performing arts |
Aftersleep Books
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Ray Harryhausen An Animated LifeThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
Ray wisely keeps his private life out of "An Animated Life". 99% of the book is business or SFX-related, which I found pleasing, as I tend to loathe the kind of self-indulgence practiced in other auto-biographies, particularly those of rock-stars. The book's 300 pages are jam-packed with pictures, illustrations and text, explaining in a mostly non-technical language, how Harryhausen's breakthrough effects work was done (it also has a nice picture of Jane Seymour in a bikini). You find yourself going "aha" and "wow, that was pretty logical", which is a good indicator that the editor has done his job well. Your respect and admiration for Ray grows with each page, as you begin to realize the amount of work it took to put to screen stuff that looks pretty ordinary, or even bad, today.
Personal commentaries are frequent throughout, and this is the only place where the book failed to impress me. Harryhausen comes across as a pretty naive gentleman with a narrow-minded view of movies. Some times, his opinions and attempts at dry humour are amusing, at other times they just sound like a bitter old man. You can't really dislike him, he's too much of a nice and non-confrontative guy for that, but his comments about CGI and modern on-screen violence kinda irked me. This is the only fault I could find with the book, otherwise it's a brilliant and thoroughly researched book about a great on-screen magician.