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Willis H. O'Brien

 
Willis O'Brien
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The father of "stop-motion" animation, Willis O'Brien (1886-1962) was a Hollywood special effects innovator most famous for his work using miniature models of a gorilla in "King Kong". O'Brien'spioneering efforts transformed the possibilities of filmmaking, inventing a new kind of visual language later exploited by others in movies such as "Jaws" and "Alien".

Starting with his models in animated shorts and in the original dinosaur movie, 1925's The Lost World, O'Brien gave American filmmakers new latitude in creating monstrous fantasies. Although he won an Academy Award for the special effects in Mighty Joe Young in 1949, O'Brien labored largely in obscurity, gaining neither fame nor fortune. Many of O'Brien's fantastic, elaborate film ideas were never realized.

Conjurer of Movie Tricks

Born in Oakland, California, in 1886, Willis Harold O'Brien worked short stints as a cowboy and a boxer before becoming a cartoonist for the San Francisco Daily News. Soon, he grew interested in sculpting, making mostly small human or animal figures. In 1913, his sculptures were displayed at the San Francisco World's Fair. Soon after that, he used wooden figures with moveable joints, molded rubber to them, and began making his sculptures move.

In 1914, O'Brien realized he could make short films by moving his figures and filming them one frame at a time. He began experimenting with his clay models and within a year had produced The Dinosaur and the Missing Link, a "caveman comedy." For Edison's Biograph Company, he made four more shorts, including The Birth of a Flivver, Prehistoric Poultry, and R.F.D. 10,000 B.C., with prehistoric creatures the customary subject and a light comic touch always evident. After leaving Edison, O'Brien wrote, directed, and did special effects for four more films, including The Ghost of Slumber Mountain, released in 1919, which for the first time strove to make prehistoric animals look realistic and combined stop-action animation with live action. O'Brien has a cameo role in the short film.

O'Brien's fascination with prehistoric creatures found an outlet in the 1925 feature film The Lost World, directed by Harry Hoyt. Based on a novel by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the movie stars Wallace Beery as Professor Challenger, who, with a party of adventurers, finds a hideaway where dinosaurs still survive. O'Brien's dinosaurs not only moved and fought in the jungle, they "breathed" - using a bladder inside the skeleton model that could be inflated and deflated. At the film's end, a brontosaurus terrorizes London, constructed as a miniature set by O'Brien, who is credited with "research and technical direction."

The film's real stars were O'Brien's dinosaurs. A reviewer in Bioscope called the prehistoric monsters "marvels of ingenuity both in design and in the method of animation their movements are so supple and natural that it would be easy to believe them to be huge living creatures." The magazine Picturegoer called them "the most startling and intriguing monsters who have ever invaded screenland." Audiences loved the movie, and most viewers never realized that the huge monsters were miniature models. The studios never shared the secret.

O'Brien immediately started work on a project called Atlantis, but it was canceled by First National studio before production began. The same fate befell O'Brien's next project, Frankenstein. O'Brien's run of bad luck continued at RKO, where O'Brien teamed up with Hoyt again to make Creation, another dinosaur film that was a spin-off from The Lost World. O'Brien was listed as "scenarist" and "chief technician and animator." Two reels of film were shot before financial problems and personnel changes at RKO led to the film being scrapped.

The Magnificent Monster

By the early 1930s, Hollywood had become fascinated with jungle movies, particularly after the release of Tarzan the Ape Man in 1932. Producer Merian Cooper decided that O'Brien's work should be joined to a good jungle story. Cooper commissioned writers to work on a story idea he had about a giant ape, hired director Edward Schoedsack, and shot a test reel using O'Brien's sets and dinosaurs that had been made for Creation. Eventually the film was named King Kong.

For the new project, O'Brien put a year's worth of effort into his models and sets. He spent days in zoos, studying the behavior and movements of gorillas. He also went to wrestling matches to get ideas of how Kong would battle the dinosaurs of Skull Island. O'Brien used 18-inch-high models constructed on metal skeletons with joints formed of balls and sockets. He padded the skeletons with foam rubber and cotton and covered them with rabbit skin. He also contributed to the story line, adding touches of realism and fantasy as "chief technician."

King Kong caused a sensation. The story about a giant ape who is brought to New York and escapes to terrorize the city was a box-office blockbuster and a cultural phenomenon. It was the first "monster movie." O'Brien and his team constructed elaborate miniature sets that were used in almost all the scenes of Kong in the jungles and the city. He made audiences really feel that New York was under attack. In only a few scenes did he use a life-sized bust of Kong or a life-sized Kong hand or foot. The scene with Kong atop the Empire State Building, holding Fay Wray and being attacked by planes, is one of the most famous in film history.

