Great video, as always. However, I consider myself an expert on all things Harryhausen and would like to clarify a few things: -"Clash of the Titans" is actually the only Harryhausen film in which he did NOT do all the special effects by himself. Due to the busy schedule, he had a lot of help, especially from Jim Danforth, who created the amazing creatures from "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth." -Most of the movie was shot in Spain, like the "Sinbad" movies and "Valley of Gwangi". -Harry Hamlin was very difficult to work with and constantly changed his lines or even reworked entire scenes. However, the team had to admit that their ideas were better than what was in the script. For example, the original concept was for Perseus to throw his shield like Captain America and decapitate Medusa. The film's astonishing beheading scene is truer to the legends because Hamlin insisted on it. -Ray Harryhausen was a co-producer of all his films from the 60s onwards and most of those projects were born from his own original ideas. He only acted as a "hired gunman" in "One Million Years BC." He didn't like sex and violence in movies, so there are some conflicting accounts about why the original "Clash of the Titans" script was for a R-rated flick. -"The Force of the Trojans" screenplay wouldn't have been a direct sequel, but rather another story from Greek mythology. It would have been an adaptation of Virgil's Aeneid and the founding of Rome, with more emphasis on the fantastical elements and adding many monsters from Homer's Odyssey. Right now, british filmmaker John Walsh is trying to make a proper movie out of it. -The word "Dynamation" was created by Coumbia's PR team to promote the "7th Voyage". Ray liked it and continued using it for many years, but the truth is that the term means very little. -Most of the "Clash of the Titans" models survive to this day. They are being handled by the "Ray & Diana Harryhausen foundation", with home base in London. They were displayed in the "National Galleries of Scotland" just two years ago. -About Arnold being in a Dynamation movie: For many years there were rumors of a proper Ray Harryhausen movie based on the original Conan books by Robert E. Howard. Nothing came of it, but how COOL is that!?
I met Ray Harryhausen at a book signing in Glasgow, Scotland, just before he died. I brought a bunch of soundtracks scored by Bernard Herrmann and Laurence Rosenthal, from movies he was involved in and he signed every one for me. He said he was very good friends with the composers and he just loved their scores for these movies. He also loved my albums, as they were in mint condition and my interest in film scores. He had one of the original skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts sitting beside him and he let me handle it. He was so nice and he keep talking to me and would probably talked longer, if it wasn't for the giant queue behind me. What a great man and what a great memory I have of him.
Boy, do I have a story about this one. After working on a Bela Lugosi documentary at the "Ackermansion", I started hanging with the "Horrorwood Brat Pack" (Ackerman, Harryhausen, Bradbury). After the two "Rays" spoke at our film school, I asked my first celebrity question to Harryhausen. "At the end of "Jason and the Argonauts" you clearly set up a sequel. Are we going to see it?" Harryhausen paused for the first time to contemplate. A few years later I get an invitation at our school from Ray Bradbury to attend a screening at the Acadamy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and it is for THIS film, where Bradbury formally introduced Fay Wray to Ray Harryhausen and I saw him for the fan boy he always was. I miss those gentlemen. Bonus... I worked on a lot of documentaries around the Black Sea. When we went to Spain, I actually recognized locations used in this movie, Jason and the Argonauts, 7th Voyage of Sinbad and One Million Years B.C. What a thrill.
Speaking of the Stygian Witches, one of them was played by famed British actress *Flora Robson* know for playing Queen Elizabeth I in 1937's _Fire Over England_ opposite Olivier and 1940's _The Sea Hawk_ opposite Errol Flynn. In 1945 she was nominated for an Academy Award for the American western _Saratoga Trunk_ opposite Gary Cooper. . She later appeared on British and American TV. Clash was her last movie appearance. Sometimes you never know who you'll find under the makeup.
Here's a cool Harryhausen fact. I was looking in the underbelly of a NE theater when I found a strip of old film. I smiled w/ glee as I saw a few skeletons w/ swords drawn fighting a guy in a toga. Forgotten for years, I had discovered a few frames of (most likely) Jason & the Argonauts!
Hamlin was in a relationship with Ursula Andress. The pair had a child together. They were together from 1979 to 1983. Harry Hamlin's young co-star was married to someone else.
When you mentioned the waning days of stop motion monsters, I wondered if there would be future MM&M episodes about Caveman (1981) and Dragonslayer (1981 go-motion). Dragonslayer is the movie which essentially caused Harryhausen to step away! He visited the production stage, saw all the computer gear hooked up to the dragon, said "I ain't learning all that new stuff", and shut down the in-preproduction SINBAD ON MARS movie. He then retired - at age 60. (Dragonslayer's Phil Tippett is still going strong at age 72, however, turning out masterpieces such as 2021's stop-motion MAD GOD - hey, maybe you could do a MAD GOD episode)
Wonderful video, Dan. Would love to see a Ray Harryhausen-Charles H. Schneer retrospective on the four films they produced from 1958-1963, singling out the legendary composer Bernard Herrmann. (“7th Voyage of Sinbad”, “The 3 Worlds of Gulliver”, “Mysterious Island” and “Jason and the Argonauts”).
There are other folks on YT that do videos like this, but your's are "the BEST" & the amount of films & series you cover all the way to the most unknown is insane! 👍.....
Fun fact. In order to save money, Ray Harryhausen sacrificed his Trog puppet from Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger. In order to reuse its skeleton frame to create Calibos.
