Showing posts with label Ray Kellogg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ray Kellogg. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 August 2012

It Never Rains, But It Pours in Ranchipur


Pete's editorial:

What's on and what's coming up:

Today's blog will be a retrospective look at the many photographic, matte and miniature effects featured in the big 1955 20th Century Fox epic THE RAINS OF RANCHIPUR... but first, some updates on what's happening in NZPete's world of trick shots.



Future blogs will be a Disney Double which will look back at two of the biggest effects movies produced by the Disney Studios - IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS (1962) and ISLAND AT THE TOP OF THE WORLD (1974).  Former Disney matte artist and visual effects supervisor Harrison Ellenshaw has graciously agreed to tell us all about these two huge films, and I know alot of people out there have a fondness for both films, so all things going well, next 'issue' it'll be Disney on a grand scale.

As if that weren't enough, I'll be featuring a vast and comprehensive career piece on Harrison and his many, many films in a significant interview where we'll be discussing many and varied aspects to Harrison's chosen career such as the 'Royal Lineage' of  Pop Day and Harrison's dad Peter, through to working with visionary film makers such as Nicholas Roeg, George Lucas and others.  Harrison's a great guy to talk to and has alot of wonderful stories to tell. Stay tuned. 

I have a retrospective on the action packed war film TOBRUK (1967) due soon too.  Lots of terrific Oscar nominated Albert Whitlock shots and thrilling Howard Anderson miniature battles.  Solid stuff, all of it.  I just cannot understand how this show lost out to that awful DOCTOR DOOLITTLE in the effects stakes!!
Lastly, I've come across some rarely seen material on the late and enormously talented British special effects man Wally Veevers, and this too will form the basis for a one off article on his life and achievements.

Who was Neil McGuire?

I was most pleased with the response to my last article, Matthew Yuricich's Oral History, and I thank all of those who have commented and written to me on Matt.  As is often the case with these things, a sort of Murphy's Law as it were, important tidbits, photos and historic fact sometimes comes to hand after I've published these mammoth blogs - and this is the case with my Yuricich article.

First off, in the section of the interview on MGM's early matte painters, Matt mentioned a mystery figure who was Warren Newcombe's effects partner and matte artist for many years, having been brought out to Hollywood from New York, though not surprisingly this artist's name eluded Matt (and everyone else too it seems).  Well, as a true fanatic when it comes to sorting out just who did what and when, in the effects world I was absolutely delighted when Italian cinematic historian extraordinaire, Federico Magni sent me that very information the day after the blog was published.  Federico has a proven track record of digging up the most obscure, lost, forgotten and unobtainable motion picture trivia, especially in the arena of special visual effects, and for quasi-historians like your humble author, this info is pure gold.  Here is Federico's research:

McGuire (left) & Newcombe (right)
NZPete blog: 'Newcombe did paint mattes back at the beginning in the 20's, but to me he couldn't paint and wasn't really a top artist.[.] He did some lithographs and stuff.  In the old days the matte shots were done by his friend that he brought with him from New York - he was a real artist. he did all the work.'

Federico:  "I think the 'real artist' Yuricich made reference was Neil McGuire. I've attached to this mail a page from the Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual 1921 (Published by MOTION PICTURE NEWS, INC., 729.7th Avenue, New York) related to Newcombe and McGuire's art effects company.  From the same source, the brief profile of Neil:"

McGUIRE, Neil Elwood, art director; b. Santa Maria, Calif.; educ. Univ.of Calif, and Art Students League; screen career, Universal, Triangle, Thos. H. Ince, art title director, Famous Players, Selznick, recent productions: "Passion," "Inside of the Cup," "Vendetta."  Neil Elwood McGuire was born in Santa Maria, California, on October 17, 1896. He died there on January 8, 1972. In 1942 he was employed at Fine Arts Studios, Santa Monica Boulevard, Hollywood.

Federico adds: "This is the text of McGuire's Variety obituary (Daily Variety, Feb 14, 1972)":
Neil McGuire, special effects technician who started his film career
during silent pix, died in Santa Maria, Calif., Jan. 8, it was learned over weekend. He had made his home there, where he was reared, since retirement in 1965. McGuire was with Universal early in career, later also active in tv. He produced a number of educational films, including "Lincoln's Gettysburg Address." He specialized in scenic effects and miniatures.


