Shot at Pinewood in England, this film has some passable model ship shots in it.
It is more notable for the real scenes of large scale whaling operations, all very loathsome and appallingly savage, seen today.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Popular posts in the last 7 days
-
The Seaview submarine of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea is one of the most recognizable fictional submarines second only to the Nautilus fr...
-
I saw this film in the cinema with my Dad on a free double pass that I won as a teenager. I remember feeling at the time that it was fai...
-
Won oscar for best Special Effects (1955). Probably the most recognised submarine shape ever, fictional or otherwise, was the Nautilus des...
-
Tora Tora Tora stands out as a prime example of the art of model ships in the cinema due largely to the scale of the the work undertaken and...
-
Arguably still the best movie depiction of the Titanic disaster to date with miniature work done at Pinewood supervised by Bill Warrington. ...
-
The year 1996 was just on the cusp of the CG revolution in visual effects. In this film we see one of the dwindling examples of miniature su...






















No comments:
Post a Comment