@@MoviesMusicMonsters I think in time when we collectively gather even more awesome facts you should redo your excellent vids with updated info. Plus as said by others we would love some merch!! 😀😉😉
Was lucky enough to see the Ray Harryhausen exhibition in Edinburgh a couple of years ago, so many props and models, absolutely amazing to see them up close
Dan I've been singing your praises about the awesome videos you've been documenting for the past 4.5 months to anyone who will listen. Some have subscribe to the channel. Sorry to point an error to this episode, but you said that the two lead actors were dating & had a child together. It was not Harry Hamlin & Judi Bowker but Harry Hamlin & Ursula Andress that had their son. Keep up the GREAT work as you've have brought back A LOT of my childhood memories!
Only other movie I remember seeing as much on HBO from 81 was the James Coburn, Susan Dey, Albert Finney movie. 'Looker'. With today's obsession with Social Media, still surprised 'Looker' hasn't gotten a remake or sequel.
Dan, I truly appreciate your channel! I stumbled across it by accident and have NOT been disappointed! I appreciate all of the work that you put into your research and work into your videos! They are a time capsule into MUCH better times! Keep the awesome!
Hey Dan, enjoyed the video. This was the second (and obviously last) Harryhausen film I saw in the cinema. I remember seeing the poster in a cinema lobby as an upcoming attraction and knowing I would have to be in line for it. Even then, post Star Wars, I felt the promised stop motion creatures likely a little 'old-fashioned'. Frankly, as a movie it was no Star Wars but still great fun and like you, I have a soft spot for it. I believe the behind the scenes romance Hamlin had was actually with Ursula Andress, rather than Bowker as your photo implies. He was a lucky dog either way.
I grew up watching this movie on TV in the early 90s. I loved it for the cheesy special effects and the story too. When I was in 7th grade our history and literature classes had overlapping lessons on ancient Greece and mythology. At the end of that week the literature teacher that it was a great idea to rent the VHS of the movie and show it to the class. Unfortunately she had only seen it on TV too, where the nudity was removed. I will never forget the look of shock she had as she ran to block the TV.
Harry Hamlin was in a four year relationship with Ursula Andres, not Judy Bowker. Their son Dmitry was born in 1980. They were engaged but never married.
Thanks Dan, love this film... so much better than the terrible remakes. A couple of years ago I went to an exhibition, in Edinburgh, showing off most of Ray Harryhausen’s original stop-motion models. The Kraken, Medusa and plenty of other COTT were on show. It was so cool!
I've been a huge mythology buff since childhood. While CotT was not very faithful to the myths, it was a wonderfully fun pastiche and I loved it as a kid. I really hope you will do a Ray Harryhausen video.
If I recall correctly, when "Jurassic Park" was being made they explored using Dynamation to animate the dinosaurs. But, that was just as CGI came into it's own and Dynamation just couldn't compete. ILM, who was doing the CGI for Jurassic park, brought on some of the animators who worked on the Dynamation test footage because they were really talented at knowing how to make the movements of the dinosaurs look realistic. The animators themselves were so impressed by what CGI could accomplish, they happily joined up, so it sort of worked out for everyone.
Yeah, the dinosaurs were originally going to be done using stop motion with Phil Tippet's studio with Stun Winston's studio providing animatronics. But even with the CG Tippet's puppeteers were used as the animators for the 3D models. They went as far as to create special armatures for them so that they could animate in a way that they were more accustomed to as opposed to using a mouse and keyboard.
I was 9 in 1981 my elder brother and a few other kids from my street went to watch it in the lee cinema in cork city unfortunately the cinema closed down the greatest stop motion film ever
Thanks Dan. Another great retrospective. BTW, I love how you cock your head to the mic when you say “music”. Ok, so Dynamation was Ray Harryhausen’s trademark stop-motion process where the backgrounds were filmed separately, and projected by front projection behind the models, which each frame held during the frame of each stop-motion animation move. This gave a better look as no mattes and was virtually just one pass. Oh, and one of his triumphs was “The First Men in the Moon” - but that my friend is the story for another day….
Harry Hamlin wasn’t involved with Judy Bowker, Hamlin was, in fact, involved with Ursula Andress, and it’s Andress who is the mother of Hamlin’s son Dmitri.
Been a fan of Ray Harryhausen's work since the early 60s, and raised my kids on the DVDs of "7th Voyage of Sinbad," "Golden Voyage of Sinbad," "Valley of Gwangi,," and, of course, "Clash of the Titans," among the other Harryhausen films. Had to wait until they were a little older to show them "One Million Years B.C." because we didn't want to jump start their puberty!
Sir, I LOVE your channel! EVERY thing that you talk about is nostalgic stuff I'm also interested in. We're very close in age (I'm slightly older that thee), so we experienced a lot of the same cool movies & TV when we were kids in the 70s, including watching the old classics on TV. And, like you, I've kept and treasured many of those cool toys that I was lucky enough to have as a child. I'm always excited when you post a new video. Keep up the great work!
The drive in in town was showing Clash of the Titans. My brother climbed the marquee. Took out the a and n, slid the s over to the left. Nobody noticed for about three days before they fixed it.
I am going get knocked for this, and though I enjoy Star Wars, I actually loved this film so much more.This and Thor comics were my gateway to Greek, Norse, and Celtic mythology.
