Tag Archives: stop-motion animation

IMAGINATOR MAGAZINE’S STOP-MOTION SPECIAL EDITION!

This issue is currently available to preorder via Monster Zone in the UK, the EU and the USA.
(US readers may want to wait until it’s available via the publisher at a cheaper rate – it’s up to you!)

Imaginator is more like a book than a magazine: it is a journal-type publication that has a thick spine and boasts 116 pages crammed with colour photos, concept art and storyboards! It will look great on any bookshelf!

Imaginator Issue 12 – To order if you’re in the UK

This is a Stop-Motion Special Edition! There’s a 40-page celebration of David Allen’s The Primevals! Plus a big section focusing on the work of Brett Piper! Randall William Cook and other top animators are interviewed!

£22.99

Imaginator Issue 12 – To order if you’re in the EU

This is a Stop-Motion Special Edition! There’s a 40-page celebration of David Allen’s The Primevals! Plus a big section focusing on the work of Brett Piper! Randall William Cook and other top animators are interviewed!

€34.99

Imaginator Issue 12 – To order if you’re in the USA

This is a Stop-Motion Special Edition! There’s a 40-page celebration of David Allen’s The Primevals! Plus a big section focusing on the work of Brett Piper! Randall William Cook and other top animators are interviewed!

$42.40

The first 40 orders will come with an A4 poster created by Imaginator’s regular cover illustrator Zilla Man!

This Stop-Motion Special Edition is a joy to behold, just check out the mouthwatering contents…

FOREWORD
Alan Friswell, the official restorer for the Ray and Diana Harryhausen Foundation, ponders what is so magical and special about the art and technique of stop-motion animation.  

Alan Friswell

INTERVIEW WITH AN ARGONAUT
Gary Raymond, who played the villainous Acastus in JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS, recalls what it was like to star in this fantasy adventure classic!

Gary Raymond

YOU HAVE 20 SECONDS TO COMPLY…
Oscar-nominated FX genius Randal Dutra takes us all back to the time he animated rogue killer droid ED-209 in the iconic 1987 science fiction action masterpiece ROBOCOP!

ED-209

THE PRIMEVALS – A CELEBRATION
A 40-page zone focusing on David Allen’s stop-motion sci-fi-adventure-fantasy film! This section is full of interviews, storyboards, promo art and photos! Check out what’s in store within this celebration zone..

The Primevals - A Celebration

DECADES IN THE MAKING
An overview of the long and winding journey that THE PRIMEVALS took to finally reach the screen! 

eti!

IN THE ARENA
Chris Endicott, whose credits include ROBOT WARS, DOCTOR MORDRID and AVENGERS: ENDGAME, talks about how he saved the dormant PRIMEVALS project from extinction and ensured that it got finished with the help of lots of creative colleagues!

A CONVERSATION WITH TOM ST. AMAND
Tom, the ‘King of the Armature Makers’, was a key member of the team that attempted to make THE PRIMEVALS way back in 1978, and now he casts his mind back to those 70s-tastic times.

THE PRIMEVALS PROMO ART
Lee MacLeod, the gifted artist who produced cool poster illustrations for such releases as HOWARD THE DUCK, BATMAN, and SUBSPECIES, describes the techniques he used for the superb PRIMEVALS artworks he created to help Charles Band generate international interest in the project.

Lee MacLeod art

JULIET MILLS – YETI HUNTER
Juliet Mills, the star of THE PRIMEVALS, chats about working with David Allen during the shooting of the principle photography in 1994.

Juliet Mills

I, HOMINID
An interview with Jeff Farley, who headed-up the PRIMEVALS makeup effects department. He also portrayed several of the mutated hominids in the film!

Jeff Farley as a hominid

STORYBOARD ZONE
A talk with Peter William Von Sholly, a Hollywood storyboard artist who’s worked on over 100 movies, including VAMP (1986) and THE BLOB (1988). He recalls his time working on THE PRIMEVALS. Peter also looks back at PREHYSTERIA!, a film that was based on his ideas!  

Peter William Von Sholly art

YETIS AND RIVER LIZARDS
A selection of storyboard artwork examples that were rendered by artists Robin Bielefeld and Duncan Rouleau!

