✦ Day ‘n’ Nite ✧
Sci-Fi Dolphin Saturday is in the middle of its 90s phase: Here’s Christian Lassen’s “Cosmos” poster from 1991.
MOVIE SERIES: 80s Horror
Horror movies of the 1980s exist at the glorious watershed when special visual effects finally catch up with the gory imaginings of horror fans and movie makers. Technical advances in special effects meant the human frame could be distorted to grotesque new dimensions on screen. This coincided with the decadent and materialistic aesthetic of the 1980s. Having it all was important. Showing it off was paramount. It was truly the Age of Excess. ― Horror Film History
(dedicated to @daniellarussos // ‘a whole decade!’ celebration!)
Host Club ‘Ai Honten’ - Tokyo, Japan (1971-2020)
Scanned from the book, '背景ビジュアル資料〈6〉歓楽街・繁華街・夜の街 ’ – Link
cali:
holypoisonflowerbird yea it has 10000000000000000000 Hp
Artwork for ’Metropolis’ dir. by Fritz Lang; 1927.
The city shots of Metropolis were a combination of both two and three dimensional elements, consisting of matte drawings and paintings, flat wooden relief models, and three dimensional models scaled to 1/16th of the simulated heights. All matte drawings of the cityscape were scaled to a height of 1/100. The man responsible for most of the film’s models was Walter Schuzle-Mittendorf. The set designers- Otto Hunte, Erich Kettelhut and Karl Vollbrecht- first created a number of concept drawings for the imagined city of Metropolis, following Lang’s plan for the city to be divided into several sections. The emphasis was on the verticality of the structures, intersected by roadway systems and aircraft.





