That bird around the 4:52 mark looks like that bird from the Rudolph the Red nose reindeer Christmas special from one of the Rankin Bass specials not sure which one but it may have had the baby new year, 'Happy" in it. :D
Another great video. I can't say this was a childhood favorite since I was 20 when it came out, but still a favorite. Love Harryhausen's work in many films. As always thanks for the great memories
Loved it! I saw it when it opened, even before I saw Raiders. I saw it with my wife overseas. COTT, to me, was the last great stop-motion and I believe it was Ray H.'s last film. I love watching his movies, most of the ones you listed I own. Can't wait for those Deep Dives.
Thank you for featuring this film. Regrettably, I never appreciated it when it came out, but this video has inspired me to give it another look...some forty years later!
I once worked with the late Steven Archer, who animated Bubo in this film. A really lovely, quiet and intelligent guy. He's the guy with the beard at 10:39
I was at a fan convention years ago and only knew Ray Harryhausen by his work. I had never seen a picture of him. I literally turned around in a crowd people and ran right into this man. It knew this man had to be Ray Harryhausen. He looked just I expected. He was a great down to earth guy. I got to meet him again a few years later. Great memories.
As for Ray harryhausens creatures..I always loved the bronze statue. That one moving (with the creaking sound effect) was the one that stood out for me. Even more than the skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts.
Hi Dan, love your show. In fact, Harry Hamlin had an affair on this film with Ursula Andress, not the Andromeda. actress. She is the mother of his son sown from the seeds of this film.
I was lucky enough to meet Ray Harryhausen and my friend has a replica Bubo, which he uses to raise funds for Brain Tumour research after his partner passed from an undiagnosed tumour. Oh, and Harry Hamlin was having a relationship with Ursula Andress, not Judi Bowker.
My Favorite movie of all-time. My father took me to see it when I was 8 years old. It blew my mind and I loved it. I became a huge Ray Harryhausen fan and lover of Greek mythology and fantasy in-general. I had the chance to meet Harry Hamlin (Perseus) at a book signing event for his biography book in 2014, and talked to him a bit about Clash of the Titans. He said he loved working on the movie and it was a great experience and then he signed my book. I walked away and opened the cover of my book to see how he signed it and he wrote: "Brian... Release the Kraken -Harry" So cool 😎
Thank you for your excellent reviews! I watched this film in the theater when I was 17. I was then, and am now, an avid fan of ancient mythologies. This is definitely in my top five favorite films of the 1980s. Now, get to work! I very much look forward to what you have for us next!
I loved this movie as well. So did a girlfriend I had later in life. I took an old plastic horse and a model kit of an eagle and made her a Pegasus of her very own. She was SO excited when I gave it to her. Oddly enough, we never watched the film together…
I’m a big Harryhausen fan, love all his films, but CLASH has a special place in my memories. It was on all the time during the early days of HBO and for a kid I just got lost in the effects, the story and the music. It was an amazing, fun ride! Later I picked up the novelization which had even more dialogue and story, especially between Perseus and his fellow warriors on the Isle of the Dead. Thank you for this my friend!
Dan, love your videos. A couple of errors in this one though. One poster already said that Hamlin was involved with Ursula Andress. The other error was you referring to 20 million miles to Earth as 20 million YEARS to Earth. 😮😊. I’ve watched many of your videos and never caught any other errors, so your average is still pretty good! 😊
It was such a wonderful film with a great cast! Of all the Harryhausen films, this is my favorite of his stop motion animation works, but The Golden Voyage of Sinbad is my favorite of the movies he has worked on!
I’m pretty sure Harry Hamlin was romantically involved with Ursula Andress not Judi Bowker. They had a son together; however, never married. Great movie! I saw it as a double feature. The companion film was Dragonslayer.
As always, a fine overview Dan. Couple a' comments: you mentioned that Ray began as a young mentor of Willis O'Brien on Mighty Joe Young. Surely you meant apprentice. :) Also, Clash was the first film where Ray employed assistants to aid in the animation. Jim Danforth handled the Pegasus sequence and Steve Archer (pictured @ 10:44) animated Bubo. Yes, some of the models still exist. The RH Foundation keeps track of them all. You didn't mention the giant scorpion sequence, which was well animated but suffered from very milky, grainy background plates. Ray told me that the day they were scheduled to be shot was rainy, but the director insisted trhey be shot anyway despite Ray's protestations that they would create more headaches for him in post and not match well with the other Dynamation sequences. As producer As the co-producer Ray should've overruled the director and rescheduled the shoot, but it is what it is, as they say. Say, why don't you stop by the Facebook page Stop Motion Monsterland and say hello? Lots of the members are working professionals in the visual effects field.
Love to see this. I ‘ll never forget seeing this film in a drive-in theater. I was 7. A major influence on my path as an artist and character designer. I watch it every year.
I did like that Bill Nighy was cast in The Wrath of the Titans film as the somewhat mad Hephestus who kept getting into one-sided arguments with Boobo. When the queen first happens upon the bickering duo she asks "Alright, which one of you is in charge?" My fave scene from the original is the Stygian Witches. Those ladies play it out like a Shakespeare scene. Top notch stuff!
I love this movie! In some ways, I liked it better than Star Wars. i always loved Greek Mythology, so I was partial to this movie, also loved the classic stop motion animation that brought all those mythical creatures to life, the Kraken, Medusa, the scorpians, the two headed dog Cerebus and of course the cast of Gods playede by Lawrence Oliver, maggie smith, ursuala andreas and the awesome music! its too bad they didnt do more back then. i didnt care at all for the 2010 remake at all.