River Lizard storyboard

RAIDERS OF THE STONE RING STORYBOARD PANELS
A couple of panels drawn by David Allen back when the project was still titled RAIDERS OF THE STONE RING!
The 40-page PRIMEVALS celebration zone finishes here.

Detail of storyboard panel by David Allen

HANDCRAFTED FABULOUSNESS
A look at three of Czech director/screenwriter/special effects artist Karel Zeman’s most beloved films: JOURNEY TO THE BEGINNING OF TIME, INVENTION FOR DESTRUCTION and THE FABULOUS BARON MUNCHAUSEN!

Blu-ray cover for Invention for Destruction

OH! WHAT A BEAUTIFUL UGLY BIRD!
Uber-talented animator Harry Walton discusses the time he brought the squawking stop-motion terror known as the Ugly Bird to the screen in the quirky cult folk horror feature film THE LEGEND OF HILLBILLY JOHN. Harry also talks about the transition he made from traditional stop-motion to handling and supervising scenes that involved the Go-Motion process.

Ugly Bird by Harry Walton

STOP-MOTION FILM REVIEWS
Movies reviewed include THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD, MAD GOD, ONE MILLION YEARS B.C., EQUINOX and KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS.

Kubo behind the scenes
The 7th Voyage of Sinbad

BRETT PIPER’S STOP-MOTION WONDERLAND!
A 30-page zone focusing on the work of director, writer & animator Brett Piper. This section is overflowing with interviews, behind the scenes puppet shots, reviews, plus info on upcoming projects! Check out what’s in store within this section of the mag

Brett Piper intro page

CARRYING THE TORCH
An interview with Brett Piper, the unsung hero of the live action/stop-motion film genre! Brett continues to carry the torch, almost singlehandedly ensuring that stop-motion-with-live-action films are still getting made. Here he talks about the many entertaining, modestly-budgeted feature films that he’s been responsible for, including A NYMPHOID BARBARIAN IN DINOSAUR HELL, BATTLE FOR THE LOST PLANET, OUTPOST EARTH and REDNECK MUTANTS.

Triclops movie
Redneck Mutants movie

MAKING MONSTERS
A look at how Brett builds his puppets is demonstrated via two step-by-step examples. The first example focuses on the titular dinosaur-like id-critter from BUSTER (2024), and the second looks at the construction of an alien bug-monster, known as a ‘Clicket’, from OUTPOST EARTH (2019).

Monster puppet-making image

PICTURE PERFECT
A selection of creature sketches and concept drawings rendered by Brett for his various projects over the years.

Brett Piper concept painting

ON THE COMET
A sneak peek at a feature film project that Brett will hopefully be making. In this proposed adaptation of Jules Verne’s novel ‘Off on a Comet’, a steampunk-style airship finds itself on a comet where prehistoric beasts still roam!

On The Comet movie project

BRETT PIPER: TELLER OF TALES
In this interview Brett is asked about his ‘2 MINUTE KLASSICS’, which are a series of all-puppet stop-motion shorts. They are super-concise adaptations of such stories as FIRST MEN IN THE MOON and 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA. Brett also talks about his in-progress all-puppet short… SINBAD GOES TO MARS!

Shot from Jason and the Golden Fleece

FLEETING YARNS OF HIGH ADVENTURE
All of Brett’s 2 MINUTE KLASSICS (which are short mini-movies with running times that vary from around 7 to nearly 10 minutes in length) are reviewed!

Fleeting Yarns intro page
Shot from Brett's At The Earth's Core

PIPER’S PUPPET GALLERY
A double page spread of behind the scenes photos of some of Brett Piper’s gorgeous stop-motion puppets!
The 30-page Brett Piper Wonderland zone finishes here.

Some of Brett Piper's puppets

THE BEAUTY OF DESTRUCTION AND TRANSFORMATION
A dive into the strange, unsettling worlds of Japanese director Shinya Tsukamoto’s films TETSUO: THE IRON MAN, TETSUO II: BODY HAMMER and HIRUKO THE GOBLIN. These three movies are awash with off-the-wall stop-motion effects (including pixilation), copious amounts of surrealism & futurism, bouts of body horror and gritty cyberpunk aesthetics.