I'm most grateful to Federico for this information (and numerous other past discoveries) on a pioneer in the matte art field whom I'd never heard of.


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More on Matt:


I never suspected this as a matte, till now!
While on Matthew's blog, I will take this opportunity if I may to illustrate a few of Matt's outstanding, invisible matte shots he made for the excellent nuclear thriller THE CHINA SYNDROME (1978).  All I had on file till now were lousy VHS images as I'd never been able to track down the DVD - until now!
It's far too tricky an affair to go back into those big blogs to 'fix' things without the damned thing falling apart - possibly due to the sheer size of my blogs, so here are those wonderful mattes which Matthew spoke of.

Incidentally, the blogger stability issue really came to a head recently while I was looking back at a few old articles and to my utter horror discovered about two thirds of my BIG War Film Special Effects article had simply disappeared without trace!!!  I spent a lot of time putting that together a few years ago, so naturally I'm very bloody annoyed.  I'll try to resurrect as much of it as I can remember, which ain't easy as it's not as though it's a one off 'click', but more like uploading the hundred or so frames all over again and adding text.
As usual, I digress.........................

Anyway, here are those CHINA SYNDROME mattes in all their glory..... Enjoy!
Matt had artistic and compositional  issues on this production with photographic effects man James Liles, but the finished mattes are really first class and are always utterly convincing.

Al Whitlock often remarked: "The true special effect is the one that nobody ever notices".  That credo is flawlessly observed here in what is a major trick shot with almost everything added by Matthew's brush.

A great before and after for the fictional nuclear power plant.

Now, I'd never noticed this invisible matte until a few days ago.

Matthew wasn't happy with his work on this shot and was self critical of his perspective drawing for the cooling towers.  The entire shot is painted except the stairs that Jack Lemmon walks down.  Jim Liles intoduced an optical zoom in and back out with the painting remaining on screen for a relatively long duration.


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It Never Rains But It Pours in Ranchipur:  
The Special Visual Effects of THE RAINS OF RANCHIPUR



I've always been a sucker for the disaster picture, and not just the ones we all remember from the so called disaster cycle of the 1970's.  A great many more cropped up in early times, and I've discussed many of those here in past blog articles such as IN OLD CHICAGO, THE RAIN'S CAME and others.
THE RAINS OF RANCHIPUR (1955) was in effect a near shot for shot remake of Fox's earlier, and better Tyrone Power show THE RAINS CAME (1939).  My earlier article on that film may be found here.

A glossy, big budgeted CinemaScope love story featuring Lana Turner and a badly miscast turbaned Richard Burton, set (and partly shot, by the looks of it) in India, the picture is punctuated by an earthquake and a colossal flood, much of which looks pretty good still today.  The picture was a 1955 Oscar nominee for it's photographic effects, which were supervised by 20th Century Fox veteran effects man and matte artist Ray Kellogg.  Interestingly, the earlier film THE RAINS CAME did win the Academy Award for special effects - and deservedly so.  This remake has several good painted mattes, excellent miniatures and impressively well scaled deluge shots must have looked sensational back in the day on the huge Scope screen. The many optical combination shots suffer as one would expect from the anamorphic lens format and travelling matte shortcomings of the period. Until recently I'd only ever seen Ranchipur on tv in awful cropped down pan & scan format, though come to think of it, I actually don't even think it was scanned at all - just dead centre with much periphery action just not seen and Lana's nose at screen left and Burton's nose at screen right in dialogue scenes.  Jesus!

Well, the film looks and sounds great on DVD  with an excellent anamorphic transfer and little or no grain, which is rare for a classic Fox film on DVD, and I have a number of spectacular set pieces here to show you....so put your raincoats on, sit back, and prepare to get soaked..................................


Special Photographic Effects:  Ray Kellogg
Matte Painting Supervisor:  Emil Kosa,jr
Visual Effects Cinematographers:  L.B Abbott, James B.Gordon, Walter Castle & Harry Dawes
Matte Artists:  (most likely) Menrad von Muldorfer, Max De Vega, Cliff Silsby


I still love the old Scope logo and fanfare.  It really meant something as a kid at the movie house to see this!