6:16 Um, no Dan. Harry Hamlin became romantically involved during production with Ursula Andress (Aphrodite) who is Dmitri Hamlin's Mom. NOT Judi Bowker.
@@monsterphile Yeah, about that. Pump your brakes, Chief. Aphrodite (Ursula) wasn't his Mother. Larry Olivier as Zeus was his Father, while his Mother, Danae, was played by Vida Taylor.
@planetpopvideos4418 Only pretty sure? There's a 15 year age difference. She played opposite Sean Connery in _Dr No_ in 1962 for crying out loud. Of course she's older than him.
@planetpopvideos4418 So, are you "pretty sure" that wasn't called for?😉 Asking for a friend. Besides, I thought I was saving you the trouble of having to look it up.
We lived on a military base when this came out. Between this, Raiders, Empire, Tron, and Starfighter the staff knew me well. I went to see Titans many times. I have it on DVD and still enjoy it! Sadly, I never had any of the toys but some of my friends did. So I still got to play with the toys. I would enjoy building a full size model of the owl. I know a Kraken model is out there and available.
I saw this one in the theater twice: the first time during the original theatrical release, and then again a couple of years later when it was re-released in theaters, taking my younger cousins who didn't see it the first time around.
It still holds up. I will take Harreyhausen's stop motion over CGI all day long. Sadly, the process is too time-consuming and expensive compared to ehat we can do with software.
Yup, was also 13 years old when I saw it in June 1981. Ray Harryhausen's final film and would end up being his highest grossing! I heard that Charlton Heston was a consideration for Zeus, which would have been very interesting, but glad that part was eventually given to Sr. Lawrence.
Even after his retirement, Ray Harryhausen was still active in the industry. He personally supervised the colorizing of several of his old classic films such as IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA and EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS... and they are among the best colorized films around, still rivalling new AI software being used today.
Excellent review...anything involving Ray Harryhausen was a must watch in the day, and all remain the most amazing fantasy films ever. What impressed me they always had amazing production values..cinematography, music, direction, acting and FX and were made for a wide market, not just children or adults. A sequel to Jason and the Argonauts would have been amazing. I could see Malcolm McDowell as a Perseus, not sure the others. Bubo I loved, it supplied comic relief. As you would know Calibos was based on Caliban, as was the Monster of the Id from Forbidden Planet if one adopts the suggestion that FP was based on the Tempest. Looking very much forward to future reviews.
What a memory! Thanks for all you do, brotha! Watching your show is like hanging out with an old buddy I grew up with--REMEMBERING the better years. You will hit 100 000 pretty soon. Great quality.
Great video, as always. However, I consider myself an expert on all things Harryhausen and would like to clarify a few things:
-"Clash of the Titans" is actually the only Harryhausen film in which he did NOT do all the special effects by himself. Due to the busy schedule, he had a lot of help, especially from Jim Danforth, who created the amazing creatures from "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth."
-Most of the movie was shot in Spain, like the "Sinbad" movies and "Valley of Gwangi".
-Harry Hamlin was very difficult to work with and constantly changed his lines or even reworked entire scenes. However, the team had to admit that their ideas were better than what was in the script. For example, the original concept was for Perseus to throw his shield like Captain America and decapitate Medusa. The film's astonishing beheading scene is truer to the legends because Hamlin insisted on it.
-Ray Harryhausen was a co-producer of all his films from the 60s onwards and most of those projects were born from his own original ideas. He only acted as a "hired gunman" in "One Million Years BC." He didn't like sex and violence in movies, so there are some conflicting accounts about why the original "Clash of the Titans" script was for a R-rated flick.
-"The Force of the Trojans" screenplay wouldn't have been a direct sequel, but rather another story from Greek mythology. It would have been an adaptation of Virgil's Aeneid and the founding of Rome, with more emphasis on the fantastical elements and adding many monsters from Homer's Odyssey. Right now, british filmmaker John Walsh is trying to make a proper movie out of it.
-The word "Dynamation" was created by Coumbia's PR team to promote the "7th Voyage". Ray liked it and continued using it for many years, but the truth is that the term means very little.
-Most of the "Clash of the Titans" models survive to this day. They are being handled by the "Ray & Diana Harryhausen foundation", with home base in London. They were displayed in the "National Galleries of Scotland" just two years ago.
-About Arnold being in a Dynamation movie: For many years there were rumors of a proper Ray Harryhausen movie based on the original Conan books by Robert E. Howard. Nothing came of it, but how COOL is that!?
Ray Harryhausen was a genius. I rekon the skeleton fight in Jason and the Argonauts was the most amazing thing he ever did.
The Medusa scene is still the best version of Medusa ever put on film.
I met Ray Harryhausen at a book signing in Glasgow, Scotland, just before he died. I brought a bunch of soundtracks scored by Bernard Herrmann and Laurence Rosenthal, from movies he was involved in and he signed every one for me. He said he was very good friends with the composers and he just loved their scores for these movies. He also loved my albums, as they were in mint condition and my interest in film scores. He had one of the original skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts sitting beside him and he let me handle it. He was so nice and he keep talking to me and would probably talked longer, if it wasn't for the giant queue behind me. What a great man and what a great memory I have of him.
I love your presentation style. Informative and just easy on the ear without any of the usual histrionics.
