|
|
|
|

At the beginning of production, a test was conducted using
real fish and the resulting smells that quickly developed
led to a decision to go with artificial fish. We provided
over 650 Fish for Godzilla. The bodies were solid silicone
rubber, greatly softened with thinners for added realistic
flexibility. All of the fins had to be made separately and
joined on so they would be much stiffer than the softened
rubber, which would have flopped over at those thicknesses.
Realistic fish scale patterns were painted on by starting
with a base green rubber color and painting through a fine
screen with silver, then glazing over this layer with white
for the bellies and pearlescent colors on the sides to achieve
the iridescence of trout. High quality glass taxidermy eyes
were used for their bright, hard highlights and k-y jelly
was used to keep any water present from beading up unaturally
on the fish. To achieve the outrageously huge piles of fish
that appear in the movie, big piles of our fish were simultaneously
gang-molded in flats from which large latex sheets of fish
were cast & painted, and thrown over big air bags on set.
For the scenes of fish still kicking along Godzilla's trail,
we built an additional six fully self enclosed, animatronic,
kicking fish.

A
studio painter on this production got his hands on some of
our unpainted fish. He became very territorial and aggresive,
even though these were props and special effects. He threatened
to shut down production, insisting that painting the fish
were within his jurisdiction and took the fish away to paint.
A few days went by and the guy finally returns with the fish
unpainted. He explains that he's tried everything and can't
get any paint to stick to these fish. He asks, "are you sure
you really still need me to paint these?" and we were only
too glad to take them back.
Silicone
is nearly the only thing that will stick to silicone; making
silicone paint is pretty easy once you know this. 100% pure
rubber, silicone caulking -found in tubes, in the hardware
stores- thinned with naptha, xylene or even paint thinner
provides a good vehicle/binder and for pigment- the minimum
neccesary quantities of oil paint or universal tinting colors
to achieve the color are added.
back
| home
©2004 Anatomorphex All Rights Reserved
www.anatomorphex.com
|