The opening matte painted shot -  a sprawling vista of Ranchipur, India.

I'm not sure if this is a matte or a genuine location shot?

A stunning matte which may have been achieved by painting over a large photo enlargement, as was common at Fox.
Painted Indian fortress matted in.
The quake begins.  Exceptional integration of miniature collapsing building with live action and possible painted left side of the street.  This is the sort of shot set up that the Fox FX dept were well versed at over the years.
The next shot in the sequence where tons of miniature rubble and architecture falls onto fleeing Indians.  An excellent and well assembled travelling matte with presumably a significant hand drawn rotoscoped aspect involved.
Some frames from the original RAINS CAME for comparison.
Extras and miniature collapse all beautifully tied together by travelling mattes which being in black & white help conceal technical issues better.


One of the few 'hokey' shots.  Extras atop of matte painted gash in earth, with left and right action separated by a very visible split screen whereby both sides 'shake' up and down optically.  Quite poor when compared with the same scene in the 1939 film (see below) which was a mind blower of an effects shot.
The same action as depicted in the earlier film, where the earth suddenly drops away with crowds of people falling into the abyss.  To this day this effect blows me away with it's violent ferocity and flawless execution, which I'm still not sure how Fred Sersen pulled it off so effectively?
And the rain keeps falling...............  A wonderful painted matte shot augmented with rain overlay.

"I canny hold her together anymore Captain...she's breaking up"
The same footage as it appeared in other Fox shows, such as one of the James Coburn FLINT movies for memory and maybe even some Irwin Allen tv shows.

The rains came, and came, and came!  Good miniature work and 'scaled water'.  Having the disasters occur at night helps to lend a more realistic look to the shots and darkness can hide a multitude of sins, or so I'm told!

Live action/miniature travelling matte combo.  The people all seem so unconcerned though.

People hit with a sudden surge:  a fairly weak FX shot when compared with the same event in the first film (see below)

Same event in the 1939 film.  One of the greatest shock effects of all time, and one executed with such skill as to be utterly convincing and terrifying in the same instance.  I'm not sure how Sersen did this, but would bet this was an entirely miniature set with the people matted in very believably and then removed with an articulated hand drawn matte as the water envelopes them?  One jaw dropping special effect.

I've lightened up this frame to better see the construction of the very elaborate and realistic composite of elements.  I think the water and the street are two separate elements filmed at different times and beautifully combined on the optical printer, with the people at right yet another element, split screened in.  The whole sequence may be seen below.

The raging floodwaters in action.  The best effects shot in the film with a very high standard of compositing.

The same set piece in the 1939 film, with miniatures, matte art and live action all flawlessly combined, and the well earned winning Oscar special effects picture that year.  Most of the RANCHIPUR effects people worked on RAINS CAME too such as Ray Kellogg, James B.Gordon, Bill Abbott and Menrad von Muldorfer.
The hazards of the travelling matte process in the fifties, especially on CinemaScope shows where film element shrinkage is exacerbated by the stretched anamorphic process which magnifies matte lines on the left and right thirds of the widescreen.  Still, this is as good if not better than the almost identical FX shots done some 24 years later for the huge $20 million epic METEOR (1979) which is infamous for having the all time worst photographic effects ever!!!

Again, I've lightened up this frame to better demonstrate the miniatures and badly washed out (no pun intended!) travelling mattes.
This optical works really well, and again is 100 times better than the same abysmal TM in METEOR

Another good multi part effect which I would suggest is largely a miniature set with dump tank deluge, live action people matted in and I'm sure the upper part is a painted matte to extend the set.

The reverse angle on the same sequence, which I've lightened up a little so as to see the components of the shot.  Aside from some peculiar transparency on the upper people and the highly evident TM lines against white water this actually looks pretty good on screen in motion.

Another view which really works well.  What I like about these shots is that the Fox effects guys must have used every inch available of the Sersen tank to obtain such well scaled water effects - not an easy task by any stretch.  The 'physics' and weight of the water, not to mention the foam and spray in these FX composites really is superb and among the best of it's type.  L.B Abbott would eventually make a name for himself on many shows for his tank shots.  I always felt he deserved the Oscar for 1941.... but don't get me started on bloody Oscar injustices at this time of the day!