Great film and cast too
Hey, thank you Simon :-) really appreciate it
Boy, do I have a story about this one. After working on a Bela Lugosi documentary at the "Ackermansion", I started hanging with the "Horrorwood Brat Pack" (Ackerman, Harryhausen, Bradbury). After the two "Rays" spoke at our film school, I asked my first celebrity question to Harryhausen. "At the end of "Jason and the Argonauts" you clearly set up a sequel. Are we going to see it?" Harryhausen paused for the first time to contemplate. A few years later I get an invitation at our school from Ray Bradbury to attend a screening at the Acadamy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and it is for THIS film, where Bradbury formally introduced Fay Wray to Ray Harryhausen and I saw him for the fan boy he always was. I miss those gentlemen. Bonus... I worked on a lot of documentaries around the Black Sea. When we went to Spain, I actually recognized locations used in this movie, Jason and the Argonauts, 7th Voyage of Sinbad and One Million Years B.C. What a thrill.
Speaking of the Stygian Witches, one of them was played by famed British actress *Flora Robson* know for playing Queen Elizabeth I in 1937's _Fire Over England_ opposite Olivier and 1940's _The Sea Hawk_ opposite Errol Flynn. In 1945 she was nominated for an Academy Award for the American western _Saratoga Trunk_ opposite Gary Cooper. . She later appeared on British and American TV. Clash was her last movie appearance. Sometimes you never know who you'll find under the makeup.
Here's a cool Harryhausen fact. I was looking in the underbelly of a NE theater when I found a strip of old film. I smiled w/ glee as I saw a few skeletons w/ swords drawn fighting a guy in a toga. Forgotten for years, I had discovered a few frames of (most likely) Jason & the Argonauts!
Harryhousen was already retired when Clash came out. He was talked into coming back to do this one last movie and thank God he did.
Hamlin was in a relationship with Ursula Andress. The pair had a child together. They were together from 1979 to 1983. Harry Hamlin's young co-star was married to someone else.
Need "How Cool Is That?" merch, mister Dan, stat!
Would you believe I already have it? Check out the store link on my channel LOL
@@MoviesMusicMonsters My next stop! Thank you for being awesome!
When you mentioned the waning days of stop motion monsters, I wondered if there would be future MM&M episodes about Caveman (1981) and Dragonslayer (1981 go-motion). Dragonslayer is the movie which essentially caused Harryhausen to step away! He visited the production stage, saw all the computer gear hooked up to the dragon, said "I ain't learning all that new stuff", and shut down the in-preproduction SINBAD ON MARS movie. He then retired - at age 60. (Dragonslayer's Phil Tippett is still going strong at age 72, however, turning out masterpieces such as 2021's stop-motion MAD GOD - hey, maybe you could do a MAD GOD episode)
Wonderful video, Dan. Would love to see a Ray Harryhausen-Charles H. Schneer retrospective on the four films they produced from 1958-1963, singling out the legendary composer Bernard Herrmann. (“7th Voyage of Sinbad”, “The 3 Worlds of Gulliver”, “Mysterious Island” and “Jason and the Argonauts”).
I think we'll see "How Cool Is That?" T-Shirts appearing pretty soon.
It ‘s fun to see the subscribers grow everyday.
There are other folks on YT that do videos like this, but your's are "the BEST" & the amount of films & series you cover all the way to the most unknown is insane! 👍.....
One of my favorites too. Up there with Jason and the Argonauts.
Fun fact. In order to save money, Ray Harryhausen sacrificed his Trog puppet from Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger. In order to reuse its skeleton frame to create Calibos.
Oh man, I didn't know that. That is an awesome fact. Thank you :-)
@@MoviesMusicMonsters I think in time when we collectively gather even more awesome facts you should redo your excellent vids with updated info. Plus as said by others we would love some merch!! 😀😉😉
Was lucky enough to see the Ray Harryhausen exhibition in Edinburgh a couple of years ago, so many props and models, absolutely amazing to see them up close
Dan I've been singing your praises about the awesome videos you've been documenting for the past 4.5 months to anyone who will listen. Some have subscribe to the channel. Sorry to point an error to this episode, but you said that the two lead actors were dating & had a child together. It was not Harry Hamlin & Judi Bowker but Harry Hamlin & Ursula Andress that had their son. Keep up the GREAT work as you've have brought back A LOT of my childhood memories!
Only other movie I remember seeing as much on HBO from 81 was the James Coburn, Susan Dey, Albert Finney movie. 'Looker'.
With today's obsession with Social Media, still surprised 'Looker' hasn't gotten a remake or sequel.
Looker was excellent...and even more relevant today. Completely ripe for an update.
@@mattscott4286 I know right. That's why I'm torn about a sequel and remake
That and Beastmaster used to come on tv at least several times a year.
It showed on Show time and HBO
Hamilin had affair with Ursalla, and that is where Dimitri came from
You mean a day...
i love this movie and appreciate your knowlegde of movies
Dan, I truly appreciate your channel! I stumbled across it by accident and have NOT been disappointed! I appreciate all of the work that you put into your research and work into your videos! They are a time capsule into MUCH better times! Keep the awesome!
Thank you sir :-) I truly appreciate the support. Cheers, Dan
@@MoviesMusicMonsters you're very welcome! I will be 51, God-willing, in July...I've been a bit nostalgic lately. I miss the old days!
