View allAll Photos Tagged Creature
Our Multiverse Voyageur left behind a few very curious creations. These are beyond present comprehension to explain or understand. They just are. For better or worse.
Derived by reflection from an image of a rubbish pile. Inverting the image on the right leads to a different interpretation.
God Lleu has two beloved creatures. Older is Dragon, wise and serious man. Not long ago Lleu created his second "child". Elesana is young and quite stubborn goddess. But she adores Dragon so much ^^\'
Not sure Lleu approves it >_>
Dragon and Lleu are Kimirra [on behalf of Kagami Design] characters.
Elesana\'s dress is made by talented AyuAna
One of my all time favorites! Ben cooper creature people I was lucky enough to find it in new condition with original tag and price Tag which marks 79 cents haha still looking for the other versions
The Creature from the Black Lagoon has always been a favorite Universal Monster...I finally sculpted one myself.
oil base clay CHAVANT Y2KLAY
The swamp terror, a creature from marshlands of Gamdron II.
More information and pics up: THE BRICK TIME
Dont forget to visit the BrickLink Shop: THE BRICK TIME - Store
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New species! We are still not sure if this mysterious creature is a clam, a slug, a snail, a hermit crab, or a monster??
There is a snap fastener inside the clam, so you can enjoy opening/closing it.
貝かナメかカタツムリかヤドカリかわからないままのクリーチャー、Clamon (仮名)。
スナップ付きなので開いたり閉じたりできます、クラモン(仮名)。注: ブローチではありません。
Found this cute creature while trekking. Though dont know its name. Had a good playtime :)
Please Tweet if you like this image :)
Inside Seattle based design / illustration firm - Invisible Creature
See the rest of the photos and read the interview at:
images c2008 invisible creature
From the left to the right:
Yoshi the Woodling, Boneka Kayu, Deer Faith from Charles' Creatures Cabinet
As winter's quiet hush settles throughout the Strangeland woods with little ones tucked in to their snugly bunkers for a snoozy hibernation, the neighbours make the long trek to the snowy garden, assembling for the annual "Ice Kickers Ball" and convention.
Doigt of the Thimbleheads arrived from his delegation located down the lane near the home of Larry the goat. The Jacabobs found him clad in the traditional rubber Thimblehead garb of his clan of Phylangecots. He was nearly frozen, ice hanging off his schnoz so the Jacabobs brought him in for tea.
Within the walls of the manor, creatures lurk through the old registries.
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creepy crawly creatures...
Happy Macro Monday All.
Those bugs were shot @ my home, Gombak. I found some very interesting creatures all over the place, and my kit wont permit me for the super macro mode..:D
Enjoy the new weeks.
It Came From Beneath The Sea
It Came from Beneath the Sea (Columbia, 1955).
Starring Faith Domergue, Kenneth Tobey, Donald Curtis, Ian Keith, Dean Maddox Jr., Chuck Griffiths, Harry Lauter, and Richard W. Peterson. Directed by Robert Gordon.
A massive six-tentacle creature attacks San Francisco, demolishing Market Street, the Ferry Building, and the Golden Gate Bridge in this sci-fi classic. The film marks the first of many collaborations between special effects legend Ray Harryhausen and producer Charles H. Schneer, who would later work together on 20 Million Miles to Earth, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, Jason and the Argonauts, Clash of the Titans, and many more. Offered here is a fantastic lobby card set, in which Harryhausen's colossal beast is on full display.
synopsis
It Came From Beneath the Sea was the first of several fruitful collaborations between producer Charles H. Schneer and special-effects wizard Ray Harryhausen. "It" is a giant, six-tentacled octopus, which is galvanized into action by an H-bomb test. Worse still, the monster is highly radioactive, rendering useless the normal means of defense against it. Scientists Donald Curtis and Faith Domergue team with atomic-submarine commander Kenneth Tobey to halt the creature's progress before it begins to attack major coastal cities. Alas, the monster manages to reach San Francisco, wreaking havoc on the Golden Gate Bridge, the Ferry Building, and Market Street before Tobey figures out a way to destroy it. The stop-motion animation utilized by Harryhausen in It Came From Beneath Sea is convincingly frightening, but before long he'd top this achievement with such superb projects as Earth vs. Flying Saucers and Seventh Voyage of Sinbad.
review
It's easy to underestimate It Came From Beneath The Sea 50 years after its release. Not only have there been lots of monster-on-the-loose thrillers since, butits own creators, special effects designer Ray Harryhausen and producer Charles H. Schneer, have done much more obivously impressive work together during the ensuing 25 years. What's more, Harryhausen's earlier Beast From 20,000 Fathoms had a more haunting set of images scattered throughout its length. It Came From Beneath The Sea, however, had its own virtues that aren't entirely lost today, if you take the trouble to spot them. As a sci-fi film, it also utilized elements of the documentary, with a narration that makes the first half of the movie seem almost like a newsreel, which gives the action a greater immediacy than could be communicated by any plot summary. The script, by George Worthing Yates and Hal Smith, also drew from the best available model of its era, following the lead of Gordon Douglas's Them! (1954) by interweaving elements of mystery in the movie's first half-hour. And the film contained an extremely potent topical element -- the first 12 minutes of the movie are a realistic depiction of an atomic submarine on maneuvers, in a time when nuclear submarines were the scientific marvel of the moment. This is all presented in a cool, clipped realistic manner, with a strong but convincingly stated macho tone (which will figure prominently in the interaction of two of the key characters later in the movie); indeed, It Came From Beneath The Sea may well have been the earliest screen depiction of a nuclear sub in action, at a time when ships like the submarine Nautilus were making headlines and history around the world. It all served to make the first quarter hour of the film almost irresistably suspenseful, and gave Harryhausen one of the best lead-ins that one could ask for, for his effects -- luckily, the latter lived up to the anticipation and the movie ended up packing a powerful visual punch in its time, especially the scenes of the destruction of well known pieces of San Francisco real estate. What's more, the screenplay engaged in some interesting (though partly unfulfilled) sex-role by-play between the Kenneth Tobey, Faith Domergue, and Donald Curtis characters, and also included an interesting subtext about the nature of bureaucracy -- the manner in which the survivors of the first shipwreck are treated nearly short-circuits the investigation before it begins, and the depiction of the inability of bureaucrats to deal with answers they don't expect or want are all strangely honest and disquieting, almost subversive elements to turn up in a mid-1950's mainstream movie.
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Strobist Info:
1 Einstein E640, camera right, with a gridded strip box
1 B-1600, gridded, hitting the doors in the background, to give some detail
1 Nikon SB-800, shooting through the glass windows (the doors) in the back of the room, as a rim light
From the "Creatures" blog post: t.co/9wLC3SKE
Promotional shot for an indie movie, directed by a good friend of ours!