The Dynamation of Ray Harryhausen

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  • čas přidán 11. 04. 2021
  • To coincide with our exhibition Ray Harryhausen | Titan of Cinema we asked horror movie podcaster and Ray Harryhausen fan Becky Darke to share her thoughts on growing up with Harryhausen's films on wet bank holiday weekends.
    Described as one of the most influential people in cinema, Ray Harryhausen's films have inspired generations of filmmakers, animators, writers, and artists, to push the boundaries of their own creations.
    Written and narrated by Becky Darke.
    Edited and produced by Mike Muncer.
    The National Galleries of Scotland cares for, develops and displays Scotland's collection of Scottish and international art. Our aim is to engage, inform and inspire. We can do more with your support www.nationalgalleries.org/donate.
    Find out more about the Ray Harryhausen, Titan of cinema exhibition: bit.ly/33UJg5q
    Or sign up for our Virtual Exhibition Experience bit.ly/326Sf1H

Komentáře • 33

  • @pbcreative6388
    @pbcreative6388 Před 2 lety +7

    I met Ray Harryhausen a couple of times. He was not only a genius but a really nice person.

  • @AlanHuntUK
    @AlanHuntUK Před 3 lety +4

    I 100% agree with every bit of this essay: The 'real but not-real' (which somehow, to me, seems more 'real' than a lot of CGI), the thrill of watching RH's films when a kid (and never being too sure which Sinbad film is which) and the connection between watching things like Clash of The Titans and a later love of horror (I KNEW there must be a good reason why I own all of the Basket Case films on BluRay...!)

  • @realkabecio
    @realkabecio Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for your great celebratory video.All the things you love and put into your video is a great summary of all the things I also have long loved from Ray Harryhausen. In the late fifties, every Saturday, we neighborhood kids lined up for the all day matinee of 17 cartoons and 2 fantasy features. I think I saw every one of the amazing Ray Harryhausen films you mentioned - right there in that little theatre in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. Today I'm still watching them and still being awed by them in visual effects courses.

  • @eddiequist
    @eddiequist Před 2 lety +2

    Wow, Becky Darke just summed up my entire life in relationship to Ray Harryhausen. Thank you so much for your Eloquent words.

  • @thejetshowlive
    @thejetshowlive Před rokem +1

    BEST memories. This is why I do what I do for work today!

  • @johnboger6
    @johnboger6 Před 3 lety +5

    I couldn't agree more with the narrator. Same experience in the States. These movies and their sfx have a charm about them that make me watch them with fascination and awe. Modern sfx is also great, just different, with its own merits. Still it's hard to beat sword-fighting skeletons and mechanical owls. Thank you.

  • @santiagolamelo480
    @santiagolamelo480 Před 18 dny

    He invented the use of skeletons to articulate the figures. He made metal skeletons which he inserted into the hand-modelled figures in sickly detail. I had the chance to see an exhibition of his where they included some of the fugures he used in the films. The level of detail is amazing. The pegasus had real feathers. A real genius.
    You could say he invented rigging.

  • @owenmcgee8496
    @owenmcgee8496 Před 2 lety +4

    Nice video. I actually have no interest in horror movies. But Harryhausen etched some impression my childhood brain, so I picked the dvds up as an adult. I rarely watch them, but I don't regret getting them. Golden Voyage is definitely my favourite. As a child, I think the one that made the biggest impression of me was either the gorilla one (Mickey Joe Young?: can't remember the name) or the one with the alien ('it came from outer space' was it called?) who gets hunted down but is an innocent. I always got suckered and bowled over by sob stories like that as a child. Part of who I am.

  • @holeintheleg
    @holeintheleg Před 2 lety +2

    Great show. Was there today. amazing to come face to face with the Medusa. Probably one of the scariest characters from childhood memories. Obviously the fighting skeletons are so brill.

    • @realkabecio
      @realkabecio Před 2 lety +1

      I agree about Medusa...it's the way she moved and turned her head and slithered on her belly.....eeeeeyi

  • @MuzikJunky
    @MuzikJunky Před rokem +2

    Imagine what would’ve happened if Harryhausen and Eiji Tsuburaya ever had the chance to collaborate! Peace.

  • @brianedwards7142
    @brianedwards7142 Před 3 lety +3

    I often wish he and Gerrry Anderson had collaborated. Dynamation and Supermarionation working side by side.

  • @bobfriedman409
    @bobfriedman409 Před 2 lety +2

    THIS ESSAY is the best !!!!!

  • @christopherkinsinger7193

    YOU ARE SO RIGHT!!!!

  • @jaylloyd7246
    @jaylloyd7246 Před 9 měsíci

    Wow just great!

  • @KeithJBrett
    @KeithJBrett Před rokem +1

    Ray was such a sweet guy.

  • @micra6641
    @micra6641 Před 7 měsíci

    Great video! Wasn't Pegasus animated by Jim Danforth?
    I wouldn't say the casting was problematic. 300 had Gerard Butler and other's playing Greeks. It's acting!

  • @timmarshall4881
    @timmarshall4881 Před 3 lety +1

    Love and peace. Tim

  • @rockerteen8300
    @rockerteen8300 Před 2 lety +2

    I like his stuff better than cgi, I can’t put my finger on it, but it’s more entertaining to watch than cgi.

  • @davidross2155
    @davidross2155 Před 3 lety +3

    The sword fighting skeletons are the best!

  • @occidentadvocate.9759
    @occidentadvocate.9759 Před 2 lety +1

    Ray Harryhausen. German Genius!

  • @user-se5gh7ob4w
    @user-se5gh7ob4w Před 3 lety +1

    “And some of the casting choices are certainly problematic....” (image of Tom Baker is on screen). Why? What's wrong with the Fourth Doctor?

    • @cheetahluv210
      @cheetahluv210 Před 3 lety +2

      Well it’s a white actor being brown faced as an Arab

    • @matthewh.9544
      @matthewh.9544 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cheetahluv210 it was 1974, so bore off with that crap. It is a film of its time and you're supposed to be mature enough to get it...

    • @cheetahluv210
      @cheetahluv210 Před 2 lety +1

      @@matthewh.9544 it’s int the past yes it shouldn’t have happened but we should all try to just enjoy the film for what it is

  • @1950Grendel
    @1950Grendel Před rokem +2

    Am I a fan? Look at my avatar.

  • @Paddyllfixit
    @Paddyllfixit Před 3 měsíci

    CGI doesn't even come close

  • @artamussumatra6286
    @artamussumatra6286 Před 3 lety +2

    “And some of the casting choices are CERTAINLY problematic....” 🙄 Can’t we just enjoy celebrating these great movies without injecting woke/cancel culture finger wagging?

    • @davidross2155
      @davidross2155 Před 2 lety +2

      Of course we can. At home, when enjoying the movie with a bowl of popcorn on a rainy bank holiday 🙂
      But this is a piece of work, for a museum exhibition. If this isn't the right place to at least acknowledge the changing attitudes to 'blacking up' a white actor, then what is?

    • @realkabecio
      @realkabecio Před 2 lety +1

      Guess what - there are blue eyed desert people in the Sahara - from times long ago when the northern Vandals invaded