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One of cinema's most admired and influential special-effects gurus, legendary movie magician Ray Harryhausen has enthralled film goers with his wild and creative visions, with over 60 years of groundbreaking screen wizardry under his belt. Leaving no doubt as to his seminal influence on modern-day special effects, Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan digs deep in the vault and features enlightening interviews with the man himself as well as creative greats Peter Jackson (The Lord of The Rings Trilogy), Nick Park (Wallace & Gromit), Phil Tippett (stop-motion animator of Robocop & The Empire Strikes Back), Terry Gilliam (Time Bandits), Dennis Muren (Oscar winning effects supervisor for Jurassic Park), John Landis (An American Werewolf In London), Guillermo Del Toro (Hellboy), James Cameron (Avatar), Steven Spielberg (E.T-the Extra Terrestrial) and many more. Paying tribute to a pioneer of Stop Motion animation (alongside legendary Willis 'King Kong' O'Brien), Harryhausen's extraordinary films such as The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, It Came from Beneath the Sea, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, Mysterious Island, Jason and the Argonauts, The Golden Voyage of Sinbad and of course the original Clash of the Titans are testament to his great ingenuity behind the camera - creating all manner of monsters, mayhem and inspiring generations of filmmakers to dream big. (Umbrella Entertainment)

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Reviews (2)

Matty 

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English There’s no lingering on biographical facts here. The obvious purpose of this tech-nerd documentary is to expose younger viewers to Ray Harryhausen’s influence on the work of modern special-effects magicians, and to thus also to defend CGI as a noble continuation of the tradition. Though the speakers lack critical distance, their admiration is mostly for how convincingly a given monster moved, rather than for what a great guy Ray is. Like a number of other documentary portraits, this film becomes exceedingly sentimental in the closing minutes (Ray’s 90th birthday celebration). It’s intimated only subtly between the lines that the films with Harryhausen’s effects had mediocre screenplays and wooden actors, and that – with a few exceptions – watching them from start to finish would not be nearly as entertaining as this cherry-picked exhibition of the best trick scenes. In the case of such a fannish tribute (for example, the titles with the names of the speakers are complemented with miniature examples of their creativity) that could bear the subtitle “The Best of Ray Harryhausen”, such one-sidedness is understandable and probably unavoidable to a certain extent (try enticing Cameron, Jackson or Spielberg to take part in a film aimed at dispassionately assessing Ray Harryhausen’s life and work without concealing unpleasant truths). 80% ()

kaylin 

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English Ray Harryhausen is a genius of film animation and stop motion. What he accomplished for cinema is essentially immeasurable. Still, this documentary, featuring truly significant figures including Ray, strives to capture that, and it succeeds. It's a beautiful overview of his work and, in fact, of the entire realm of fantasy filmmaking. Yes, I'm very biased, but not that biased. ()