Guillermo del Toro's At the Mountains of Madness [Complete] - Unmade Masterpieces
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- čas přidán 29. 04. 2023
- The Complete Production History of Guillermo del Toro's most famous dream project. We cover the rise of author H.P Lovecraft, the cinematic attempts to translate his vision, and del Toro's lifelong mission to adapt one his greatest stories.
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The concept art that an artist made for del Toro they posted on deviant art was absolutely mind blowing, the ancient cities looks perfect, its so alien, ancient and "seems" abandoned
Lovecraft Country was the biggest pile of you know what.... I actually forgot about it until this video.
It was indeed a pile of crap
You have a good voice for this kind of work. Pleasant, easy to listen to and doesn't wear you out. Keep up the good work, please. Finding a good 'voice' person is oddly very hard.
Awesome Vid!
Thank You very much for Your Work! Greetings from Germany
Just ten minutes in, will finish tonight. Wanted to quickly note that your persona, voice and obvious command of your ideas is exactly what this fan of crucial works of seminal horror is always looking for, often not finding.
I love the word "cyclopean". It specifically describes tightly fitted stonework for buildings, walls, etc., but HPL routinely lost control and applied it to almost everything Eldritch, abominable or non-euclidean.
The ancient Greeks used to describe large stone structures as 'Cyclopean', apparently.
Even back then, they believed ancient giants built the larger temples and walls.
Stone Age structures like the temples on Ibiza and Stonehenge in Britain were old at the start of recorded history.
This is the sort of idea that started Lovecraft writing.
I was so looking forward to this film😢.
Great video....so many wipes
H.P. Lovecraft: not a fan of penguins
I wanted this so very much.
I miss the Stuart Gordon/Brian Yuzna era of Lovecraft adaptations..
YES.
A little sad you didn't mention Bloodborne which essentially adapts all of Lovecraft at once somehow weaving in older gothic horror into it as well.
Thank you !!! You should combine the Clair Noto’s Tourist videos and the interstellar by Spielberg videos !! Keep up the great work !
Good content but I can’t handle transitions. It’s like a bad 2007 PowerPoint, and constant. Gives me a headache
Thank you, I have been telling him this for years. 😂
@@frnz1943 How do either of you even manage to watch a movie? In case you haven't noticed, they are full of transitions.
What? You dont like the cut for EVERY single sentence?!?!?!?! ugh.
Just like Shoggoth this movie is in waiting for the day it may rise. Also I thought Annihilation with Natalie Portman was a good Lovecraftian film, just to add one more
Universal was stupid to set up their Dark Universe without him.
Lighthouse kicked ass
you are my new fav channel DRH
Lovecraft was being humorous becoming more extravagant at every turn of it.
Yes
There’s another aspect to his racism that people don’t talk about and that is the fact in his later years after moving away from province but later, returning is the fact that he gave up most of his bigotry and he never personally published the shadow over innsmouth because he saw the implications of it just goes to show that people can change.
I think what people neglect to mention is that he was very much a product of his time, but also a product of very sheltered upbringing. Raised within his own family, sickly, and probably very anxious and scared of the outside world, it's no wonder that moving to NYC would make him conjure up all sorts of racist things because of that same fear of the unknown and new. It doesn't justify any of it, but definitely sheds light on his disposition. Even his racism (lol) ended up feeding his imagination and moving away from narrowness of our bigotry into the realm of unimaginable.
@@rainiwakura2430 People act like he was immensely racist even for his time, when the only thing that was different was that he was basically afraid of and loathed every thing but his own New England Anglo-Saxons. And even that wasn't so rare that it would have raised much of a stir.
As you suggest, his racism was born completely out of his fears and insecurities, I've long since considered his work impossible, were he not the scared, sad little man that he was. I could never close my eyes to the racism of his work, because it is very much entwined with it.
The problem he faces today is that many people can't accept anything out of their comfort zone. Instead of accepting that he was a very flawed human being, but that without those flaws he might not have been able to create his work, they are ashamed that they like/love/are inspired by someone who clearly held ideas (at least for a long time) that they despise (and of course rightly so, still feels weird that you basically have to write that out nowadays, when it should be a given) and so they can't let anything related to him stay without constantly going on about his racism and the name of his cat and and and.
I wouldn't care about that at all, if it wasn't for the attempts to devalue his legacy by claiming that in reality Robert W. Chambers" four horror stories in The King in Yellow are the birth of cosmic horror and that Lovecraft just expanded upon it, which is kinda ridiculous to claim that four short stories create a whole genre.
Or that Lovecraft's work itself is weak and far exceeded by what others have created inspired by it (though I do think that mostly these are people who haven't read his work extensively).
For someone that didn't get any respect and acknowledgement for his genius during his life, to get the place in horror history he was due so many decades after his death and now be threatened with being relegated to the backseats again, because of his troublesome flaws and traits. I find that infuriating tbh.
Shadow is definitely my favorite story. Only later did I find out he wrote it after finding out about his Welsh ancestry. I think horror at red hook is more racist
racism schmacism
It’s pretty disgusting that these days more people seem more intent on canceling brilliant artist for something like racism, rather than acknowledging how beautiful it is someone can actually grow past it and develop into a better human being.
