANS -- always worked alone in bringing his creations to life. Unfortunately, Danforth never quite attained the same level of respect afforded Harryhausen; although his work rivaled, and in some cases surpassed that of the stop-motion master. Danforth had an incredible career, though; one that was dotted with numerous pictures that benefited from his splendid and innovative animated touch.
Heralded as a discovery of Famous Monsters of Filmland Magazine, Danforth got a big break, and a great deal of experience animating the creatures of the 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1958) clone, JACK THE GIANT KILLER (1962). The creatures were colorful and fun to watch onscreen, but their appearance was more cartoonish than fearsome. They made for an enjoyable movie regardless. One of his more popular creations were the 'Zanti Misfits' from the same titled 1963 episode of the OUTER LIMITS television program. These were very early in Danforth's career, and he would soon encounter projects of greater value and prestige.
One of his earliest gigs was for AIP. Danforth was assigned to add some brief moments of a stop-motion dragon to the tepid Vittorio Cattafavi Italian muscleman movie from 1960, GOLIATH & THE DRAGON (Italian title: THE VENGEANCE OF HERCULES). These brief shots don't match well with the prop dragon head that Mark Forest does battle with to rescue the manacled maiden towards the end of the movie.
After performing stop-motion duties on THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF THE BROTHERS GRIMM (1962) and IT'S A MAD, MAD, MAD, MAD WORLD (1963), Danforth brought the Loch Ness Monster to life in the intriguing fantasy film 7 FACES OF DR. LAO (1964; see above pic). Danforth's animated monster garnered him his first of two Oscar nominations. Not long after, he assisted on the low budget SPX artist laden cult favorite EQUINOX (1971). Some of Danforth's most spectacular work is on display in Hammer's WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH (1970; see insert pic). His animated dinosaurs surpass Harryhausen's in some respects, although his experience at Hammer was not a pleasurable one. Danforth also contributed incredible matte paintings; and his career is filled with many credits where his painterly exuberance is in evidence.
DAVID ALLEN: BAND LEADER & UNREALIZED DREAMS
David Allen is another familiar name to fans of fantasy and science fiction movies. In his early career, he often assisted, or collaborated with Jim Danforth. His first work came with the aforementioned cult classic EQUINOX -- filmed in 1967, but not getting theatrical release till a few years later. The low budget picture ($6,500) also featured the work of Jim Danforth and was directed by future award winning special effects ace Dennis Muren. Allen later assisted Danforth on Hammer's second stone-age adventure, WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH (1970).
Allen's association with Hammer Films led to their interest in one of his own story ideas -- RAIDERS OF THE STONE RINGS (see photo above). Described in the pages of Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine as a tale of 'vikings, zeppelins, and prehistoric monsters', this ambitious production was later promoted as an upcoming Hammer film with the title of ZEPPELIN VS. PTERODACTYLS.
When Hammer failed to secure financing, the story morphed yet again. Now known as THE PRIMEVALS, the film eventually found a home at Charles Band's production company. While Allen's pet project was never completed, he did animate a low budget Plesiosaur in THE CRATER LAKE MONSTER (1977), and big budget prehistoric creatures in the comedy CAVEMAN (1981). LASERBLAST (1978) and the troubled production THE DAY TIME ENDED (1979) were two early Charles Band productions Allen contributed to. In the near future, he would be kept quite busy under the employ of Band.
KONG HAS THE 411
One of Allen's notable works was a King Kong Volkswagen commercial that featured the Skull Island primate climbing down from the Empire State Building with a plane in one hand and his lady friend (played by Vickie Riskin) in the other. The end of the 60 second spot has him drive off in a gigantic Volkswagen 411 a "Volkswagen big enough for everyone"; Trunk monkey not included. A then young up and coming Rick Baker built the ape arm (that he wore himself) for a few shots of Kong closing the trunk and handling the gear shift.
Reportedly, the commercial only aired a few times before being pulled for a variety of reasons -- that it gave a false impression of the vehicle; viewers would somehow perceive that only apes drove Volkswagen's; and that the animated Kong overshadowed the very subject the commercial was about. The latter seems the likelier suspect.
In the 80s, Allen's stop-motion prowess included unused werewolf footage for Joe Dante's THE HOWLING in 1981 (a few seconds of this survived in the finished film) and the giant plumed reptile in the bloody Q, THE WINGED SERPENT (1982); the violently energetic pint-sized terrors of DOLLS (1987) and the massive transforming robots of ROBOT JOX (1989); the latter two directed by Stuart Gordon. Allen worked steadily for Charles Band's Full Moon Productions performing various SPX duties. He also directed 1991s PUPPETMASTER 2, which, in my opinion, was the best entry of that series. His death by cancer in 1999 at age 54 was a shock to many. Allen was nominated for an Oscar for his work on YOUNG SHERLOCK HOLMES in 1985. His pet project, THE PRIMEVALS, remains unfinished.
