Edinburgh: Ray Harryhausen on His Career
The animation legend tells an eager audience about his life and work...
Dynamation legend Ray Harryhausen, whose films including The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, One Million Years B.C. and Clash of the Titans delighted and terrified audiences for forty years, visited the Edinburgh Film Festival last night to talk about his life and work and take questions from a capacity crowd.
Interviewed by longtime friend Tony Dalton - with whom Harryhausen has penned several books about his work - the special effects master, who turns 88 on Saturday, reminisced on the making and impact of his entire body of work, from his apprenticeship under Willis O'Brien on Mighty Joe Young through to his last feature film, 1981's Clash of the Titans.
Famed for pioneering stop-motion animation that interacts with live action, Harryhausen explained that the phrase Dynamation was chosen to differentiate the process for audiences who may have been put off at the thought of an all-animated movie.
"Then the PR teams took over and started calling it 'Super-Dynamation, then Electrolytic Dynamation, and it was just silly, but that was nothing to do with me," he joked. The process, which is entirely achieved in-camera, allowed stop-motion minatures to interact with actors shot separately on location. This allowed skeletons to fight in Jason and the Argonauts and dinosaurs to terrify the natives in One MIllion Years B.C. Harryhausen spoke of the number of filmmakers working today who've credited him as an inspiration, including Tim Burton. "I knocked over the Washington Monument [in Earth vs. the Flying Saucers] long before Mars Attacks!" he joked. "Glad to see it was rebuilt!" With him, Harryhausen bought a few of models, including a dinosaur from One Million Years B.C. and one of the seven skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts. Only six and a half survived, he explains, because he needed a set of skeleton legs when he was preparing a later film.
The painstaking process involves the animator - Harryhausen famously worked alone until a technical issue meant he had to bring help onboard for Clash of the Titans - moving the model by minute degrees for every frame of film. For a four and a half minute sequence involving the skeletons in Jason and the Argonauts, Harryhausen estimated that there were a total of 150,000 model moves involved. "It takes a lot of patience and there's a lot of hair pulling," he laughed, "which I guess is why so few animators have any hair!" Harryhausen and Dalton are set to publish a new book called A Century of Model Animation, which they explained will take a look at the history of the artform from its very beginning under Melies and O'Brien through to the recent work of Tim Burton and Nick Park.

"Then the PR teams took over and started calling it 'Super-Dynamation, then Electrolytic Dynamation, and it was just silly, but that was nothing to do with me," he joked. The process, which is entirely achieved in-camera, allowed stop-motion minatures to interact with actors shot separately on location. This allowed skeletons to fight in Jason and the Argonauts and dinosaurs to terrify the natives in One MIllion Years B.C. Harryhausen spoke of the number of filmmakers working today who've credited him as an inspiration, including Tim Burton. "I knocked over the Washington Monument [in Earth vs. the Flying Saucers] long before Mars Attacks!" he joked. "Glad to see it was rebuilt!" With him, Harryhausen bought a few of models, including a dinosaur from One Million Years B.C. and one of the seven skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts. Only six and a half survived, he explains, because he needed a set of skeleton legs when he was preparing a later film.

The painstaking process involves the animator - Harryhausen famously worked alone until a technical issue meant he had to bring help onboard for Clash of the Titans - moving the model by minute degrees for every frame of film. For a four and a half minute sequence involving the skeletons in Jason and the Argonauts, Harryhausen estimated that there were a total of 150,000 model moves involved. "It takes a lot of patience and there's a lot of hair pulling," he laughed, "which I guess is why so few animators have any hair!" Harryhausen and Dalton are set to publish a new book called A Century of Model Animation, which they explained will take a look at the history of the artform from its very beginning under Melies and O'Brien through to the recent work of Tim Burton and Nick Park.
Related Items
| Movie: | Clash of the Titans |
| Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers | |
| Mighty Joe Young | |
| The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad | |
| One Million Years B.C. | |
| RT-UK at the Edinburgh Film Festival | |
| Celeb: | Willis O'Brien |
| Ray Harryhausen |
Related Links
Most Discussed
- Total Recall: Bill Murray's Best Movies 46
- Box Office Guru Wrapup: Chihuahua is Top Dog 42
- Critics Consensus: Express Scores, Body of Lies Falls Flat 34
- RT on DVD: The Future of Watchmen, Plus Sleeping Beauty, Touch of Evil Remastered 30
- Weekly Ketchup: Steve Carell to Get Smart again. 29
- Box Office Guru Preview: Audiences Surrounded by Lies 9
- Exclusive: Alexandre Aja talks Mirrors and Piranha 3D 7
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 2 3
- Meet Corey Feldman Courtesy of RT 1
Latest News
- Weekly Ketchup: Steve Carell to Get Smart again. 30
- Exclusive: Alexandre Aja talks Mirrors and Piranha 3D 7
- Critics Consensus: Express Scores, Body of Lies Falls Flat 34
- Box Office Guru Preview: Audiences Surrounded by Lies 9
- Meet Corey Feldman Courtesy of RT 1
- Total Recall: Bill Murray's Best Movies 46
- RT on DVD: The Future of Watchmen, Plus Sleeping Beauty, Touch of Evil Remastered 30
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 2 3
- Box Office Guru Wrapup: Chihuahua is Top Dog 42
- Weekly Ketchup: Branagh directs Thor, Seagal vs. aliens? 45
Latest Interviews
- Exclusive: Alexandre Aja talks Mirrors and Piranha 3D 7
- RT Interview: Jason Statham Chats Death Race, Crank 2 and The Sweeney 9
- Video Exclusive: Gerard Butler talks RocknRolla and 300 sequel with RT 13
- Video Exclusive: Maria Bello, Brendan Fraser and the Mummy 3 Cast Talk to RT 14
- RT goes behind the scenes on Stargate: Continuum 4
- Starship Troopers' Casper Van Dien Shares His Five Favorite Films 48
- RT Interview: Philippe Petit on Crossing the Twin Towers on a Wire 2
- RT Interview: David Duchovny on The X-Files, Californication and Directing 11
- RT Interview: Ben Barnes on Taking on the Journey of Prince Caspian 1
- RT Interview: William Moseley on His Last Narnia Adventure in Prince Caspian 2
Latest Features
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 2 3
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 1 12
- Five Favorite Films with Paris Hilton 146
- Exclusive: Brand New The Children Photos and Director Introduction 5
- Five Favorite Films with Chuck Palahniuk 38
- Five Favorite Films with Dane Cook 106
- Five Favorite Films with Eva Mendes 51
- What The Hell Happened To ... Cuba Gooding Jr.? 86
- RT's Summer in Review: The Best, The Worst, and Our Favorite Films! 77
- What The Hell Happened To Shannon Elizabeth? 101