The bridge gets hit.  Miniature bridge and dump tanks, and I'm just guessing here, but maybe mechanised toy people 'running' to safety?  If it were an MGM film I just know that Arnold Gillespie would have done it that way.  The sequence looks exciting here but once again, the Sersen variation of it for the original film is better (see below).

The sequence as seen in THE RAINS CAME (1939) with the added realism factor of real people carefully matted into  some shots, and on other angles having miniature water matted onto the people with articulated mattes.
Extras swept away with TM water.  Probably not such a good idea.  Dump tanks on stuntmen would have worked better.


The rains subside....
The floodwaters recede.... a glorious matte painting.

The people return to Ranchipur.  A mostly painted matte shot with some perspective irregularities.

A full screen painting with just a small slot with the car driving off into the distance.


Till next blog... 


Peter

Sunday, 2 October 2011

TORA, TORA, TORA: Oscar winning expertise recreates day of infamy at Pearl Harbour

I've been a bit slack of late, and somewhat lacking in matte motivation, which given my temperament isn't a surprise for anyone who knows me personally.  Lots of posts on the back burner and some more or less ready to go, but I'm the sort of fella who always puts off till 'tomorrow' what might be better carried out 'today' - that is until the proverbial 'stars are in alignment' and the kama is tuned (!), and all the so called creative juices flow like the Japanese Tsunami (maybe that's a bad example... but I'm sure readers will get my drift).  I find that those big articles can be trying at the best of times, especially with the 'Blogger' machinery which is very unreliable and simply cannot be relied upon to always save the material during it's preparation.  Drives me to distraction!  :(

I'm very happy with the feedback I received from my recent Shepperton mega blog - and as always I'm grateful to those dedicated fellows out there who send me amazing material (from where, I've no clue!).  Well what's on the agenda today?..... Well, shock of shocks, today's big effects extravaganza retrospective barely falls within the matte category, with just one major matte shot and a small second 'top up' shot comprising all there is paint on glass wise.  It's not that I've run low on matte material (you wouldn't believe how much I have.... (over 80 GB of just images alone) but often I feel justified in examining effects shows that I love and as with today's film, were entirely justified in achieving FX Oscar status.

For matte afficienados I must wholly recommend  the excellent 90 minute documentary my pal Dennis Lowe has produced on the careers of long time British matte team Doug Ferris and John Grant.  Plenty of great stories and behind the scenes info which is a must for fans of the British matte industry.  Click here for that.




My Dad took me to see TORA, TORA, TORA back in it's initial release in 1970 - where I'm fairly sure it was a 70mm release - at the now deceased Cinerama theatre in Auckland, on the giant curved screen - a relic from the short lived  3 projector system of the early 60's.  As a lad who loved war films and play acting war scenarios with my mates in the dense bush near our house, where camoflage and guerilla style jungle warfare was our kick (though none of this in any way pertains to TORA's naval scenario).  But these were the days when TV was black and white, movies were double bills, kids got covered in mud and scratches and the dreaded PlayStation style of 'living room combat' was still a quarter of a century (or more) away. ...as usual, I digress.

Damn..........did TORA make an impact upon me!  I loved it.  Even on extraordinarily bizzare 1 o'clock Saturday double bills (paired inexplicably with Adam West's BATMAN or Jerry Lewis' THE DISORDERLY ORDERLY (!!) more often than not at the luxurious - and sadly now gone Mayfair cinema in suburban Sandringham, Auckland) I'd  always try to catch it, even if it meant wandering out into the late afternoon daylight after it all with bloodshot eyes and stiff neck from sitting too near to the screen -  with the oddly paired feature films sometimes turning up in freaky dreams: "I'm confused....what precisely did Batman have to do with the sinking of the US Arizona now?...".