Prometheus and Covenant are pretty close to the first two thirds of 'At The Mountains Of Madness'.
The Engineers create humans, leave clues, expedition sets out into new places, finds the historical account and living tools of the engineers.
The slasher-film disease / body horror stuff distracts, then the servant / soldier of the engineers, the alien, does it's job, while the last of the engineers / elder things appears and falls victim to it's servant.
Second expedition finds first on a world made by the engineers life forms, fall victim to the necessary slasher / disease / thing distraction... are we really sure that Del Toro's script/s of that time wasn't bought and adapted by Ridley Scott?
I mean how do you visualize something that the human mind can't even comprehend?
AI. Just saying.
That's not a challenge. Look at The Thing from 1982 and 2011, The Mist, From Beyond, Cloverfield, Harbinger Down, Lovecraft Country, Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities and many more movies that were also mentioned in this video.
Apart from that the 'unimaginable' was also often described very accurately in Lovecraft's stories so that you can imagine it. That's the reason in the first place why there are pictures, series and films about it.
The thing is that when something is described as "impossible to describe or even visualize" or "simply seeing it will drive you insane", any visualization of it is bound to fall flat in comparison since it is immediately obvious that it is none of those things.
Idk. Something we hear again and again about "creature feature" movies is that the *suggestion* of the monster in the beginning is often much scarier than the "big reveal" later on. An adaptation that really plays with the suggestion of a thing, and ramps up the terror the old fashioned way could be really effective IMO. But most of the directors attracted to Lovecraft seem to just want to make monsters, and studios probably cant really understand a monster story without monsters. Would Del Toro make a horror movie without monsters in it?
Y'know, i bet H.P. had a cat. I wonder what someone like him would name a kitty. Probably something cute like Snicker.
I really hope this happens. I actually had a dream somewhat a while ago about a Mountains movie. It was of an opening with a huge snow flurry obscuring the researchers trekking through the snow while John Carpenter style music, similar to that of The Thing, was playing. It almost inspired me to try and write a screenplay at least of just that opening because it was so vivid
God I want this movie SO SO BAD!
After watching Cabinet of curiosities, Netflix better pick this up
When you think about the project had been stopped because of the lame „Prometheus“ movie, it hurts 2 times.
The only special effects would be the city and the purple Leng mountains. Simpler animations for the history of ancient Earth as recounted.
Looking forward to “Mountains!”
The resurrected was an awesome movie.
Especially the two practical fx "imperfect saltes" creatures. The one they end up burning on the riverbank is especially awful, with the walking evisceration in Curwens cellar not much easier to look at
If it 100% won't happen, at least I hope we'll get a Jodorowsky's Dune-level of in depth documentary about it.
I wonder if the shooting script from the original pitch is floating around
He didn't finish his contract with searchlight
I admit, I kind of wanted the big scale epic blockbuster version of the story, to make an impact upon the regular cinema-crowd and while I think a stop-motion version could be great, I think in regard to making the first big Lovecraft adaptation, this will be taking a huge step back and will certainly not be as impressive as a Pacific Rim like blockbuster would have been.
I'll take what I can get, I guess.
All I care about is the telegraph scene. Gotta have them dits and dots.
Hey man, dont forget about Alien, Aliens, Predator, Predator 2, Predators etc
The producers, investors r only interested in the money this film can make for them . They need more than a top director, film star, etc. Something more than a James C. Endorsement. U have to prove and i mean shove it up their butts that Lovecraft is a moneymaker. U need a top salesman with a heart for horror to woo these investors. Build the story, the wonder of the abandoned structures under the snow and ice. The mystery of who,what happened here and the horror that follows. Use artists, paintings of the story and explain in detail that audiences will be hooked with this sense of frightening terrors. Wow them with the special effects. God, if only Jerry Goldsmith was still alive to do the music. Keep pushing the story. Eventually someone will listen .
The hulking brother that look closest to human was the titular focal point.
A Color Out Of Space (2019) is a good representation of Lovecraftian horror
So is the Dunwich Horror 1970: with the Dungeons and Dragons-style ‘Beholder’ appearing at the end
@@darrenscrowston9386 Dungeons&Dragons-style? That movie came out 4 years before the very first D&D rulebooks were published by Tactical Studies Rules.
@@Kneon_Knightthanks learned colleague for his clarification. But can witness clarify whether Wilbur’s brother (resembling as it has been established “more like its father Yog Soggoth than Wilbur”) indeed resemble a Beyonder, or not? Being as it was made up (and I read from the notes my lord) of “a single large eye with smaller eyes around it on tentacles”? That, my lord, is the clarification on which the prosecution and the court rests.
Too bad he didn’t made this movie, but at least we have Pacific Rim, one of my all time favorite films.
mediocre and not at all Lovecraftian
@@robi6317Mediocre is subjective. Not lovecraftian just because it isn’t meant to be is also subjective.