Hey Dan, enjoyed the video. This was the second (and obviously last) Harryhausen film I saw in the cinema. I remember seeing the poster in a cinema lobby as an upcoming attraction and knowing I would have to be in line for it. Even then, post Star Wars, I felt the promised stop motion creatures likely a little 'old-fashioned'. Frankly, as a movie it was no Star Wars but still great fun and like you, I have a soft spot for it. I believe the behind the scenes romance Hamlin had was actually with Ursula Andress, rather than Bowker as your photo implies. He was a lucky dog either way.
I grew up watching this movie on TV in the early 90s. I loved it for the cheesy special effects and the story too. When I was in 7th grade our history and literature classes had overlapping lessons on ancient Greece and mythology. At the end of that week the literature teacher that it was a great idea to rent the VHS of the movie and show it to the class. Unfortunately she had only seen it on TV too, where the nudity was removed. I will never forget the look of shock she had as she ran to block the TV.
Oh wow, that is an awesome memory :-)
Dan, greatly appreciate your content. Brings back many good memories.
Thanks Paul :-) truly appreciated.
Harry Hamlin was in a four year relationship with Ursula Andres, not Judy Bowker. Their son Dmitry was born in 1980. They were engaged but never married.
Thanks Dan, love this film... so much better than the terrible remakes. A couple of years ago I went to an exhibition, in Edinburgh, showing off most of Ray Harryhausen’s original stop-motion models. The Kraken, Medusa and plenty of other COTT were on show. It was so cool!
Hey Dan! Great job with these fascinating looks back at the fiction that meant a lot to us!
Thank you so much :-) much appreciated
I've been a huge mythology buff since childhood. While CotT was not very faithful to the myths, it was a wonderfully fun pastiche and I loved it as a kid.
I really hope you will do a Ray Harryhausen video.
Awesome video, Dan. A crazy childhood memory: Because of this movie, I attached wings to a toy horse. Lol
Haha that's awesome :-)
Hard to believe that I was 19 years old when this movie premiered in theaters. Bought the DVD as soon as it became available.
Harryhausen was a master at his craft !!
LOVE LOVE LOVE this... I work in media and I have to tell you your content gives me a break into a world that I love and miss soooo much. Thank you.
If I recall correctly, when "Jurassic Park" was being made they explored using Dynamation to animate the dinosaurs. But, that was just as CGI came into it's own and Dynamation just couldn't compete. ILM, who was doing the CGI for Jurassic park, brought on some of the animators who worked on the Dynamation test footage because they were really talented at knowing how to make the movements of the dinosaurs look realistic. The animators themselves were so impressed by what CGI could accomplish, they happily joined up, so it sort of worked out for everyone.
Yeah, the dinosaurs were originally going to be done using stop motion with Phil Tippet's studio with Stun Winston's studio providing animatronics. But even with the CG Tippet's puppeteers were used as the animators for the 3D models. They went as far as to create special armatures for them so that they could animate in a way that they were more accustomed to as opposed to using a mouse and keyboard.
I remember going to the theater in 1981 with my friends and our moms. I remember being a little scared of Medusa. I had a few of the toys.
I was 9 in 1981 my elder brother and a few other kids from my street went to watch it in the lee cinema in cork city unfortunately the cinema closed down the greatest stop motion film ever
Thanks Dan. Another great retrospective. BTW, I love how you cock your head to the mic when you say “music”. Ok, so Dynamation was Ray Harryhausen’s trademark stop-motion process where the backgrounds were filmed separately, and projected by front projection behind the models, which each frame held during the frame of each stop-motion animation move. This gave a better look as no mattes and was virtually just one pass. Oh, and one of his triumphs was “The First Men in the Moon” - but that my friend is the story for another day….
Harry Hamlin wasn’t involved with Judy Bowker, Hamlin was, in fact, involved with Ursula Andress, and it’s Andress who is the mother of Hamlin’s son Dmitri.
I know. I thought I misheard him because I met Harry at a party in San Antonio years ago and knew he had a son with Ursula because he talked about it.
You beat me to it! ✌️
@@rmas32 same!
I would have taken either!
@@MasterMalrubiusyou and me both my friend!
Been a fan of Ray Harryhausen's work since the early 60s, and raised my kids on the DVDs of "7th Voyage of Sinbad," "Golden Voyage of Sinbad," "Valley of Gwangi,," and, of course, "Clash of the Titans," among the other Harryhausen films. Had to wait until they were a little older to show them "One Million Years B.C." because we didn't want to jump start their puberty!
Been waiting for this one!! One of my all time favorite movies. Thank you!
It was one great film, during one great time. A time i miss very much.
It's so freaking cool to have a new favorite show to look forward to. Thank you so much for creating this channel.
Absolutely superfabulous job doing these exemplary film reviews and things of historical nature 😂❤
agree i love this channel and his work
My favorite and scariest movie when I was a child. Medusa scare the shit out of me and I loved it!!!
Sir, I LOVE your channel! EVERY thing that you talk about is nostalgic stuff I'm also interested in. We're very close in age (I'm slightly older that thee), so we experienced a lot of the same cool movies & TV when we were kids in the 70s, including watching the old classics on TV. And, like you, I've kept and treasured many of those cool toys that I was lucky enough to have as a child.
I'm always excited when you post a new video. Keep up the great work!
Harry Hamlin voiced Perseus in the video game God of War II I was so psyched to hear him
I remember wanting so badly wanting to learn stop-motion❤
The drive in in town was showing Clash of the Titans. My brother climbed the marquee. Took out the a and n, slid the s over to the left. Nobody noticed for about three days before they fixed it.