HIRUKO THE GOBLIN

YOU’LL JUST HAVE TIME TO SCREAM… BEFORE IT TEARS YOU APART!
Randall William Cook, the three-times Oscar winner, doesn’t mince his words as he is questioned about the Larry Cohen film Q: THE WINGED SERPENT! Randall chats about working with Tibor Takacs too.

William Cook talks about Q: The Winged Serpent

THE ANIMATED DINOSAURS OF JURASSIC PARK
In Randal Dutra’s second interview for this issue, he remembers his time producing animatics and the dinosaur movement ‘bible’ for JURASSIC PARK, and explains how his work using the newly-invented Dinosaur Input Device heralded the seismic shift from stop-motion/Go-Motion over to CG effects. 

Randal Dutra working on a Dinosaur Input Device

RADIOACTIVE REVIEWS
A final mini-review section looking at a couple of non-animated movies, including the wild Taiwanese flick WATARI AND THE SEVEN MONSTERS!

WATARI AND THE SEVEN MONSTERS

C’mon folks, this issue is 100% pure-gold animation heaven for stop-motion movie fans everywhere!

A Ballad About Green Wood (1983)

This stop-motion crow ain't nice!
This stop-motion crow ain’t nice!

Written and directed by Jirí Barta. Music by Vladimír Merta. Art direction by Lenka Kerelová. Cinematography by Jan Vycítal. Edited by Helena Lebdusková.
Produced by Krátký Film Praha and Studio Jirího Trnky.

Stump on a bonfire

This short film from Czechoslovakia uses a mixture of live action and stop motion.

The movie begins with close-up shots of an axe chopping into logs. One log splits into multiple pieces of wood, some of which have faces. These wooden sticks rush about the landscape, seemingly elated that spring is coming, with the stop-motion footage intermixed with time-lapse photography of seeds germinating and the ice receding. 

This stick has a woman's face
This stick has a woman’s face

The wooden stick with a maiden’s face is attacked by a crow, which pecks the stick to pieces and swallows the splinters.

The crow attacks the lady-stick!
The crow attacks the lady-stick!

The stop-motion crow now turns into a creepy, skull-faced, winged piece of wood. This weird log-thing flies over the countryside, enters a cavern lit by candles, and roosts upside down like a bat, becoming an icicle. Sunlight enters the cave and the icicle becomes the death-faced stump again, which fights a wooden carving of a knight on a horse. The knight wins!  

The crow turns into this evil stick!
The crow turns into this evil stick!
The winged stick-monster flies over the woods
The winged stick-monster flies over the woods
This heroic piece of wood is shaped like a knight on a horse!
This heroic piece of wood is shaped like a knight on a horse!

The other sticks carry the winged, skull-headed piece of wood aloft and place it atop a bonfire on a hill. Then, instead of burning the bonfire, a stick with the maiden’s face uses a newly-grown leaf to make the bonfire burst into a flurry of spring growth, with long blades of green grass consuming the monster-branch, transforming it into a normal piece of wood once more. 

The crow-stick is engulfed by a 'bonfire' of fresh grass
The crow-stick is engulfed by a ‘bonfire’ of fresh grass

Jirí Barta’s sweet-and-sinister short is inspired by Vesna, a female character from Slavic mythology, who is associated with rituals conducted in rural areas during springtime. Here she is represented as the wooden stick with a maiden’s face that is consumed by the black crow, then returns anew to ignite the return of spring, as symbolised by the bonfire of rapidly-growing grass. 

The branch-of-badness is swamped by the blades of grass.,..
The branch-of-badness is swamped by the blades of grass.,..
...and it becomes a normal piece of wood again, which sprouts fresh leaves
…and it becomes a normal piece of wood again, which sprouts fresh leaves

The yarn, which possesses a typically surreal Eastern European folktale vibe, begins in an upbeat manner, turns darker with the arrival of the crow-stump-creature, then seemingly becomes upbeat again after the (ritualistic-looking) ‘burning’ of the winged branch transforms it into a regular stick again, which starts to grow fresh leaves. This would be the happy ending, right? But Barta chooses to finish the story by showing the sticks being collected by a villager to be used as firewood. The final shot is of smoke issuing from a chimney! The end!