DOUG BESWICK: DINOSAURS, CYBORGS & EVIL DEAD GIRLS
Doug Beswick is another purveyor of stop-motion animation from the 1970s (he had animated Gumby in the late 60s) who went on to enormous things in the 1980s and beyond. While others were inspired by KING KONG (1933), Beswick found inspiration in THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1958). An early moment for him to shine with the art of stop-motion came in the late 1970s with the ambitious low budget effort PLANET OF DINOSAURS (1978). In addition to Beswick's work, others toiled on this picture such as Jim Aupperle, Steven Czerkas (see above pic -- Aupperle, Czerkas and Beswick behind the scenes on POD) and Jim Danforth, who contributed mattes and at least one animation sequence.
The movie may have been overshadowed by STAR WARS (1977), but it did garner attention when it became a part of a special effects exhibit at Universal Studios where, among other things, you could see how the visual effects were accomplished.
Beswick was not just an expert animator, he also counted sculpting, animatronics and miniature model design among his skill set. He built the Endoskeleton (animated by the late Peter Kleinow of Fantasy II Visual Effects) from THE TERMINATOR (1984), worked on miniatures for James Cameron's ALIENS (1986), and animated the macabre dancing corpse sequence seen in Sam Raimi's EVIL DEAD 2 (1987). The spooky, darkly humorous "dance of the dead" took over a month to complete. Beswick's PLANET OF THE DINOSAURS co-animator Jim Aupperle oversaw the photography for this scene.
HOMEGROWN HORROR AND SCI-FI: DO IT YOURSELF MOVIEMAKERS OF THE LOW BUDGET UNIVERSE
Stop-motion animation continued to be a viable commodity during the close of the 70s. STAR WARS, a film that changed the cinematic landscape, utilized the art form briefly in the famous chess sequence between C-3PO and Chewbacca. STAR WARS fueled the use of the technique in many other productions, but it also signaled that change was coming that would ultimately leave stop-motion looking antiquated by comparison.
While Lucas's breakthrough was a big studio production, other independent features and creature creators were on the horizon doing their own homegrown product. Some of the stop-motion big guns were also dabbling in smaller pictures simply for the love of their craft.
Among this new crop of independent productions was Baltimore filmmaker Don Dohler's THE ALIEN FACTOR (1978) and THE DAY TIME ENDED (1979) from director John 'Bud' Cardos. Although Dohler's (pictured above with his NIGHTBEAST creature) movies were ambitious, they were undone by poor acting and low production values. It didn't stop them from being appreciated by a small contingent of fans who remain devoted to his movies to this day. In the right frame of mind, his movies can be appreciated as prime examples of 'Do It Yourself' moviemaking that the producers of SyFy Channel and Asylum hokum will never comprehend. Dohler's ALIEN FACTOR came at an opportune time, even though it never received a theatrical release. With STAR WARS raking in massive numbers of box office receipts, Dohler was able to sell his movie to television where it was shown nationwide.
Outside of his films, the late directors major accomplishment would be his Cinemagic magazine; a periodical he created about the art of filmmaking. Starlog Magazine eventually took it over in 1979. I had a couple of the issues from around 1981 or '82. The extraordinary Dohler passed away in 2006 aged 60 from cancer. Don wasn't a practitioner of the stop-motion technique (although he often performed multiple duties on his pictures), but one man on his first movie was, and went on to be very successful.
THE ALIEN FACTOR was Dohler's first movie. It's of interest because it was also the first film of Emmy Award winning effects artist Ernest D. Farino. Among other monsters in the movie, Farino designed and animated the alien Leemoid (see pic above). In his early career, Farino contributed animation and other forms of visual effects to THE STRANGENESS (1980), SATURDAY THE 14TH (1981), SPACEHUNTER: ADVENTURES IN THE FORBIDDEN ZONE (1983) and the nightmarish images found in DREAMSCAPE (1984; see insert pic) among others. In addition, he's noted for animating the Pillsbury Doughboy, and also contributed main titles to a slew of motion pictures. In the last few years, Farino has been the publisher of the 'Ray Harryhausen: Master of the Majicks' three volume book series.