I am going get knocked for this, and though I enjoy Star Wars, I actually loved this film so much more.This and Thor comics were my gateway to Greek, Norse, and Celtic mythology.
Laurence Rosenthal's complete score is available on a 2CD set from the Intrada soundtrack label.
Own it plus the double LP!!!
That bird around the 4:52 mark looks like that bird from the Rudolph the Red nose reindeer Christmas special from one of the Rankin Bass specials not sure which one but it may have had the baby new year, 'Happy" in it. :D
Another great video. I can't say this was a childhood favorite since I was 20 when it came out, but still a favorite. Love Harryhausen's work in many films. As always thanks for the great memories
Loved it! I saw it when it opened, even before I saw Raiders. I saw it with my wife overseas. COTT, to me, was the last great stop-motion and I believe it was Ray H.'s last film. I love watching his movies, most of the ones you listed I own. Can't wait for those Deep Dives.
What a great channel! It's got to be my favorite on youtube.
Mine, too!
Thank you for featuring this film. Regrettably, I never appreciated it when it came out, but this video has inspired me to give it another look...some forty years later!
One of my favorites, thank you Dan another great show
I once worked with the late Steven Archer, who animated Bubo in this film. A really lovely, quiet and intelligent guy. He's the guy with the beard at 10:39
I was at a fan convention years ago and only knew Ray Harryhausen by his work. I had never seen a picture of him. I literally turned around in a crowd people and ran right into this man. It knew this man had to be Ray Harryhausen. He looked just I expected. He was a great down to earth guy. I got to meet him again a few years later. Great memories.
I own it on DVD. Loved it and it was way better then the remake.
As for Ray harryhausens creatures..I always loved the bronze statue. That one moving (with the creaking sound effect) was the one that stood out for me. Even more than the skeletons from Jason and the Argonauts.
Such great movies. I have a video on Jason and the Argonauts coming up in a couple weeks :-)
Hi Dan, love your show. In fact, Harry Hamlin had an affair on this film with Ursula Andress, not the Andromeda. actress. She is the mother of his son sown from the seeds of this film.
I was lucky enough to meet Ray Harryhausen and my friend has a replica Bubo, which he uses to raise funds for Brain Tumour research after his partner passed from an undiagnosed tumour.
Oh, and Harry Hamlin was having a relationship with Ursula Andress, not Judi Bowker.
Oh my gosh that must have been unbelievable :-)
Your template for each show is beyond professional.
My Favorite movie of all-time. My father took me to see it when I was 8 years old. It blew my mind and I loved it. I became a huge Ray Harryhausen fan and lover of Greek mythology and fantasy in-general. I had the chance to meet Harry Hamlin (Perseus) at a book signing event for his biography book in 2014, and talked to him a bit about Clash of the Titans. He said he loved working on the movie and it was a great experience and then he signed my book. I walked away and opened the cover of my book to see how he signed it and he wrote:
"Brian... Release the Kraken -Harry"
So cool 😎
Thanks Dan - GREAT video. I was 11 when the movie came out and watch it at least 3X per year - never ever gets stale. Thanks for what you do!
Thank you for your excellent reviews! I watched this film in the theater when I was 17. I was then, and am now, an avid fan of ancient mythologies. This is definitely in my top five favorite films of the 1980s. Now, get to work! I very much look forward to what you have for us next!
I loved this movie as well. So did a girlfriend I had later in life. I took an old plastic horse and a model kit of an eagle and made her a Pegasus of her very own. She was SO excited when I gave it to her. Oddly enough, we never watched the film together…
Clash of the Titans is one of my favorite movies growing up along with Dragonslayer and Excalibur. Thanks for your review. Brings back memories!
I also saw almost all of the models at the Ray Harryhausen expo in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 2021.
I’m a big Harryhausen fan, love all his films, but CLASH has a special place in my memories. It was on all the time during the early days of HBO and for a kid I just got lost in the effects, the story and the music. It was an amazing, fun ride! Later I picked up the novelization which had even more dialogue and story, especially between Perseus and his fellow warriors on the Isle of the Dead.
Thank you for this my friend!
Also worth noting; Jack Gwillam, who played Poseidon, earlier worked with Harryhausen in Jason and the Argonauts as King Aetes.
I saw this in the theater first run, still a favorite.
Thank you.
Dan, love your videos. A couple of errors in this one though. One poster already said that Hamlin was involved with Ursula Andress. The other error was you referring to 20 million miles to Earth as 20 million YEARS to Earth. 😮😊. I’ve watched many of your videos and never caught any other errors, so your average is still pretty good! 😊
It was such a wonderful film with a great cast! Of all the Harryhausen films, this is my favorite of his stop motion animation works, but The Golden Voyage of Sinbad is my favorite of the movies he has worked on!
I’m pretty sure Harry Hamlin was romantically involved with Ursula Andress not Judi Bowker. They had a son together; however, never married.
Great movie! I saw it as a double feature. The companion film was Dragonslayer.
