Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan
- Ray Harryhausen.
- Ray Harryhausen.
Ray Harryhausen monsters,
you know, they're all beautiful.
- (Dragon roars)
- (Woman screams)
(Creature snarls)
(Dinosaur roars)
(Creature roars)
I love Ray Harryhausen films,
those were a huge influence on me
as a kid.
I never knew who Ray Harryhausen was,
I just saw these things happening.
It was only later that I discovered
it was one guy giving life to these things.
(Man) That is very difficult,
to define myself in two words.
I would say I was a filmmaker
rather than just an animator
or a special effects person.
I'm in on the story at the beginning.
Sometimes I initiate the story.
I wear many different hats
in the production.
I even, at the end of the day,
go out and help sell the picture.
Ray is the only technician really
who is an auteur
It is a very unique position.
There really isn't anyone else like it.
He has a huge body of work.
There was nobody else
who was doing that sort of work.
I mean, he's the only person.
He himself is deeply influenced
by the master Willis O'Brien,
who had done King Kong.
(Ray) When I first saw King Kong
in 1933,
I wanted to do something
in the film business.
Well, in 1933, when I was 13,
King Kong nothing like it
had been put on the screen.
(Narrator) 'Truly
the thrill of thrills.
"Don't miss it
this time."
And it haunted me for years,
even though it was a little jerky.
This creature is amazing, you know,
it's so big, you know.
It just left an enormous impression.
It wasn't only the technical expertise,
it was the whole production of the Films.
They took you by the hand
from the mundane world of the Depression
and brought you
into the most outrageous fantasy
that has ever been put
on the screen.
It really set me off on my career.
I didn't know how the film was made
when I first saw it.
Finally, it came out in magazines
how King Kong was stop motion.
And that intrigued me,
so I started experimenting on my own
as a hobby, in my garage.
I took courses in photography
at USC at night school
and I studied various things,
art direction and film editing.
It gradually developed from a hobby
into a profession.
I couldn't find anybody
to make the figures
so I had to learn
to make them myself.
I couldn't find anybody to photograph it,
so I learned photography
and learned to do things myself.
Stop motion animation
is really basically
the same principle
as the animated cartoon,
only instead of using flat drawings,
you use a dimensional model.
This has a rubber coating
on the outside of a metal armature
and as the shutter is closed
on one frame of film,
you move it slightly,
you move the arms
and you have to keep it all
in synchronization.
And then when you get hundreds
of these still pictures,
the thing is moving on its own.
In my early days,
I did mostly experiments with dinosaurs.
(Man) We were both 18
and we both loved King Kong
and I met his dinosaurs in his garage.
I said, "Oh, God, this is incredible!
"You build these, do you'?"
He said, "Yes.
Let me show you a piece of film I did."
And he showed me
a little tiny piece of 5mm film
with his dinosaurs
roaming over a prehistoric landscape.
I said, "You know something
I got to tell you?"
He said, "What?" I said, "I think
you're gonna be my friend for life."
I wanted to make
a film called E Evolution.
It was about the development
of life on Earth.
And then Fantasia came along
and so I abandoned it.
They could do it so much better
with Disney.
But I had all these tests that I had made
for dinosaurs for Evolution
and I showed them to George Pal.
(Man) George Pal was
a European animator
who went to America
to make a series of films there
and was commissioned by Paramount
to make the Puppetoons series.
My first professional job
was with the George Pal
Puppetoons before the war.
The George Pal technique,
all the models were cutout
ahead of time in wood.
So there wasn't much creativity,
you simply substituted a new figure.
There was very little for an animator
to put his own personality into.
But it was an enormous part
of Ray's early career.
When he came out of the army
in around about 1946,
he found a thousand foot
of Kodak 16mm footage.
It was out of date,
so they were throwing it out.
So he used that for his first films,
and those were
the Mother Goose stories
that became the first
of the fairy tales.
The fairy tales were really
what I call my teething rings.
(Tony) That's where he really learnt
so much about film making.
And he went on to make
Little Red Riding Hood,
Hansel and Gretel
Rapunzel King Midas,
and eventually,
The Tortoise And The Hare.
His mother and father helped him.
His mother made a lot of the clothes
for the fairy tales
and his father obviously did
a lot of the machining,
the armatures and everything,
based on Ray's designs.
Fred and Martha, his parents,
were a huge part of his life.
Most parents would have said, "No, no,
you've gotta be a doctor or a plumber."
I was very fortunate, I should say,
that my father knew a lot
about engineering and machine work
and he used to make a lot of my armatures
on the lathe at home.
(Tony) And Fred
continued to make the armatures
until just after hours! Men In The Moon,
when he died.
So all the armatures seen in all
the feature films were made by Fred.
My first introduction to
the work of Ray Harryhausen
was the Mother Goose stories, actually,
which at the time I was not aware
that they were Ray Harryhausen's work.
(J' Frantic orchestral music)
I was about nine or ten years old
and, you know,
it was all cozy, Christmas Eve,
and this Films came on,
which was Hansel and Gretel
And I could not believe it, I was just
so drawn into it, the magic of it.
I don't know back then if I knew
how stop frame animation was done,
but I could see there were no strings.
I think Ray Harryhausen is really
the grandfather of stop frame animation.
I mean, I know that there was
Willis O'Brien as the great-grandfather.
I'd kept in touch with Willis O'Brien.
I had met him
when I was still in high school.
I called him up at MGM
and he kindly invited me over.
I brought some of my dinosaurs
in my suitcase and showed them to him.
And finally,
after Merian Cooper and Willis O'Brien
were going to make
Mighty Joe Young,
I became Willis O'Brien's assistant.
(Whistle blows)
(Sirens blare)
(Gorilla roars)
Here we were
making another gorilla picture,
which wasn't quite like King Kong
but it had a gorilla.
And gorillas are my best friends.
(Narrator) 'See Mighty Joe Young,
enraged by Hollywood pranksters,
'destroy film-land's swankiest nightclub
on the fabulous Sunset Strip.'
Willis O'Brien was busy
getting the next set-ups ready
and making tests and everything,
so I ended up doing
about 90 percent of the animation.
I think that's some of his best stuff,
cos the personality in Joe Young
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