Showing posts with label the beast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the beast. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Angel: The Casefiles Volume 2

I have mentioned previously here on the blog and elsewhere that I am still going through a lot of files, boxes, shelves, and random stuff, months after my studio was completed. Over the last two decades, I have accumulated a lot of art-related items, artifacts of my career, and strange oddities. Going through it all, organizing it, and putting it away has been an ongoing chore. I am sure I could be done with it all by now, but I have wanted to make art, so the cleaning has been dragged out. 

Today I am sharing an item I knew I had, but it was lost on a shelf for a while. This book was published in 2004, and I picked it up likely in 2005, long before we all shared everything we did on social media. Jump ahead nineteen years, and I am going to now share the book, especially as it has been newly rediscovered and is currently on a shelf in the studio. The Angel Casefiles were a pair of books (alas, it appears that the third book that would have completed the series was never made) that focused on the Angel television series and offered commentary, behind-the-scenes details, and interviews with people involved with the show. I mention all this because I worked on the show and am in the book. Let's start with a look at the cover, and then I will share some relevant details. 

Angel - The Casefiles Volume 2
I found this at the local Borders books store when they existed. I likely bought it on a Friday night after eating dinner. I remember this because it was a common practice to hit the bookstore after dinner and before a movie when we had time and energy to do such adventurous things. At the time, a lot of content was still being created based on my work in the film industry, so I would keep an eye out in bookstores for anything associated with my work.

Here is a page with lots of photos. I have marked them to talk about them. (A) is the Beast on set (90% sure it is the stunt Beast), and he is touch ups by one of the union makeup artists. The union folks were not from our shop and could touch the actor from the neck up. As we were not in a union, we could touch the actor from the neck down. The union folks put the makeup we made and painted onto the actors, and we put the suits, gloves, and feet on them. Sadly I do not recall this person's name, but I worked with him a lot. He was a good guy and had loads of stories, and worked on many projects. (B) is a photo of the set on location in Chinatown in LA. With enough money and pull, you, too, can dig a massive hole in the middle of an alley and shoot the monster emerging into the world. This was a fun night on set to say the least. (C) is the stunt Beast. Again, I am blanking on this person's name, but he, too, was fun to work with and had a million stories - like getting hurt when he was dead-dropped off the ship's side in Speed 2. (D) Allan Holt and I are on set making sure the Beast's horns are screwed on. The actors wore fiberglass caps with two metal posts attached where the horns would slide over and screw into place. We were constantly putting them on and taking them off, losing screws, dropping screws, and gluing the horns into place - after which we would have to pop them off. 
 
UPDATE - I have since been reminded that the stunt Beast, whom we worked with a lot on the show, who worked on several other shows we worked on, and who went on to do a lot of other cool stuff, was named Scott Workman. He was an awesome guy and a fun and friendly presence on set. He passed in 2013. 

Here is a close-up of the photo of Allan and I. Consentration personified... or not.

While I am not in this photo, I was there that day on set, tending to the monsters. The Keeper of the Name was one that I designed, painted, tended to, and eventually puppeteered. KotN was the quiet type and let his fists do the talking. I have stories from this day, but I will share them another time when I am not posting something publically on the internet.

Another photo of another monster on the same day as the previous photo. The High Priest was another of my creations, though I do not believe I painted this one; I only designed it and tended him on set. The weird thing to me is that I very clearly remember this photo being taken. I was only feet away when they did a little photo shoot. I would love to know if the people behind the book were given permission to photograph the show or if this was the work of the unsung set photographers. Most likely the latter, but it is nice to see some of these images making it into the wild.

Lastly, another photo of Allen and me with the Beast. It was tough working with the Beast as he was constantly hungry, and he was not picky about what he ate. Joking aside, the stunt Beast and the main Beast, played by Vladimir Kulich, were great to work with, and we had a lot of fun on set with these two.

More and more, it feels like another life lived by another person. I have the memories, but this is so far removed from what I do now. I am still making monsters and telling my stories, so there is a consistent line through my narrative, but I am a one-person operation making books. It is a fun journey all the same! But the story does not end here, for I found something in the pages of this book that I had hidden from myself, and on Friday, I will share it with you all.

That's all for another exciting Wednesday on the blog. See you back here on Friday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability, head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Monday, April 7, 2014

Taking a break: The Beast - Angel Season 4

The blog break continues as I am still overwhelmed elsewhere. In my absence, here is some stuff I have never shared from my days in the Makeup FX industry! Today I have for you The Beast from season 4 of Angel...

The Beast was the BIG BAD MONSTERS for season 4 (or was it?) and a lot of work, time, blood, and tears went into it. I lost a lot of sleep painting almost all the makeups for this monster and his stunt double as well as being on set for almost all the times it was filmed (and then some). Actually, I am getting ahead of myself. The designs for this were all over the place since production was HEAVILY involved. They really wanted us to make a rock and lava version of the Hulk meets Darkness from Legend... and after many attempts to give them something different and new the art department gave up and gave them what they wanted. ...but by then I was working on other things and not really designing the monster.

The Beast appeared in a lot of episodes through out the bulk of season 4 and this required new makeups for both the actor and stunt double for each day of shooting. We also had to replace the suit halfway through the season since they have a limited lifespan. Fun side note - on the first day filming of the replacement suit both the actor and stuntman torn the right arm nearly off their suits. There was some panicked repair work going over the lunch break that day. Without the amazing help of my two other coworkers there is no way those suits would have been film ready in about an hour.

Often I would spend a VERY long full day on set with the two Beasts and then go to the shop to paint the makeups for the next day of filming. After they were painted, I would go home for just a few hours and then get up and head back to set with the new set of makeups for the new day of filming. More then once I would grab a couple more hours of sleep in a makeup chair in the trailer after the makeups were delivered and before we had to start suiting up everybody. Not being in the Makeup Union we could handle everything dealing with an actors makeup as long as it was below their necks. The union makeup people were lords of everything from the neck up.