As always, a fine overview Dan. Couple a' comments: you mentioned that Ray began as a young mentor of Willis O'Brien on Mighty Joe Young. Surely you meant apprentice. :)
Also, Clash was the first film where Ray employed assistants to aid in the animation. Jim Danforth handled the Pegasus sequence and Steve Archer (pictured @ 10:44) animated Bubo. Yes, some of the models still exist. The RH Foundation keeps track of them all. You didn't mention the giant scorpion sequence, which was well animated but suffered from very milky, grainy background plates. Ray told me that the day they were scheduled to be shot was rainy, but the director insisted trhey be shot anyway despite Ray's protestations that they would create more headaches for him in post and not match well with the other Dynamation sequences. As producer As the co-producer Ray should've overruled the director and rescheduled the shoot, but it is what it is, as they say. Say, why don't you stop by the Facebook page Stop Motion Monsterland and say hello? Lots of the members are working professionals in the visual effects field.
All the creatures still do exist and were recently in Edinburgh Scotland on display, along with all of Mr Harryhausens other monsters.
One of my all time favorites. I almost turned to stone in the theater the first time seeing the face of Medusa on screen.
15:28 you misspoke its God of War 2. Thats a really cool fact I didn't know.
Love to see this. I ‘ll never forget seeing this film in a drive-in theater. I was 7. A major influence on my path as an artist and character designer. I watch it every year.
Medusa scared the crap out of me as a kid, thanks Ray Harryhausen , great job.👍
Hi Dan, how about doing Buckaroo Banzai? underrated but not unloved :)
Where ever you go! There you are!
I did like that Bill Nighy was cast in The Wrath of the Titans film as the somewhat mad Hephestus who kept getting into one-sided arguments with Boobo. When the queen first happens upon the bickering duo she asks "Alright, which one of you is in charge?"
My fave scene from the original is the Stygian Witches. Those ladies play it out like a Shakespeare scene. Top notch stuff!
I love this movie! In some ways, I liked it better than Star Wars. i always loved Greek Mythology, so I was partial to this movie, also loved the classic stop motion animation that brought all those mythical creatures to life, the Kraken, Medusa, the scorpians, the two headed dog Cerebus and of course the cast of Gods playede by Lawrence Oliver, maggie smith, ursuala andreas and the awesome music! its too bad they didnt do more back then. i didnt care at all for the 2010 remake at all.
6:16 Um, no Dan. Harry Hamlin became romantically involved during production with Ursula Andress (Aphrodite) who is Dmitri Hamlin's Mom. NOT Judi Bowker.
And she was playing his mother in the film. Zoinks!
@@monsterphile Yeah, about that. Pump your brakes, Chief. Aphrodite (Ursula) wasn't his Mother. Larry Olivier as Zeus was his Father, while his Mother, Danae, was played by Vida Taylor.
@planetpopvideos4418 Only pretty sure? There's a 15 year age difference. She played opposite Sean Connery in _Dr No_ in 1962 for crying out loud. Of course she's older than him.
@planetpopvideos4418 So, are you "pretty sure" that wasn't called for?😉 Asking for a friend. Besides, I thought I was saving you the trouble of having to look it up.
We lived on a military base when this came out. Between this, Raiders, Empire, Tron, and Starfighter the staff knew me well. I went to see Titans many times. I have it on DVD and still enjoy it!
Sadly, I never had any of the toys but some of my friends did. So I still got to play with the toys.
I would enjoy building a full size model of the owl. I know a Kraken model is out there and available.
I saw this one in the theater twice: the first time during the original theatrical release, and then again a couple of years later when it was re-released in theaters, taking my younger cousins who didn't see it the first time around.
It still holds up. I will take Harreyhausen's stop motion over CGI all day long. Sadly, the process is too time-consuming and expensive compared to ehat we can do with software.
These keep getting better and better. Thank you!
Pat Roach was a well known wrestler in the UK during the 1970s. He was a kindly man, always happy to talk to his many fans.
I think he's in a few Raiders of the Lost Ark 1981 scenes. The bald Nazi who fights Indy by the plane 🛩 ...
You forgot The Scorpions!
How can you forget the horrible Giant Scorpions?!?!
Yup, was also 13 years old when I saw it in June 1981. Ray Harryhausen's final film and would end up being his highest grossing! I heard that Charlton Heston was a consideration for Zeus, which would have been very interesting, but glad that part was eventually given to Sr. Lawrence.
Harry Hamlin had a recurring role in the later seasons of Mad Men. His character was pretty amusing and funny at times. Good acting and writing.
Even after his retirement, Ray Harryhausen was still active in the industry. He personally supervised the colorizing of several of his old classic films such as IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA and EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS... and they are among the best colorized films around, still rivalling new AI software being used today.
Saw this in the theater when I was 4..Still one of the best films I’ve ever seen ❤❤
I think the stop motion of Robocop II was top notch AND a real special effect.
Robo 2 was Go-Motion's swan song...
Wes Anderson does stop-motion...
Excellent review...anything involving Ray Harryhausen was a must watch in the day, and all remain the most amazing fantasy films ever. What impressed me they always had amazing production values..cinematography, music, direction, acting and FX and were made for a wide market, not just children or adults. A sequel to Jason and the Argonauts would have been amazing. I could see Malcolm McDowell as a Perseus, not sure the others. Bubo I loved, it supplied comic relief. As you would know Calibos was based on Caliban, as was the Monster of the Id from Forbidden Planet if one adopts the suggestion that FP was based on the Tempest. Looking very much forward to future reviews.
What a memory! Thanks for all you do, brotha! Watching your show is like hanging out with an old buddy I grew up with--REMEMBERING the better years. You will hit 100 000 pretty soon. Great quality.