I presented the Amazing Aquifer Adventure show to a groups of sixty elementary school-age youngsters at Salinas Elementary School Adventure Camp. It went well but working in a gym can be very echo-y. I was very glad when I uttered the last line of the presentation.
The destruction of the lighthouse from the 1951 film "The Beast from Twenty Thousand Fathoms brought to life by stop motion animation master Ray Harryhausen.
I started inking a drawing I'd been wanting to do for a long time. It's a scene from the film "Beast from Twenty Thousand Fathoms" which is based on the 1951 Ray Bradbury short story " The Foghorn" which was published in the Saturday Evening Post. The short story itself takes place entirely at a lighthouse. It's a story of profound loneliness that spans millions of years for a creature that hears what it believes to be the call of one of it's kind but is only the "Voice" of the foghorn.
There's a scene in the story where the monster rises from the sea to attack the lighthouse, which is in the film version as well, that I chose to illustrate. It's the moment before the monster rears up to destroy the lighthouse after the foghorn stops calling out momentarily. So far so good. I'm taking it slow because I'm using crossing hatching throughout the drawing which can be time consuming but produces beautiful results. I drew my version of a poster for the film "Them", in a similar fashion. That's another giant- monster- on- the- loose film. It's a genre I which I really like.
Below is a link to Wikipedia and The Official Ray Harryhausen website with lots more info on the story.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fog_Horn
http://www.rayharryhausen.com/index.php
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