Despite the crudeness of film techniques of the day, many critics consider O'Brien's work on King Kong to be the greatest use of stop-motion animation in movie history. It certainly was the most successful. The film was re-released 15 years later, unchanged, and again raked in huge amounts of money. Six decades later it remained a staple of television. It inspired countless films. Critics were exuberant over the monsters and baffled by the production techniques. Long after the movie and its sequel Son of Kong were released, details about how the animals were constructed and shot were kept secret. Even into the 1950s, many people believed that Kong was a man in a gorilla suit.

The sequel, Son of Kong, was released the same year (1933) as the original, with a lower budget and a smaller ape, Little Kong. O'Brien thought it was cheesy. "He asked them to not put his name on it and he didn't do any more than put in appearances each day, so he would get his check," recalled his second wife, Darlyne O'Brien, in a 1982 interview. "He did no animation and was a little unhappy with some of the humor." Nonetheless, O'Brien was credited again as "chief technician."

During the filming of Son of Kong, O'Brien experienced a profound personal tragedy. His first wife, Hazel O'Brien, who was separated from him, became anguished after the older of their two sons went blind from a disease. She fatally shot both the boys and then tried to commit suicide; she died from her self-inflicted wounds a year later. In 1935, O'Brien married Darlyne.

Flops and Aborted Projects

O'Brien teamed again with producer Cooper and director Schoedsack to make The Last Days of Pompeii in 1935, a gladiator movie that ends with the spectacular eruption of a volcano. O'Brien's special effects were stunning and would be widely imitated in future disaster movies. O'Brien built a miniature model of the temple at Pompeii, mounted it on a platform with motors beneath it, put rods in the pillars, and made it shake but remain standing.

In 1936, Cooper produced The Dancing Pirate, O'Brien's first film shot in Technicolor. Directed by Lloyd Corrigan, it was a musical romance-adventure for which O'Brien was credited for "photographic effects." He did no animation for the film, which was a flop.

Cooper hired Schoedsack and O'Brien again to do a spectacular new project called War Eagles. The film was to feature modern adventurers rediscovering Vikings. Cooper described the unusual idea as "a super western of the air" involving incredible special effects. O'Brien did many sketches, produced models, and was involved as a test reel was shot. But the story never went into production, and the project was shelved after Cooper left his job to help organize mercenary pilots to fight for Chinese nationalist Chiang Kai-shek. O'Brien had put nearly a year's work into building models, doing sketches and planning scenes.

O'Brien next decided to sell his own film project to RKO. Called Gwangi, it was about cowboys who encounter a prehistoric animal in a "lost" valley. O'Brien was to co-produce the film with his longtime model-builder assistant Marcel Delgado as effects technician. He had glass paintings made and Delgado produced a detailed allosaurus model. But O'Brien couldn't get the studio's full backing. Schoedsack commented: "This was a rodeo with a dinosaur, what the hell."

Mighty Joe and Beyond

After years of disappointments, Cooper and John Ford hired O'Brien to help Shoedsack on Mighty Joe Young, another movie about an ape who is wronged by the civilized world. After some false starts, the film was finally shot in black and white. This was a more heartwarming story than King Kong, with a gorilla who was more playful, heroic and expressive. O'Brien's collaborator on the special effects was young animator Ray Harryhausen, who would go on to work on many films. Sequences showing Joe going on a drunken rampage in a nightclub and rescuing children from a burning building were especially impressive.

O'Brien finally got recognition with an Academy Award for special effects for Mighty Joe Young. Ironically, by this stage in his career O'Brien was doing mostly planning and preparation, with animators like Harryhausen supervising the actual shooting. Not even an Oscar got O'Brien's stop-motion career completely into full gear. O'Brien and his wife had a rough outline of a script for a film he called Emilio and Guloso, about a young Mexican cowboy and a bull. Retitled Valley of the Mist, it was optioned by producer Jesse Lasky, and O'Brien and Harryhausen were hired to do special effects. But once again the project fell through.

O'Brien was "never a good promoter," according to his wife Darlyne. Though he had plenty of ideas, he could not figure out how to get them produced in Hollywood. In 1952, Cooper got O'Brien hired at the new Cinerama corporation and talked about a remake of King Kong using the new wide-screen techniques. It was never made; instead, O'Brien played a small, uncredited role in making the film This Is Cinerama, a travelogue-style feature.

