Andrew Pulver 

Creature Designers: The Frankenstein Complex review – the men behind the monsters

An absorbing study of the evolution of a film-making niche that will hold most weight with the movie buffs
  
  

Creature Designers: The Frankenstein Complex.
Old-fashioned puppeteering - a craft facing extinction? Photograph: film company handout

A wide-ranging, informative and nicely generous documentary about the unsung – or perhaps more accurately, rarely sung – heroes of the monster-movie universe. Everything from King Kong to Avatar gets a namecheck, via Georges Méliès, Ray Harryhausen, An American Werewolf in London, Star Wars and Lord of the Rings. We get an intense, and necessarily concise, account of the development of technique – how stop-motion evolved into animatronics and on to CGI.

Watch a trailer for Creature Designers

This is very much a male universe – not a single woman is among the dozens of interviewees – with lots of head-shaking regret at the passing of the old puppeteering ways. (Phil Tippett, who worked on Star Wars, Robocop and Jurassic Park, even admits to sinking into depression-related illness after the arrival of computer imaging.)

It’s a film that packs a lot in, and covers a lot of bases. It will no doubt be of most relevance to genre aficionados, but illuminating nonetheless for anyone interested in contemporary film-making.

 

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