by DocRick » Tue Mar 14, 2023 2:03 pm
I watched a documentary about the 1933 King Kong. They did the stop motion filming of Kong, so someone had to touch him to move the body parts. When the first watched it, the director wanted to throw out the film as everywhere the technician touched the model, the fur had been disturbed. But when the ran the footage, it gave the bristling fur affect that we see in the movie.
I watched a documentary about the 1933 King Kong. They did the stop motion filming of Kong, so someone had to touch him to move the body parts. When the first watched it, the director wanted to throw out the film as everywhere the technician touched the model, the fur had been disturbed. But when the ran the footage, it gave the bristling fur affect that we see in the movie.