Anyway.... on with my TORA, TORA, TORA photo tribute to a sensational true life bio-pic which still holds together 40 years down the track, largely due to it's one of a kind narrative where both the Japanese and the Americans worked on their own individual segments and brilliantly tied them together as a surprisingly coherent final product.  The decision to NOT use any 'name stars' was a wise one.  Superb character actors such as the always effective Martin Balsam and real life WWII hero Neville Brand just added to the sense of authenticity.  The picture, despite it's two and a half hour length actually manages to rush along at breakneck pace - with facts and actual events never being sidelined by subplots or unnecessary padding - unlike so many epic war pictures.  The Richard Fleischer helmed show is a tribute to this director - with his obvious talent in semi-doco features previously scoring bullseye with the excellent Tony Curtis film THE BOSTON STRANGLER  a few years prior, Fleischer succinctly pulled off, what could easily have been a 'dud' in the wrong hands (think of just how many great films could have been a disaster in the wrong hands?) 

Bob McCall advertising artwork
While Fleischer's US unit tackled the immense Pearl Harbour and Washington sequences involving dialogue and drama, the Japanese based sequences were under the control of Toshio Masuda and Kinji Fukasaka (after the departure of Japanese icon Akira Kurosawa due to that old bugbear 'artistic differences').  I can only imagine the difficulties of coordinating not only a singular feature film technically in this way but even more so the vast, arguably 'different' points of view of the events as seen by the Japanese who at the time  this production was greenlit were still not acknowledging the horrors their military might inflicted upon millions of innocent civilians in the Asian region.  
In addition to Fleischer, Masuda and Fukasaka, mention must be made of second unit action director, Ray Kellogg.  I've written much about Kellogg in previous blogs, so for anyone unfamiliar with Ray's background, he had an almost lifelong association with 20th Century Fox - firstly as chief matte artist under Fred Sersen and later as Sersen's right hand man in the photographic effects department.  Kellogg would take over the role upon Sersen's retirement and oversee the effects on many, many Fox films before eventually going solo as a director (of unbelievable bad 'B' monster flicks) and finally as a much in demand and highly respected second unit director on alot of huge pictures of the 60's and early 70's.  All of the phenomenal physical effect and stunt sequences were coordinated by Kellogg, and still today are utterly jaw dropping in their realism and toe curling sense of near death peril for all involved in the camera viewfinder (and behind it).  I'll demonstrate some of these staggering physical effects in the article which follows.
  
The Fox tank at Malibu for TORA - all systems 'go'!
In fact, Kellogg's action cameraman Michael Butler, and son of legendary Columbia effects veteran Lawrence W. Butler, said in an interview that several of Kellogg's stunt gags were just too much and a stop was put to them before they got off the ground.  I'd love to know what they were, because what's in the film is 'dynamite' - literally!!!
 The complex miniature work was supervised by Fox 'lifer', Bill Abbott - of whom I have written much in previous blogs such as my Fox tribute and many one off retrospectives found elsewhere in my blog.  For excellent detailed info on the actual aircraft replicated for use in the film, click here and here for even more.



Bill Abbott and A.D Flowers - 1970 Oscar recipients.
This film, and many others like it could not have been half as effective in my view without the genius of mechanical effects and pyrotechnics expert, the late, great A.D Flowers.  
Flowers (whose forenames I've never been able to establish) started in the MGM effects department with Arnold Gillespie and among his many, many, many credits were the mindblowing miniature explosions as seen in the brilliant Oscar winning THIRTY SECONDS OVER TOKYO (1944) and later trendsetting squib mayhem in the GODFATHER series (including some in conjunction with make up maestro Dick Smith where bullet hits were detonated  actually on Sterling Hayden's forehead - a cinematic first) - and of course the monumental pyro work he oversaw for the incredible APOCALYPSE NOW.  Flowers was a one of a kind, with his work on Speilberg's 1941 being, in his words, a career high, and the toughest assignment he'd ever worked on.  An amazingly resourceful technician and collaborator, Flowers passed away in 2001.