Interesting - surprised that some actor with limited range, Tomas Cruise, was assigned to the movie.
If you want to checkout Lovecraft inspired authors, try Brian Lumley.
How about an author that inspired Lovecraft? The House on the Borderland (1908), by William Hope Hodgson. Lovecraft praised the novel. It deserved the praise.
A studio attributing H.P's work to Poe would have pleased him...He worshipped Poe. Additonally he wrote pastiche badly until he found his voice. Hilariously all the writers considered better at the time are forgotten.
unmade masterpiece david lean film's nostromo.
Lovecraft was very talented and imaginative, but the details he mentioned in his stories and the world building and the characters, made you think , is this really his imagination or did he really had a connection to the other side , and then i found out that his wife was Aleister Crowley's ex girlfriend, and this is someone who've definitely seen someshit .
fastest sub ever!
I'm not a fan of directors taking artistic liberties with a property they're adapting. It rarely works out and frankly the property usually suffers for the failure. Better to let it stay where it is than chance damage to the brand. Thats not to say a NEW story with Lovcraftian elements isn't a worthy goal. Celebrate the author by creating something new.
Yeah, I have to agree with you not liking directors taking artistic liberties. 99% of the time it's utter trash
I personally could care less about race issues I do not conform my attitudes with what others think.
Anytime somebody virtue-signals by calling Lovecraft a racist, I give the video a thumbs-down and stop watching.
Lovecraft was a Modernist and his ideas on race, as well as other topics in science and philosophy, were typical of the time. He was a Darwinist and that was a big part of his bleak outlook. He was a reluctant agnostic, forced to confront a pitiless universe and ideas that tended either to madness or nihilism. So he wrote about these things as cosmic horrors. That's WHY cosmic horror is different from gothic horror. Cosmic horror isn't just a fear of the unknown. It's a fear of the unknowable, the emptiness hiding behind everything in a universe where we are just an irrelevant speck of dust that has a beginning and inevitable end in a brief flicker of time.
Disappointing.
It's all about the bottom line
I live and work in the areas the filmed the show.
I had just learned about the king in yellow as I was going through lovecraft.
I’m a progressive atheist in the south. Everyone tells me to stuf all the time.
This was perfect
New weird. Read The Kraken by China Mieville.
Great video! But: “Lovecraft’s meticulous attention to scientific accuracy”? Ummm, nope. Lovecraft had a very loose relationship to science and mathematics. And that means 1920s and 1930s science. It does not detract from his genius, but he nmade up his “science” from very thin cloth.
Those wipes between cuts is horribly distracting. And 20 minutes in, still no del torro
I wrote a ten minute Lovecraft-esque play titled WE ARE NOT DEAD.
I hope to never come across it.
I’m sorry… did you say scientific rigor? I think you mean scientific misunderstanding…
Such as? I hate it when someone makes a vague dig without proof.
@@randallbesch2424 well most of the sci-fi elements in his writing fundamentally misconstrue the tech or science they are talking about for their horror. Which is fine, it’s a great read, but not what I’d describe as scientific rigor. Non-Euclidean geometry is just Euclidean geometry on a curved surface so … ya know… Earth in a nutshell. Air conditioning was new technology when he wrote cold air and I’m fairly sure that’s not how it works. It’s sort of hard to have scientific rigor in scientific fiction, because that’s sort of the point. It plays with the information to make it entertaining. It’s always impressive when sci-fi has a core of real science going on, but I don’t think that’s the sandbox Lovecraft was playing in. Not even sure he was trying to, really. And that’s ignoring all the deeply racist and eugenicist takes he worked in there.
@@randallbesch2424and, btw, that’s assuming Lovecraft himself was in on it. His actual scientific knowledge is up for debate. He loved the sciences, but complained that math gave him headaches so he couldn’t study physics and chemistry, and he reported that he gave up on studying anatomy when he learned about human reproduction and was too grossed out to continue. He had long absences from school and never completed high school, although he was doing well in school so it’s hard to say exactly how well he was able to grasp the scientific concepts he was learning. Did he learn about the spectrum of visible and non-visible light and think “it would be cool if…” or did he learn it and think “gah, what do those other colors DO!?”
sry, but king is a totally over hyped hack.
There already exists an awesome MOM - inspired movie directed by John Carpenter.
'The Thing' 1982 was based upon a 1948 film 'The Thing From Another World', which in turn was based upon a novel by Joseph Campbell 'Who Goes There?', which may be ATMOM boiled down to a simple story.
@@stevetheduck1425 Yup exactly. A stripped down version of Lovecraft's story, who btw isn't exactly suited for movie adaptations because it's basically 90% the description of an alien civilization's history carved on a bas relief.
"Lovecraft Country" sucked. Alan Moore's Providence is a cool riff on Lovecraft.
It's an absolute crime that Prometheus killed At The Mountains Of Madness.
Prometheus is a turd of poor characters and stolen ideas (particularly from Chris Carter's The X-Files).
Great video! Unfortunately, it's documented that Del Toro announces more projects than he completes. I don't really dislike him but he's overrated and talks too much.