I had a lot of fun and a lot of great memories working on set during this time as well as interacting with the actor and stuntman that portrayed The Beast. Not sure why this popped into my head now, there was an Assistant Director on Angel that CONSTANTLY referred to all of us from the shop by one name... Allen. He called ALL of us ALLEN. SERIOUSLY. "Where's Allen?" "We need Allen here to fix this." "Tell Allen..." ...you get the idea. So weird to look back at it now, and funny.

While I was did some design work, a ton of paint work, and a lot of other assorted work on this monster there was an entire team of my skilled coworkers that saw to the sculpting, molding, casting, and everything else that went into seeing this creature come about. This, as with everything I share from these day is a team effort!

Enough talk, here is The Beast...

Our hero photo of The Beast. He turned out looking good and the fans loved him... we just could have made it "more".

That GIANT signature can only mean one thing... this is one of my designs.
This is the only one of my Beast designs that made it to a finished state and was done in the early staged of the concept period. I was working closely with the design lead and pulling a lot of direction and influence from him. I was told after the fact that when this was shown to production that someone claimed that this looked my a moose and they all sat around giggling that is was a moose.
Yeah... looks just like a moose.

I did design the contacts for the beast. I designed a lot of contacts actually for these shows. Often I would never see the final product but I did get to see the contacts for The Beast up close... like they were in my own eyes.

SPOILER ALERT! The Beast *might* not have survived season 4.
I was asked to design the melted Beast blob. This first version is not so good.

This second Beast blog is better and then final pile looked more like this. I painted the pile and wish I could find my photos of it.

Since The Beast was such an important monster the sculpture team actually had a chance to work up a maquette of The Beast. This also allowed time to work out some design issues... like the horns... that were still coming together.

More images as the maquette takes shape...

...and even more.
 
This is an image of the clay maquette that has been panted over to show production what it will look like. once this maquette had served it usefulness and was approved a mold was made of it and we cast an army of mini Beasts.

I painted SO many of these Beast maquettes. SO. MANY. The sad reality is that I never took the time to cast and paint one for myself. That is the thing about being surrounded by this stuff everyday, you loose sight of how rare and special these things are. I didn't realize that I never made myself one until a few months after I moved away from Los Angels and it was by then a impossibility to have one. Of all the objects that I dealt with while working in the FX business, this is the one I regret not having now. A lot of memories are associated with this monster. Oh well... I still have those memories :)

The sculpture team was all hands on deck for The Beast.

I think there were four to five sculptures in total that worked on the suit alone. It came together really fast... because it had to!

Turning mud into a monster.

Rocky monster butt.

Some rocky monster gloves for all your rocky monster glove needs.
I was a hand stand in for The Beast in some second unit shooting. The Beast jabs his finger into the abdomen of a character... that was my hand in the glove jabbing a replica torso. RAWR!

The Beast cowl and horns coming together.

Beast face makeup sculpt.

Vlad going under the foam latex.

Early stage of the makeup going on the actor for one of the first days of filming.

The very... VERY first paint scheme of The Beast suit - not done by me. The suit over all became a lot darker and more even in pattern. I never thought this read well and to me appears to be burnt flesh rather then rock and lava. The earth tones continued, they just were spread throughout and the entire suit and makeup were unified.

The suit in a more finalized state on set. Notice the "suit boots" bottom right. They were built over boots with lifts in them and were for normal wear and were not meant to be filmed below the ankle.  Stilt feet with hooves were also made for 'hero' shots. They were said to be a little hard to walk in.

The stuntman getting all suited up as The Beast.

More hero shots of The Beast. Notice those great looking contacts!

And more of The Beast looking moody and introspective.

While the boss man painted the first set or two of the makeups to establish the look but this time I was painting everything including the suit. I painted so many of these makeups. Lost count actually!
The actor is posing here wearing a sword through the head rig for a dream sequence.

All kinds of weirdness here... what on earth?

The Beast is looking a little weird...

Oh... This is a rig used for the shot of the sword entering the head. There is a slot under the shin spikes that the sword slides up and out the back of the head. I painted this entire thing. It was fabricated by others. When to set with it too. Once of the other guys held the sword and I stood behind this thing and held the head up in a more realistic position and when the sword 'stabbed' the head I let go so that the head would rear back as if stabbed.

Even the Stunt Beast enjoys the holiday season.
Ho Ho RAWR!

More Christmas time filming antics on set with the stunt Beast.
This was a fun set too.

Last, but not least, Mr. Beefy and the Beast.
No comment on those goggles.

That is all for another exciting Monday on the blog, see you back here on Wednesday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Monday, March 17, 2014

Taking a break...

I need a vacation, a break, a pause, a respite, a lull in the chaos... but I just don't have the time.

For the next couple of weeks to ease my workload where I can I am going to ramp things down here on the blog. I am going to keep up posting on my usual schedule as much as I can... but I am going to be pulling content from my achieves of things never shared from my distant art past. Of course, if current work is released or spoiled I will be sure to share it... but for the next couple weeks I need to take a break.

To that end, here is a picture of James Marsters and myself suited up as the Beast at the Angel Posting Board party in 2003. See, James Marsters makes everything better...

James Marsters and myself suited up as the Beast (circa 2003)
Images © Christopher Burdett

I just need to get through the next couple deadlines and have a little break and then things will be back to normal. In the mean time you will get to enjoy images and work from my days in the makeup effect business. RAWR!

That is all for another exciting Monday on the blog, see you back here hopefully on Wednesday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com