The stop-motion animation of the sticks and the puppet crow was done outside, on location in the Bohemian Forest, the High Tatras, and the Koněprusy Caves. 

The animation was filmed on location in the outside environment
The animation was filmed on location in the outside environment

Barta’s other short films include THE VANISHED WORLD OF GLOVES (1982), THE PIED PIPER (1986), THE LAST THEFT (1987) and THE CLUB OF THE LAID OFF (1989).

The crow-stump of doom!
The crow-stump of doom!

The Primevals (2023)

Poster

Starring Juliet Mills, Richard Joseph Paul, Leon Russom, Walker Brandt, Tai Thai and Eric Steinberg. Written by David Allen and Randall William Cook. Directed by David Allen. Produced by Charles Band, Vlad Paunescu, Debra Dion, Albert Band, Danny Draven and Wendy Grossberg. Full Moon Features and Castel Film Romania.

illustration

After the body of a huge yeti is discovered and displayed at a university, a small team of scientists head to Nepal to learn more about this amazing creature. With the help of grizzled adventurer Rondo Montana, the group makes its way into an isolated, hidden, forested valley that is kept free of snow thanks to the ancient machinery of an alien race. Soon the protagonists discover that these aliens still exist…  

The yeti's body is displayed at a university
The yeti’s body is displayed at a university

I can’t believe THE PRIMEVALS has finally seen the light of day! This is a film project I have read about and followed the progress of for decades! It seemed destined to be one of those legendary projects that never got made.


Alien lizard-men fight a giant yeti in an arena! Woot!
Alien lizard-men fight a giant yeti in an arena! Woot!

Back in the late 1960s David Allen (stop-motion animator on THE DAY TIME ENDED, THE CRATER LAKE MONSTER, Q: THE WINGED SERPENT and more) developed a fantasy film treatment called RAIDERS OF THE STONE RING. Hammer Films eventually got to hear about it (at the time Jim Danforth and David Allen were working on WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH), the idea momentarily morphed into a concept called ZEPPELIN VS PTERODACTYLS (now that’s a title!), and Hammer put out a ‘coming soon’ ad for the project that boasted a striking illustration by top Hammer artist Tom Chantrell. But funding wasn’t found and the project stalled. 

Hammer Films would've added zeppelins and pterodactyls into the mix!
Hammer Films promo art rocked. Fact!

David Allen continued to return to the project, hoping to expand on the treatment, and he finally co-wrote a screenplay with Mark McGee. The concept’s title continued to fluctuate, with it being called THE GLACIAL EMPIRE and, later on, PRIMORDIUM: THE ARCTIC WORLD. A new outline was written in the mid-70s by Allen, who now called it THE PRIMEVALS. Allen would then go on to write a script with Randall William Cook, who had a potential financial backer, but, yet again, the funding disappeared. The script for THE PRIMEVALS would continue to be tweaked, altered and updated over time, and it finally became the foundation for the film that was eventually made. 

The explorers approach a skull-faced cave entrance in THE PRIMEVALS
The explorers approach a skull-faced cave entrance in THE PRIMEVALS

Producer-director Charles Band was shown a promotional reel for the film that David had shot and he agreed to fund the production through Charles Band Productions. But, once more, THE PRIMEVALS project ground to a halt after just a few months of preproduction. Then, in the early 1980s, the project was heavily advertised as part of Charles Band’s Empire Pictures slate of upcoming movies… but (you guessed it) THE PRIMEVALS failed to go beyond the preproduction stage at the studio. Damn it!

A stop-motion alien lizard-man with a ray gun, as seen in the finished film. What's not to like?!
A stop-motion alien lizard-man with a ray gun, as seen in the finished film. What’s not to like?!

THE PRIMEVALS concept was revived again when Charles Band started Full Moon Entertainment. This time the project did move past the preproduction stage! In 1994 much of the principal photography was shot in Romania. Other footage was filmed in the Dolomites mountain range in Italy. But then (there always seems to be another ‘but’ in this story!)… Full Moon got into financial difficulties, which interfered with the completion of the production, though Allen did continue, between other projects, to work on the film at irregular intervals.