Much of the TORA fx footage would reappear over the years in films such as THE BATTLE OF MIDWAY (1976) and others, such was the quality of the footage.  I should make a mention here I suppose of the more recent 2001 Michael Bay take on this event, PEARL HARBOUR.  As battered by the critics as it was, I actually liked the show.  In no way can it compare to TORA inasmuch as a vivid historical document, but in itself (once it get's around to the issues at hand that is) is pretty darned exciting.  I'd also go so far as to name it as ILM's finest hour since the Lucas factory went computerised.  For the most part, Bay tries to avoid the ludicrous fx design which so often defy gravity, laws of physics and just plain common sense (think THE AVIATOR) and sticks with CG fx shots we can believe (I'll forgive that armour piercing bomb POV that ploughs through the ammunition magazine of the Oklahoma... but just this once).  In closing, I should do a blog on BATTLE OF BRITAIN (1968) some day, as that was severely overlooked as a potential Oscar contender in the special effects stakes - which were top rung all the way.



Special Photographic Effects - L.B Abbott, ASC and  Art Cruickshank, ASC
Special Mechanical Effects Supervisor - A.D Flowers
Second Unit and Action Director - Ray Kellogg
Second Unit and Aerial Cinematographer - Michael Butler: Vision Photography Inc.
Aerial and Action Unit Camera Operators - Tony Butler, David Butler and John Fleckenstein
Matte Artist - Matthew Yuricich
Visual Effects Cameraman:  American sequences - Edward Hutton
Visual Effects Cameraman:  Japanese Sequences - Masamichi Sato
Miniatures Supervision - Gail Brown and Ivan Martin
Miniatures Consultant - Howard Lydecker
Special Mechanical Effects - Johnny Borgese, Glen Robinson and  Greg Jensen





Terrific Bob McCall ad art which drew young lads like me to the cinema back in the day.  They don't paint 'em like this anymore, with today's so called ad campaigns as dismal as most of the films they pretend to promote.


...and coupled with Jerry Goldsmith's sudden 'intrusion' of orchestra the title card is memorable indeed!

The familiar Fox SFX trio of Abbott, Cruickshank and Kosa was one man down for TORA, as matte artist Emil Kosa jr had died the previous year.  Matt Yuricich would fill Kosa's shoes from here on in - always uncredited.

A somber and simple text overlay says it all

Matthew Yuricich's extensive, sprawling matte painting - one of just two in the film.

The second of just two mattes - with this a minor top up adding distant planes and airstrip hangers.

Solid character actor James Whitmore, (unrecogisable in the year before in Fox's fantastic PLANET OF THE APES) - composited by Art Cruickshank  into an utterly convincing tank miniature set photographed on the Fox Ranch at Malibu.




One of the first miniature shots - and probably the least effective due to height of camera point and choice of lens. For shots such as this, some of the models were equipped with their own mini golf cart engines, though for the heavy storm sequences the ships were attached to underwater cables and winched across the tank (see below).

Abbott was in general, a genius at 'miniaturising' water with clever use of large aircraft fans and many smaller studio fans to create whitecaps and the use of chemical agents to reduce 'surface tension' as well as his unique 30 degree angled sloping sides of the tank which prevented manufactured waves from 'echoing' back into the shot.  The water was dyed with a blue vegetable dye to lend an opaque quality, partly to obscure the underwater mechanisms used to propel the ships, as the tank was just 3 feet deep.  The majority of TORA's tank shots look terrific.

Convincing composite of set and miniature tank.

One of my favourite miniature marine shots in the film.  Outstanding 'ocean' and a very convincing sense of weight to the Japanese carrier as it negotiates heavy seas.  Great shot.

Again, a phenomenal miniature by Gail Brown's team, and expertly 'lit' and shot by L.B Abbott - sensational!  The entire miniature effects shooting schedule was around 40 days

Varying scales of model Japanese vessels (19 in all were built) adds much to diminishing perspectiveA three quarter scaled mock up of the Japanese battleship, The Akagi, was actually constructed in part, for deck and bridge sequences where the beach construction zone allowed for excellent real time ocean backgrounds.

Without a doubt, the key to miniature success is use of natural light and phenomena wherever possible.

Fleischer's pace and intercutting establishes one hell of a sense of foreboding tension as the clock ticks by...

The gloves are off!  The rug is pulled from under the American's feet. 

Battleship Row conflagration aerial view.     The miniature effects budget alone was $1'250'000

Torpedo strike.  'Miniaturised' water is especially convincing.



The scale tends to show through in this shot, but intercut with the live action, it holds up well enough.


