Ray Harryhausen, Visual Effects Master, Dies Aged 92 49
New submitter Diakoneo writes "According to the BBC, 'Visual effects master Ray Harryhausen, whose stop-motion wizardry graced such films as Jason and the Argonauts and Clash of the Titans, has died aged 92. The American animator made his models by hand and painstakingly shot them frame by frame to create some of the best-known battle sequences in cinema.' Some of my fondest cinematic memories from my youth are from Ray Harryhausen."
Wait! (Score:5, Funny)
If we keep repositioning his body while everyone is blinking, maybe nobody will be able to tell he's actually dead.
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Revenge of the Harryhausen?
Son of Harryhausen?
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Abbot and Costello meet Harryhausen!
Re:Wait! (Score:4, Insightful)
On one hand this is absolutely morbid...but he would have probably loved it!
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Weekend at Harryhausen's?
He provided inspiration (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: He provided inspiration (Score:2, Interesting)
Was he the inspiration for the restaurant "Harryhausen's" in Monsters Inc.?
Re: He provided inspiration (Score:5, Informative)
Yep, that was named for him.
Tribute to Ray Harryhausen (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.malevole.com/mv/misc/tribute/ [malevole.com]
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This is from the internet, and it's pretty old.
http://www.malevole.com/mv/misc/tribute/ [malevole.com]
Thank you, that made my day. (And yes, all you cynics, it was a pretty shitty day...)
Skeleton fights! (Score:5, Informative)
The Sci-Fi Boys [imdb.com]
R.I.P Ray, your work with skeleton fights in "Argonauts" opened my eyes to the world of animation and all things morbid! You will be missed.
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http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL301A89EF78E1A4BB [youtube.com] for the playlist, but some videos are missing.
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So long, and thanks for all the fish! (Score:2, Offtopic)
In his honor... (Score:3)
...I will battle a troop of animated skeletons. Now where did I put Diablo II...?
Re:In his honor... (Score:4, Interesting)
You put the skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts up against the sword-fight with the skeleton pirates in Pirates of the Caribbean and some of it is almost shot-for-shot, it was a pretty strong inspiration.
Also: Bubo.
Stop motion Owl (Score:3)
King Kong (Score:4, Interesting)
We had one of the 3 armatures from King Kong in our closet for several years.
My brother, Jim Danforth, knew Ray Harryhausen and did similar puppet animation
in the '60, such as "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth" and "The 7 Faces of Dr. Lao".
Harryhausen was a house hold word in our family.
In remembrance (Score:3)
of Ray Harryhausen, I watched Jason and the Argonauts again this evening. I first saw it when I was about 20, and I've never been able to look at a skeleton quite the same way since. What a talent he had!
Will be missed (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Stop motion done right (Score:5, Interesting)
Stop-motion Jurassic park would have been like CGI Star Wars. Get it, Lucas?
Jurassic Park was originally going to be stop-motion in wide shots (or really, go-motion like the walkers from Empire Strikes Back) and Phil Tippett was hired to oversee this. The results just weren't what Spielberg was hoping for, and then the CGI dinosaurs started to look amazing...
Farewell Ray, you change our world, thank-you. (Score:2)
At the time of meeting him I was a nubie to the effects industry, one that he was instrumental in developing, yet he was as fascinated and inspired with our modern processes as we where by his. His insight, creative vision and pioneering sprite transcended time, and I value every word of advice that he bestowed upon me.
His works(seminal) will ensure that he continues to inspire, an immortal of our modern age.
I have to admit (Score:5, Insightful)
Then I was moved a little more.
And I was moved a little more still...
Goodbye (Score:2)
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Liked the Kraken in Clash of the Titans best.
I guess you must have missed Andromeda's bathing scene.
This man was a genius (Score:2)
The heart of his technique was a process he developed called Dynamation. It involved photographing a miniature — of a dinosaur, say — against a rear-projection screen through a partly masked pane of glass. The masked portion would then be re-exposed to insert foreground elements from the live footage. The effect was to make the creature appear to move in the midst of live action. It could now be seen walking behind a live tree, or be viewed in the middle distance over the shoulder of a live actor — effects difficult to achieve before.
That is brilliant!!!!! RIP Mr Ray. And thank you for everything
soon all scifi movies will look the same (Score:2)
A true great (Score:2)
Opening a sushi restaurant in Mostropolis (Score:1)
He's not dead, he's just been teleported to Monstropolis to open the hottest Asian-fusion-sushi restaurant in town.
Tim Burton, et al (Score:1)
owe this guy a huge debt artistically (corpse bride, nightmare) as well as Selick (James and the Giant Peach, Coraline)
and even South Park (although 2d cutout instead of 3d) and even a lot of current 3dcharacter animation is based on his work.
-I'm just sayin'