In 1956, O'Brien wrote the script but did none of the animation for the first color film to combine animation and live action photography, The Beast of Hollow Mountain. A low-budget independent production, it is about two young Mexican children and their encounter with a prehistoric beast which rises out of a swamp. That same year, O'Brien worked as supervisor for the dinosaur sequence in the acclaimed nature documentary film, The Animal World, with Harryhausen as the animator. In 1957, O'Brien was hired for The Black Scorpion, a low-budget monster movie about giant rampaging scorpions. O'Brien and collaborator Peter Peterson did the special effects. The two also worked together on The Giant Behemoth, a 1959 movie about a radioactive sea monster who terrorizes England. O'Brien helped build the sets and the models.

O'Brien was listed as the effects technician for the 1960 remake of The Lost World, which used live lizards with rubber fins attached rather than animated dinosaurs. Beyond a few storyboards, O'Brien actually contributed little to the project and did no animation. He thought the method was inferior to stop-motion animation, and many critics agreed.

O'Brien spent much of his later career unable to find work or sell ideas such as King Kong vs. Frankenstein, which would pair the two famous movie monsters in a colossal fight. A Japanese film company ended up appropriating the idea and turning it into King Kong vs. Godzilla, in which O'Brien was not involved.

O'Brien was hired as a special consultant and director of animation on the climactic sequence of the adventure-comedy It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, released in 1963. He worked on the scene for several months but died at the age of 76 during the production of the film. His widow told an interviewer: "Well, he was a kid right up to the day he died, still just a boy and a dreamer. He never seemed to grow up."

Books

Archer, Steve, Willis O'Brien: Special Effects Genius, McFarland, 1993.

Halliwell, Leslie, Halliwell's Who's Who in the Movies, Harper, 1999.

Katz, Ephraim, The Film Encyclopedia, Harper, 1998.

Smith, John M., and Tim Cawkwell, The World Encyclopedia of Film, Galahad Books, 1972.

Thomson, David, A Biographical Dictionary of Film, Knopf, 1994.

Periodicals

Time, December 28, 1998.

Online

"The Films of Willis O'Brien," http://www2.netdoor.com/~campbab/obie2.html

"Film 100," http://www.film100.com

"Willis O'Brien, Special Effects Genius," Missing Link,http://www.missinglink.free-online.co.uk/archer.htm

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Willis O'Brien

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Biography

Distinguished special effects expert Willis O'Brien was an innovator of stop-motion photography. Before he began toying with effects and trick photography in 1914, O'Brien had been a cartoonist for the San Francisco Daily News and a professional marble sculptor. His early filmwork caught the eye of the Edison company and they signed him on to a series of short films about the Stone Age. Some of his best effects can be seen in The Lost World (1925), King Kong (1933), and Mighty Joe Young (1949). His effects for the latter film earned O'Brien an Oscar. One of his chief innovations was the substitution of rubber for clay in his stop-motion models. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Willis H. O'Brien

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Willis O'Brien

Willis H. O'Brien on the set of Son of Kong.
Born 2 March 1886(1886-03-02)
Oakland, California, U.S.
Died 8 November 1962(1962-11-08) (aged 76)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting place Chapel of the Pines Crematory
Other names Obie
Occupation Stop motion model animator
Years active 1915-1962
Influenced by Thomas A. Edison
Influenced Ray Harryhausen
Pete Peterson
Spouse Hazel Ruth Collette (1925-1930)
Darlyne Prenett
Awards Winsor McCay Award (1997)

Willis Harold O'Brien (AKA: "Obie"; March 2, 1886 – November 8, 1962) was an Irish American motion picture special effects and stop-motion animation pioneer, who according to ASIFA-Hollywood "was responsible for some of the best-known images in cinema history," and is best remembered for his work on The Lost World (1925), King Kong (1933) and Mighty Joe Young (1949), for which he won the 1950 Academy Award for Best Visual Effects.[1]