As I mentioned, it was the full scale physical effects which to this reviewer truly stole the show.  None of that lily livered greenscreen CG virtual bullshit here.  It's all pure A.D Flowers and Ray Kellogg.... like kids in a candy store..... give them a camera, some TNT, a team of stunt men and alot of film and just wait for the results!

Now check this out - one of the most harrowing action sequences ever filmed (see below too) where P40 taxi to runway is blasted by Zero, the result of which severs the driveshaft of the propellor, whereby the prop - now with a life of it's own - spins at full rev across the airstrip with stunt guys diving for cover!!!    Jesus! 

The P40 propellor careening out of control.  Apparently an accident which some reports claim resulted in loss of life - and other accounts state no death occurred.  Whatever the truth, a monumental action set piece.

Brilliant action camerawork by Michael Butler, under Ray Kellogg's direction - with A.D Flowers chillingly convincing fx - check out those stunt guys right there in the thick of it!  Sensational stuff!

All action set pieces were multi-camera affairs - and often "one take is all we've got" deals.
Long focal length scope cinematography and multi angle cuts adds considerably to fx sequences.

I'm not sure, but I think I read that much of this set piece comprised of miniatures - although if so they are remarkably convincing and suggest vast scale if it is the case.  The aerial view most probably is, but the interior may be actual hangar.

The outcome of the kamikazi direct hit as shown above - possibly miniature?.


All the flying sequences were carefully choreographed actual replica WWII fighters flown by expert pilots, with just the close ups as shown here portrayed via mock ups in front of a front projection process screen (seen at right).

Neville Brand's immortal line: "Do you still want your confirmation, sir?"


More of Abbott's tank work.  Apparently much more great work was shot but never made the final cut.

Pyro down scaling here is very good.

Torpedos amok!

The scruffy painted sky backing tends to show through in some shots.


A rare view of the tank, painted backing and some of the miniatures at the Fox Ranch.
Effects technicians in wetsuits preparing model ships.


A close view of the painted sky backing and some of the miniature dock area.
Abbott and producer Elmo Williams with high speed camera set up.

TORA Miniatures built under the supervision of Ivan Martin and Gail Brown.

The technician lends a sense of scale to the set.
Miniature USS Arizona mid capsize.

Some of the ten US ship models, temporarily in 'dry dock' awaiting the go ahead.
In American Cinematographer 1971, Abbott wrote extensively about the making of this film and spoke of the capabilities of the Photosonics High Speed Camera which could be cranked up to 15 times normal frame rate, though this very high speed wasn't always needed.  The blowing up of The Arizona was one occasion where maximum frame rate was used.

Effects chief Lenwood Ballard Abbott and producer Elmo Williams.

Some of the original TORA miniatures (along with others such as one from the 1953 TITANIC) shown here as part of an auction sell off of many models and props, probably in the mid 70's.

Life size partial mock up of the USS Arizona.
Abbott and his camera crew with Photosonics camera.

80 foot camera crane achieves POV down view of Battleship Row miniature set as seen by attacking Zero's.
It must be in the blood.... three sons of legendary, iconic special effects wizard Lawrence W.Butler were responsible, with their own independent crew,  for all of the aerial, stunt and daredevil physical effect sequences - to jaw dropping effect.  The team were initially contracted just to provide background plates for the aerial composites but soon found themselves recruited by Ray Kellogg to shoot all of the explosions and extremely hazardous material as Butler said in the excellent American Cinematographer article:  "Ray Kellogg decided, late at night, as he usually did he wanted to get a shot of a B17 plane hitting the runway and bouncing over the camera.......I'm not so sure I'd ever do something like that again...but the enthusiasm was so terrific at the time.  I have great respect for Ray and I liked him very much, and he liked me, so when he said "C'mon kid - we'll do it" and I said "okay"....and everybody looked at me as if I was crazy...and I probably was".
Cable guided compressed air torpedos are launched.
TORA miniatures - now what 12 year old boy wouldn't want one of these?  Nowadays, probably NONE!



The trailer promised.... and the film delivered.

11x14 Lobbycards - now that's something you don't see anymore.  I've got a basement full of old stills, one sheets etc.

The excellent 1971 special on TORA

It actually means: "Tiger, Tiger, Tiger" and was the Jap codeword.