The aforementioned THE DAY TIME ENDED from 1979 is another beast entirely. Its genesis began in 1977 under various titles like RACE FOR ANTARI and STAR RACERS. After this ambitious effort found a home at Charles Band's company, it morphed into VORTEX. Problematic from the start (inexperienced crews and difficulties with the director), the budget grew to $600,000. Eventually, such animation luminaries like Jim Danforth, Dave Allen and Randy Cook were on board. When it was finally completed in 1979, the title was again changed from VORTEX to TIMEWARP before the moniker THE DAY TIME ENDED was decided upon. Irwin Yablans and David Wolf had handled some of Band's films of the era and they handled this one as well. Of the three main production participants -- Wayne Schmidt, Steve Neill and Paul Gentry, it was Gentry who went on to the biggest career.
RANDY COOK: GOOD THINGS TO COME
Randy Cook (Randall Cook) was another old school stop-motion animator who went on to be a successful SPX artist in big Hollywood productions. Cook was yet another effects specialist in training who was influenced by Harryhausen's work in THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1958) as a young boy. By the late 1970s, he honed his skills on such low budget efforts as 1977s THE CRATER LAKE MONSTER (assisting David Allen) and the Charles Band productions LASERBLAST (1978) and THE DAY TIME ENDED (1979). He would later animate a highly detailed stop-motion model of Ringo Starr in CAVEMAN (1981), and also assist in the animation of the Quetzalcoatl (with David Allen) in Larry Cohen's Q, THE WINGED SERPENT (1982).
In 1982, Cook also executed a stop-motion THING from another world in John Carpenter's remake of the 1951 classic (see insert pic).
Unfortunately, Carpenter chose not to use the footage. Some minor seconds of stop-motion did make it into the final cut, though. GHOSTBUSTERS (1984) was another of Cook's assignments. Mixed in with numerous big studio pictures, Cook also parlayed his skills in motion pictures of smaller stature, particularly those of Charles Band's Full Moon Productions. In recent years, Cook won Oscars for the LORD OF THE RINGS series.
PHIL TIPPETT: DON'T STOP, JUST GO-MOTION
The art popularized by Willis O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen began to evolve in the early 1980s. Inevitably, these advances heralded the end of this magical method of bringing inanimate objects to vivid life. By the early 1990s, the art of stop-motion photography would become a dying form of artistic expression by some of the top names who were inspired by it.
During the time Harryhausen was designing his stop-motion magnum opus that was CLASH OF THE TITANS (1981), Phil Tippett and ILM gave life to the Go-Motion technique, an advanced stop-motion photographic procedure that added a new dimension of realism. By way of a motion blur, a more seamless image is accomplished. This new innovation signaled the impending 'old hat' status stop-motion photography would soon find itself. Incidentally, Jim Danforth utilized an early form of this technique during the Rhamphoryncus sequence (see above pic) in WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH (1970).
Tippett utilized Go-Motion to an impressive degree in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK (1980; as well as JEDI); and again to noticeably spectacular effect in Disney-Paramount's 18 million DRAGONSLAYER from 1981. In that film, Tippett blew viewers away with his animation of the fierce dragon, Vermithrax Pejorative (see above image and insert pic in previous paragraph). The film bombed theatrically, but it has since went on to be a favorite of 80s fantasy.
Prior to this, Tippett was an old school animator assisting David Allen (and Randy Cook) on THE CRATER LAKE MONSTER (1977). For Joe Dante, he created a brief scene of a stop-motion creature during a laboratory sequence in the seminal PIRANHA from 1978 (see above pic). Tippett and ILM's Go-Motion innovation was featured in other films like HOWARD THE DUCK (1986), HOUSE 2: THE SECOND STORY (1987), and the ROBOCOP series.
Go-Motion was the evolution of stop-motion, but it had a relatively short lifespan when compared to the techniques pioneered by the likes of Willis O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen decades before. The advent of CGI solidified the finality of this type of special effects technology. Sadly, the increasing use of computer generated imagery (including a deluge of vastly inferior, lower level video game style graphics) infiltrating movies of all shapes and sizes has left modern audiences with little to no appreciation for these 'old-fashioned' effects accomplished by their hands on approach.
You may have noticed that all of these stop-motion creators have often went back and forth between low and big budget pictures. It seems that all of these men had one thing in common -- a love for their craft that belied the amount of money being thrown around, or the lack of it.
JURASSIC PARK (1993) may have devoured the now antiquated art form whole, but it's been kept alive in the mainstream via the directorship of Tim Burton -- most famously with his 1993 picture THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS. Burton next delivered a stop-motion CORPSE BRIDE in 2005. The seemingly lost photographic art form was resurrected again by Burton in 2012 with a feature length version of his own 1984 short film FRANKENWEENIE. Outside of Burton, the use of stop-motion animation has become all but extinct. It's survived predominantly through the hands of the artists who brought their creatures to life; the films that captured those images, and the fans that watched them -- those fans who still hold those moving images dear in their memory.
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Stop Motion Animation
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