Contents

Biography

The Dinosaur and the Missing Link.ogv
The Dinosaur and the Missing Link. 1915

Willis O'Brien was born in Oakland, California. He first left home at the age of eleven to work on cattle ranches, and again at the age of thirteen when he took on a variety of jobs including farmhand, factory worker, fur trapper, cowboy, and bartender. During this time he also competed in rodeos and developed an interest in dinosaurs while working as a guide to palaeontologists in Crater Lake region. He spent his spare time sculpting and illustrating and his natural talent lead to him being employed first as draftsman in an architect's office and then as a sports cartoonist for the San Francisco Daily News. During this time he also became a professional boxing, winning his first nine bouts but retiring after an unsuccessful tenth. He subsequently worked for the railroad, first as a brakeman and later a surveyor, as a professional marble sculptor, and was assistant to the head architect of the 1913 San Francisco World's Fair, where some of his work was displayed. During this time he made models, including a dinosaur and a caveman, which he animated with the assistance of a local newsreel cameraman. San Francisco exhibitor Herman Wobber saw this 90-second test footage and commissioned O'Brien to make his first film, The Dinosaur and the Missing Link: A Prehistoric Tragedy (1915) for a budget of $5,000.

Thomas A. Edison was impressed by the film and O'Brien was hired by the Edison Company to animate a series of short films with a prehistoric theme, these included R.F.D. 10,000 B.C. and Prehistoric Poultry (both 1917). During this time he also worked on other Edison Company productions including Sam Loyd's The Puzzling Billboard and Nippy's Nightmare (both 1917), which were the first stop-motion films to combine live actors with stop motion models. These film led to a commission from Herbert M. Dawley to write, direct, co-star and produce the effects for another dinosaur film, The Ghost of Slumber Mountain (1918), for a budget of $3,000. The collaboration was not a happy one and Dawley would cut the 45-minute film down to 11-minutes and claim credit O'Brien's pioneering effects work, which combined realistic stop-motion animated prehistoric models with live action. The film grossed over $100,000 and Dawley used the cut effects footage in a sequel Along the Moonbeam Trail (1920) and the documentary Evolution (1923), but O'Brien received little financial reimbursement from this success.

Agathaumas.ogv
Segment from the 1925 film The Lost World animated by Willis O'Brien

The film however did help to secure his position on Harold H. Hoyt's The Lost World. For his early, short films O'Brien created his own characters out of clay, although for much of his feature career he would employ Richard and Marcel Delgado to create much more detailed stop-motion models (based on O'Brien's designs) with rubber skin built up over complex, articulated metal armatures. The models contained a bladder inside the skeleton model that could be inflated and deflated to give the illusion of breathing. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who appeared in the prologue to the film based on his novel of the same name, reportedly showed a reel of O'Brien's animation from the film to his friends, claiming it was real footage of living dinosaurs, to try to convince them that his story was based on fact.

O'Brien was married to Hazel Ruth Collette in 1925 and they had two sons together, William and Willis, Jr., but the marriage was an unhappy one, which O'Brien was reportedly forced into and rebelled against with drinking, gambling, and extra-marital affairs. The couple were divorced by 1930 and the two boys remained with their mother, who had begun to show unbalanced behaviour. By 1931 Hazel had been diagnosed with cancer and tuberculosis, while William also contracted tuberculosis resulting in blindness in one eye and then the other.

Throughout this time O'Brien worked with Hoyt on a series of cancelled projects included Atlantis for First National studio, Frankenstein, and Creation for RKO Pictures, which was finally cancelled in 1931 with only 20-minutes of effects footage to show for an estimated $120,000 development cost. The studio's head of production, Merian C. Cooper, had recommended the cancellation of O'Brien's project as he thought the story was boring but he was impressed by the effects work and saw how it could be used to facilitate the development of his own pet project about a giant gorilla battling Komodo dragons. O'Brien and the dinosaur models he had created for the cancelled project were put to work on what was to become his most famous film, King Kong (1933).

The success of King Kong led to the studio commissioning a hurried sequel Son of Kong (also 1933), which O'Brien described as cheesy. With a limited budget and a short production schedule O'Brien chose to leave the animation work to his assistant and asked the studio not to credit him on the project. While making one of his daily visits to the set, O'Brien, who had remained close to his two sons after his separation from his estranged wife, invited Willis, Jnr. and the now completely blind William with him to handle the models. A few weeks after this visit O'Brien's ex-wife, Hazel Ruth Collette, shot and killed William and Willis, Jr. before turning the gun on herself. The suicide attempt failed and by draining her tubercular lung actually extended her life by another year. A publicity photo of O'Brien taken around this time shows the anguish on his face. Hazel Ruth Collette remained in the Los Angeles General Hospital prison ward until her death in 1934. On November 17 that same year O'Brien married his second wife Darlyne Prenett with whom he would remain until his death.