David Allen and Chris Endicott pose with stop-motion puppets
David Allen and Chris Endicott pose with stop-motion puppets

Then the ultimate tragedy occurred… when David Allen passed away, aged just 54, in 1999.

David Allen had left the film elements, stop motion puppets, the storyboards, and all of his equipment in the care of his colleague Chris Endicott. Finally, in 2018, Charles Band launched an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign to obtain completion funds for THE PRIMEVALS, and this resulted in enough money being raised to allow Chris Endicott to team-up with stop-motion animator Kent Burton and other talented visual effects artists to work on getting David Allen’s passion project finally finished. In 2023 the completed film was premiered at the Fantasia festival and it is now available for us to watch.

A crowd of reptile-aliens sit above the arena, watching the combat below
A crowd of reptile-aliens sit above the arena, watching the combat below

I must say I was over the moon when I eventually got to view THE PRIMEVALS and discovered I was about to be immediately treated to an opening mountain fight scene between sherpas and a big yeti. This is such a great stop-motion set piece! Honestly, this is as good as the creature sequences in Ray Harryhausen’s fantasy films. The yeti hominid creature is definitely a wonderful creation: it looks so good! In fact, this marvellous, massive yeti is so fine, the creature is a joy to look at even when it is displayed as an unmoving exhibit during the scenes at the university.

The amazing yeti roping scene that occurs at the start of the film!
The amazing yeti roping scene that occurs at the start of the film!

The film moves into explorers-on-a-quest mode next, as the protagonists trudge through cave systems and discover a lost valley. THE PRIMEVALS really exudes an old school adventure-fantasy vibe here, reminiscent of such productions as THE ISLAND AT THE TOP OF THE WORLD (1974) and JOURNEY TO THE CENTRE OF THE EARTH (1959).

I love scenes where characters explore caverns!
I love scenes where characters explore caverns!

Once in the valley, through which a river runs, the group run across primitive hominid humans (actors in man-ape costumes) living in nicely-designed huts that are held aloft by stilt-like arrangements of branches. The scientists concur that the future-tech towers they’ve encountered must be part of a warming system that allows this hidden world to remain free of snow and harsh Himalayan weather.

The group approaches one of the alien towers
The group approaches one of the alien towers

Soon our heroes discover a parked flying saucer, and this leads them to an encounter with alien reptile-people who live in a barbaric domain within the valley! The explorers are taken prisoner and placed in an arena, where they witness crowds of reptilian beings cheering on as a yeti is goaded (via fiendish implants) until it fights captured hominids! Can our heroes escape their predicament?!

A lizard-dude gunner zaps the yeti to make the creature fight in the arena
A lizard-dude gunner zaps the yeti to make the creature fight in the arena

This film, for me, is like the cinematic equivalent of a well-made dish of comfort food: it has all the ingredients I adore, including characters journeying into a lost world, nice-looking stop-motion critters, a rousing orchestral score (by Richard Band), and a no-nonsense, pulpy adventure plot.

Another shot of the yeti on display in the university
Another shot of the yeti on display in the university

I would’ve liked to have seen at least one more stop-motion sequence in the mid-section of the film, but I understand that the filmmakers were constrained, needing to build on what was already shot and what they could achieve with the crowdfunding budget and the time that was available. There is one scene in the movie where characters talk about creatures they’ve spotted in the valley that are not normally-evolved animals, but we never see these beasts. So I assume this dialogue relates to scenes that were never completed. I remember seeing a concept drawing of a massive, horned River Lizard attacking a raft in an old issue of the magazine Cinefantastique, and this was definitely going to feature in the film, but, alas, the filmmakers were not able to complete the stop-motion for this part of the film. However, on the ‘David Allen Version’ disc (which is part of THE PRIMEVALS 3 Blu-ray Collection) the River Lizard sequence is presented with animatics based on Ron Lizorty’s design.
(There’s more info on the River Lizard in a feature at the end of this review…)

The issue of Cinefantasique that featured the river lizard preproduction drawing
The issue of Cinefantasique that featured the river lizard preproduction drawing

But, hey, I’m not here to quibble. I appreciate what everyone (including those who contributed to earlier iterations of the project) did to help get this David Allen love letter to fantasy-pulp-adventure yarns onto the screen.

