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Ray Harryhausen Essay Research Paper Overview (стр. 2 из 2)

film called Star Wars. John Dykstra, leader of Lucas’s special

effects unit, Industrial Light and Magic (ILM), developed a revolutionary

stop-motion technique called Go-Motion.

Even the most painstakingly conceived stop-motion sequences seem choppy

and stilted compared to live action footage. That’s because when an object

passes in front of a motion picture camera, its movement is slightly blurred

in each frame. When projected, this motion looks fluid and natural. Animators

were long aware of this problem, but lacked the tools to solve it.

For Star Wars, Dykstra and his ILM team programmed a computer to control

the movement of their models. Every time they exposed a single frame, the computer

moved the model slightly, causing it to blur on film. When audiences saw an

X-Wing Fighter soar across the screen, its movement was sweeping and smooth.

The difference was revolutionary and the public instinctively embraced it. Star

Wars became the largest grossing film of its time. By contrast, Eye of

the Tiger disappeared after a short run.

Clash of the Titans

Although Harryhausen praised Star Wars for its swashbuckling action

and broad mythological themes, he resisted Go-Motion technology. In a

1981 interview with Cinefex he criticized the impulse among filmmakers

to make animation more lifelike. "Our pictures are more of a surrealistic

experience, rather than an excursion into technical perfection,"

he said.

Harryhausen’s last feature film, Clash of the Titans (1981), reflects

the limitations of this sensibility. The tale of Perseus’s slaying of

the Medusa was lavished with a $15 million-dollar budget. Most of this

money was expended on stiff performances from Sir Laurence Olivier, Dame

Maggie Smith, and other luminaries. Harryhausen’s Dynamation sequences

sometimes dipped beneath his own high standards. The animator complained

he simply no longer had the energy to achieve the standards of his earlier

years. A notable exception is the terrifying Medusa and her crown of slithering

snakes. Although he was proud of his work on the film, he felt it was

time to let younger hands take over.

A Legacy of Make-believe

"It’s all an accumulation," Harryhausen said of the creative

process. "Everyone builds their lives on what others have built before

them. That’s what keeps the snowball rolling."

In 1992 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences recognized Harryhausen’s

accomplishments with the Gordon E. Sawyer Award for Technical Achievement.

Filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, whose fantasy epics have

enthralled millions, acknowledge a great debt to Harryhausen. As children,

he enthralled them with cinematic magic and slight of hand. As adults,

his legacy of low-budget special effects, taught them that with a little

imagination, miracles are always possible.

Bibliography

Books

Harryhausen, Ray, Film Fantasy Scrapbook, New York:

A.S. Barnes & Co., 1972.

Dunn, Linwood G., and Turner, George, eds., The ASC

Treasury of Visual Effects, Hollywood: American Society of Cinematographers,

1983

Articles

Cox, Vic, "Ray Harryhausen: Acting Without the Lumps,"

Cinefex 5, July 1981.

Mandell, Paul, "Harryhausen Animates Annual Sci-Tech

Awards," American Cinematographer, May 1992.

Mandell, Paul, "Of Genies and Dragons: The Career

of Ray Harryhausen," American Cinematographer, December 1992.

Shay, Don, "Clash of the Foot-Tall Titans," Cinefex 5, July

1981.