There is a sequence consisting of the destruction of large fuel tanks lifted almost entirely from another terrific sub movie "Crash Dive" whose effects were handled by the legendary Fred Sersen. It may be that the miniature sub is the same model as that from Crash Dive as well even though it is supposed to be an ex WW2 Japanese sub in the film.
Ray Kellog, is credited with the special photographic effects and the results are fairly impressive. He became head of the special effects department at 20th Century Fox in 1952 after Fred Sersen. The miniature atomic explosion that precedes the title and reappears at the end is a spectacular pyrotechnic effect.
There is a model plane and a matte painting which is, I think, supposed to be a B29 but which doesn't look much like one at all.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteSuper blog!
I was wondering: were the models of the bad-guy-sub used in the 1966 episode of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea entitled "The Phantom Strikes?"
"It may be that the miniature sub is the same model as that from Crash Dive as well even though it is supposed to be an ex WW2 Japanese sub in the film."
ReplyDeleteI suspect that you are right on this point.
I believe that the ex-IJN sub is supposed to belong to the class shown in this pretty nice little clip. Very different from the model.
ReplyDeleteYou wrote in your article that you thought the plane was supposed to be a B29 but did not look very convincing. I do not know how carefully they researched Japanese aircraft but indeed the Japan had a small number of large landbased bombers. This model looks to be depicting the type given the allied reporting name RITA. And Japan had even larger aircraft on the drawing board and in factory mockup
ReplyDeleteSo don't know if they did some checking or if it was a happy accident.
The explosion at the end and beginning looks very similar in style to the explosion at the end of 20.000 leagues, I guess as a lot of the fx team were the same?
ReplyDelete