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'War of the Worlds' - Ray Harryhausen martian test footage

Ray Harryhausen is world renowned as the master of stop motion animation. Less well known is the fact that he worked extensively on an idea for a film of The War Of The Worlds as early as 1942, predating the George Pal film by over a decade.

Harryhausen was in the US Army when he first conceived the idea and wrote a basic outline. The Orson Welles broadcast influenced his decision to relocate the action to America, setting his version in and around New York city.

Harryhausen was fully intending to use the Martian tripod war machines as envisaged by Wells, and despite the inherent difficulties of such an approach, would very likely have succeeded given the flexibility of his stop motion techniques. Clearly then he was thinking very hard about making his film as realistic as possible to the audience, and it is fair to say that this unfulfilled project is one of the great losses of modern cinema.

There is tantalisingly one brief filmed scene that gives a taste of what the world has lost. In order to drum up interest in the project, Harryhausen shot a 16mm test of a Martian emerging from its cylinder. The cylinder was made of plaster and the Martian of a metal armature covered with moulded latex. In further support of the project, Harryhausen drew a dozen beautiful charcoal sketches of key scenes and a storyboard of a scene in which the hero fights a Martian in a farmhouse.

He took all this material to a number of possible financiers including Jesse Lasky Sr. Lasky was one of the founder members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and in 1913 had formed with Cecil B. DeMille the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company, which is credited with making the first full length Hollywood movie. Lasky was also Vice President In Charge Of Production at Paramount which his company had taken control of and was one of the key players in the silent film era, but the 1932 depression saw his fortunues collapse, and when Harryhausen took him the War Of The Worlds, Lasky was working as an independent producer. This gave him the ability to shop the concept around all the major studios, but even Paramount, who owned the rights, expressed no interest.

Harryhausen even wrote to Orson Welles, but never received a reply. In October of 1950 he visited his friend Frank Capra, the renowned director of It's A Wonderful Life, and in a wide ranging discussion the subject of George Pal's recent film Destination Moon arose. This prompted Harryhausen to realise that Pal might be the very person he needed. Pal was at Paramount, who owned the rights and had a solid science fiction background, so seemed ideal.

In his account of what then happened, Harryhausen is magnanimous toward Pal. On visiting Pal and armed with his material, the two had talked for several hours about the project, with Pal asking how long he thought the project might take to animate. Pal indicated that he had heard that Fox and RKO were working on the idea, but that if Harryhausen would leave his material, he would try and interest the front office. A few days later, Harryhausen discovered that Pal had already been negotiating with Paramount to make the movie, so you have to wonder just how economical he had been with the truth in their meeting. Pal admitted several weeks later to Harryhausen that he was working on the project and dangled the prospect of making a film of Tom Thumb using Harryhausen's techniques. You have to wonder if Pal was offering this as a sop while he continued with The War Of The Worlds. Pal did eventually make Tom Thumb, but without Harryhausen.

This then was the death knell of the Harryhausen War Of The Worlds project, but the material left behind shows that it may well have ranked alongside the greatest science fiction movies of all time.

(war-ofthe-worlds.co.uk)

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