One of the protagonists, Matt Connor (played by Richard Joseph Paul), is held prisoner by the alien reptile folk
One of the protagonists, Matt Connor (played by Richard Joseph Paul), is held prisoner by the alien reptile folk


The main selling point of THE PRIMEVALS is obviously the effects: the stop-motion animation, plus the miniatures, the optical effects, the props, the makeup effects, the hominid body suits and the matte paintings. They all help make this such an entertaining film. The creative people (who toiled on the final revival production and others who were part of the 1978 crew) include David Allen (of course), Chris Endicott, Kent Burton, Kim Blanchette, Mark Sullivan, Trey Thomas, Wes Caefer, Ken Ralston, Paul Mandell, Dave Carson, Jena Holman, Brett White, Dennis Gordon, Phil Tippett, Randy Cook, Jim Danforth (who was a VFX production consultant), Kevin O’Neill, Doug Beswick, Andrea Von Sholly, Peter Kermode, Steve Neill, Dave Matherly and many more talented folks. Thank you all!

An angry lizard alien
An angry lizard alien


The stop-motion animation in THE PRIMEVALS is such a delight!

The long-armed lizard-men aliens are varied in their looks, wearing different bits of clothing, headgear and armour – and all of them have big-eyed, mean, scowling expressions. Their animation is wonderfully smooth, and the puppets are exquisitely detailed. They’re meant to be the cruel, savage descendants of the original reptile alien visitors, and the animators manage to convey the leering lizard-folks’ spiteful natures well.  

The reptile-men always look a bit pissed off!
The reptile-men always look a bit pissed off!

The yetis are simply awesome. I presume the same puppet was used for the different yetis, and it is a stunning model. The yetis in THE PRIMEVALS are so fine-looking and impressive they will definitely become top fan-favourites with many stop-motion animation aficionados.

I love the yetis!
I love the yetis!

The cast, including Juliet Mills, is good, though Richard Joseph Paul, playing Matt Connor (the student who predicted the existence of yetis), tends to have an open-mouthed expression that unfortunately makes him look a little vacant some of the time!  Leon Russom, however, is great as the magnificently-named Rondo Montana, contributing an old school, manly presence to the movie. 

Leon Russom plays Rondo Montana
Leon Russom plays Rondo Montana

But as I’ve said already, I’m not here to complain: if you want to watch a movie with they-don’t-make-them-like-that-anymore vibes, that boasts extremely professional stop-motion animation, apemen suits, skull-faced cave entrances, retro sci-fi tech, stone arenas and medieval weaponry… then this is definitely the film for you!    

'A civilization lost in time... invaded one million years ago.'
‘A civilization lost in time… invaded one million years ago.’

THE RIVER LIZARD

Ron Lizorty, Production Designer on THE PRIMEVALS, put lots of work into redesigning the original River Lizard, because David Allen had never cared for some of the anatomy choices on the earlier, original version of the reptile (made for RAIDERS OF THE STONE RING). Lizorty co-designed the armature with Allen, did most of the armature tooling, then did the build-up of the beast with a detailed skin he sculpted and stretched over the muscles, using a puppet-building approach similar to the techniques sculptor and model-maker Marcel (KING KONG) Delgado utilised on his films. Lizorty’s model was truly magnificent-looking, and it would’ve been an astounding stop-motion addition to the movie, that is for sure.

The magnificent River Lizard stop-motion puppet!
The wonderful River Lizard stop-motion puppet!

Chris Endicott confirmed that this horned lizard was definitely intended to be in David’s finished film, but, for various reasons (the original camera negative for most of that sequence was lost by Full Moon, and Full Moon was never prepared to allocate the money nor the time to complete the film entirely, and so compromises had to be made), the reptile wasn’t included in the released movie. However, because Full Moon had created all the promotional artwork for THE PRIMEVALS long before the film was released, the River Lizard does feature in much of the promo art…

Details from two promo illustrations, showing the horned lizard, even though the beautiful brute never made it into the film. Shame!
Details from two promo illustrations, showing the horned River Lizard, even though the beautiful brute never made it into the film. Shame!