O'Brien continued to work with Merian C. Cooper at RKO on a number of projects including the epic The Last Days of Pompeii (1935) and The Dancing Pirate (1936), which was O'Brien's first Technicolor production. The two also developed War Eagles about a race of Vikings riding on prehistoric eagles fighting with dinosaurs, but the project was cancelled when Cooper re-enlisted as a colonel in the U.S. Army Air Forces at the outset of World War II. O'Brien went on to do some special effects work, re-using one of the mattes from Son of Kong, on Orson Welles' American classic Citizen Kane (1941) and George Pal's Oscar-nominated animated short Tulips Shall Grow (1942), as well as developing his own project, Gwangi, about cowboys who encounter a prehistoric animal in a "lost" valley, which he failed to sell to the studio.

The film Mighty Joe Young (1949), on which O'Brien is credited as Technical Creator, won an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects in 1950. Credit for the award went to the films producers, RKO Productions, but O'Brien was also awarded a statue. O'Brien's protege (and successor), Ray Harryhausen, worked alongside O'Brien on this film, and by some accounts Harryhausen did the majority of the animation.

O'Brien and his wife developed Emilio and Guloso (AKA: Valley of the Mist), about a Mexican boy and his pet bull who save their town from a dinosaur called "Lagarto Grande", which was optioned by producer Jesse Lasky, with O'Brien and Harryhausen onboard to do special effects, before falling through. O'Brien subsequently went to work for Cooper at the new Cinerama corporation with plans to do a remake of King Kong using the new wide-screen techniques but ended up contributing a matte for the travelogue This Is Cinerama (1952) when this project also fell through. O'Brien worked with Harryhausen one last time on the acclaimed dinosaur sequence for Irwin Allen's nature documentary The Animal World (1956). O'Brien's story ideas for Gwangi and Valley of the Mist were developed into Edward Nassour and Ismael Rodríguez's The Beast of Hollow Mountain (also 1956) but he did not work on the film's effects, which were the first to combine stop-motion and live-action in a colour film. O'Brien also worked with Peterson again on The Black Scorpion (1957) and Behemoth, the Sea Monster (1959), but the two subsequently struggled to find work.

Allen hired O'Brien was hired as the effects technician on his remake of The Lost World (1960), but he was given little to do as the producer opted for live lizards instead of stop-motion animation for the dinosaurs. One of his story ideas King Kong vs. Frankenstein was developed into Ishirō Honda's King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962) but O'Brien was once again not involved in the production. Shortly before his death, he animated a brief scene in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), featuring some characters dangling from a fire escape and ladder, but he died before the film was released.

O'Brien died in Los Angeles. He was survived by his second wife, Darlyne. In 1997, he was posthumously awarded the Windsor McCay Award by ASIFA-Hollywood, the United States chapter of the International Animated Film Society ASIFA (Association internationale du film d'animation). The award is in recognition of lifetime or career contributions to the art of animation. His interment was located at Chapel of the Pines Crematory.

The 1969 film The Valley of Gwangi, completed by Harryhausen seven years after O'Brien's death, was based on an idea he had spent years trying to bring to the screen. O'Brien wrote the script for an earlier version of the story which was released as The Beast of Hollow Mountain (US 1956), but O'Brien did not handle the effects for that movie.

Completed films (in chronological order)

The Ghost of Slumber Mountain.ogv
The Ghost of Slumber Mountain, 1918

Uncompleted or unmade projects (in alphabetical order)

  • Atlantis – developed by O'Brien and Harry Hoyt after the success of The Lost World.
  • Baboon: A Tale about a Yeti – story set in the Himalayas
  • The Bubbles – bubble-like creatures in Baja California start eating up anything in their path.
  • Creation
  • The Eagle – about a giant eagle who kills a dinosaur
  • Emilio and Guloso – about a boy and his pet bull who save their town from a dinosaur called "Lagarto Grande" ("The Great Lizard").
  • Frankenstein
  • Gwangi – eventually made into The Valley of Gwangi by Ray Harryhausen.
  • Last of the Labyrinthodons – modern-day sea monsters from prehistoric times attacking ships
  • The Last of the Oso Si-Papu – about a giant creature resembling a bear with skin like a Gila monster roaming Arizona
  • Umbah – treatment by O'Brien about two giant Indians spawned by a doctor's experiment
  • Valley of the Mists – further elaboration of "Emilio."
  • The Vines of Ceres – vines from outer space engulf San Francisco
  • War Eagles – about a race of Vikings riding on prehistoric eagles who fought dinosaurs. Cancelled by World War II.

References

External links


 
 
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