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RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 4:03 pm
by bairdlander2
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Mon Feb 14, 2011 4:35 pm
by bartholimew
OK found the right one. Interview with the director, same guy did hellboy.
http://www.bloody-disgusting.com/interview/624
PB: Well. Outside of all the supernatural material -- of which there's a lot -- there are two solid tank battle confrontations, done in a way that I don't think I've seen on film before, even looking at movies like "Kelly's Heroes" or "Battle Of The Bulge". We have one wonderful depot sequence with a lot of hardware...experimental German ground vehicles, a flying wing. All actual machinery that was deployed in the field at the time, but has never been seen onscreen. And a significant part of the film takes place on the "Gustav", one of a pair of monster guns...the largest railroad cannons in the world that the Germans built. The armor nuts are going to love this movie. We have a wonderful producer in Germany, a big World War 2 enthusiast, who's helping us -- informally, at this juncture -- to get together hardware for the film.
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 1:47 am
by Capt. Harlock
Not really that new as an idea - I recall there was a movie in the early '80s called The Keep
It's been done in other mediums too. Around that time I ran into some WWII miniatures gamers who had gotten together with some Dungeons & Dragons miniatures gamers. There was some discussion about the effect of a panzerfaust against a troll . . .[:D]
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 9:29 am
by nicwb
It's been done in other mediums too. Around that time I ran into some WWII miniatures gamers who had gotten together with some Dungeons & Dragons miniatures gamers. There was some discussion about the effect of a panzerfaust against a troll . . .
I recall that - wasn't it something like "Hans, how many hit points does a panzerfaust do to a troll?"
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 6:21 pm
by Jeffrey H.
ORIGINAL: bartholimew
OK found the right one. Interview with the director, same guy did hellboy.
http://www.bloody-disgusting.com/interview/624
PB: Well. Outside of all the supernatural material -- of which there's a lot -- there are two solid tank battle confrontations, done in a way that I don't think I've seen on film before, even looking at movies like "Kelly's Heroes" or "Battle Of The Bulge". We have one wonderful depot sequence with a lot of hardware...experimental German ground vehicles, a flying wing. All actual machinery that was deployed in the field at the time, but has never been seen onscreen. And a significant part of the film takes place on the "Gustav", one of a pair of monster guns...the largest railroad cannons in the world that the Germans built. The armor nuts are going to love this movie. We have a wonderful producer in Germany, a big World War 2 enthusiast, who's helping us -- informally, at this juncture -- to get together hardware for the film.
IIRC Hellboy started out as a Nazi experiment that was overrun by the Allies.
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 8:08 pm
by KG Erwin
The only movie of this type I liked was "The 13th Warrior". Some review sites panned it, but I enjoyed it for its unusual point of view and terrific battle scenes. Please note that I never read Michael Crichton's book, on which the movie was based.
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 10:44 pm
by Obsolete
How exactly was 13'th Warrior a horror? I have to confess I really did like it, an wished there had been more viking movies of that nature around.
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Tue Feb 15, 2011 11:50 pm
by KG Erwin
ORIGINAL: Obsolete
How exactly was 13'th Warrior a horror? I have to confess I really did like it, an wished there had been more viking movies of that nature around.
Remember that the Wendol, the bad guys, dressed as animals and ate their victims. What was most interesting about this film is that the lead actor, Antonio Banderas, served as narrator and observer through most of the story, even though he became an unwilling participant as the 13th warrior on the mission to kill the Wendols' matriarch. The true hero of the film was the Viking leader, Buliwyf. It has been said that Crichton based his book on the classic "Beowulf", and yes, he did borrow much from the ancient story.
RE: Panzer 88
Posted: Wed Feb 16, 2011 12:50 am
by Obsolete
Mmmm, I remember the Eaters of the Dead in detail, but it just didn't really come across as horror to me. In fact, IIRC wasn't the movie indexed at video stores as an Action title or something similar?
And may Allah bless Jerry Goldsmith for yet another great soundtrack.