Company Press Release For Immediate Release Elite, well-equipped team terrifies crowds of
people..who pay for the privilege. Canoga Park, CA., Sept. 8--They are dressed in
black from head to toe. Around their waists, multi-pocketed
belts stocked with sharp knives, flashlights, and expensive
hand tools. They move with stealth, hiding in the darkness.
They communicate, whispering in code on high-tech headsets
placed over black ski-masks. Their every move is coordinated
in unison. Are they Ninjas? An elite Special Forces group?
Nope! They're Puppeteers! They are the dexterous performers who brought to life the
disturbingly realistic creatures of "Mimic", this summers'
critically acclaimed science-fiction film. Summer moviegoers
go to the film for a good thrill, and these puppeteers have
done their best to give them their money's worth. If
Director Guillermo del Toro is the puppeteer's
Commander-in-Chief, then the title of General falls to Rick
Lazzarini. Lazzarini is the creature effects expert credited with
creating the animatronic super-insects for "Mimic". At his
company, The Character Shop in Canoga Park, Lazzarini and
his crew conjured up some incredibly effective monster
bugs. After giving us the falling elephants in "Operation:
Dumbo Drop", the Budweiser Frogs (and gator, and anteater,
and buzzard!), and many appearances on shows such as "Movie
Magic" and "Late Night with David Letterman", Lazzarini's
work is well known to the general public. His output is
usually incredibly realistic, as with the "Dumbo" elephants
and his many Bud creatures, but it's also often whimsical
and goofy, as with his Foster Farms chickens. But now he's scaring us. Lazzarini relates the various stages of the insect which
he and his crew had to depict: "You've got your egg cases,
from which they hatch. You've got your nymphs, which are the
hatchlings. You've got a disgusting juvenile creature, which
lends itself to a wonderful dissection. You've got your full
grown Mimics, which can change in appearance from a derelict
in an overcoat into a giant mega-insect killing machine,
you've got their victims, both animal and human, and
finally, you've got the King Roach, a wingless insect the
color of cookies and cream gone rotten." It took Rick and a talented workforce of 70 people over 6
months just to manufacture the many creatures. From
2-dimensional designs, The Character Shop's FX team created
three-dimensional sculptures, hundreds of molds and casts,
thousands of mechanical parts, and put them all together,
finishing them off with insect-inspired paint jobs and
disgusting little black feeler hairs. It took another 5
months of shooting in Toronto to bring the creatures to
life. That's where the puppeteering comes in. With six legs, a pair of facial claws, six wings, a
multi-axis dolly to support the weight of the body, lungs,
head, neck, and a tangle of mandibles to move, the
animatronic Mimics require a platoon of puppeteers. So, what's with the ninja get-ups? "The best way to
animate one of these puppets is to operate it directly, so
you end up very close to the creature.", Lazzarini relates.
"Nowadays, with computers, you can remove the rods, rigs,
and even entire teams of puppeteers...but it costs you. "
Therefore, to keep the post-production costs to a minimum,
there was a strict edict that the puppeteers all wear black,
as Lazzarini puts it, "So that even if you see them, well,
you won't see them." Alright, then, why the tool belts? "These things are
complex mechanical marvels," Lazzarini notes, "but we're
always doing something to tweak, adjust, or modify them. So
you end up equipping a utility belt full of wrenches,
cutters, and other groovy utensils that would put Batman to
shame." Okay, okay. Explain the headsets. "You've got 24
puppeteers and technicians to coordinate," Rick points out.
"You have to designate Sergeants and Captains to delegate
the proper tasks to the Corporals, Privates, and Enlisted
men, who are spread out all over the studio, and do it
quickly, efficiently and quietly." Interesting. What else is cool about the puppeteers? "You
get people who, like in "Mission Impossible", specialize in
certain things: the electronics wiz, the strong man, the
mechanical genius, the cosmetics expert, the sensitive
movement-related performer...the thing I think is the
greatest, though, is that there were so many of us, all
wearing black, all rushing about, always being split up
between shooting units, and they had a hard time of keeping
track of who was doing what." "So, on the call sheets, instead of listing us each
individually, at the end of the day, just when their heads
were about to explode, they would give up and just put us
down as the "Lazzarini Army". It ended up being so
appropriate, it stuck!" An Army of Darkness. And Light... With the tense subject matter that "Mimic" covers, and
such cold, grimy, and slimy conditions, you've got to let
off a little steam. That's why the puppeteer team also got
to be known for their pranks and playfulness, and their
ability to bring a bit of levity to the set. Lazzarini remembers: "The setting was dreary, it was
around Christmastime, we were far from home, so we livened
up the place a little by putting the names of Santa's
reindeer behind each Mimic as is was stored against the
wall; Donner, Comet, Cupid, Vixen..." To break up the intensity, the puppeteers would also find
themselves trying on hideous English accents, playfully
riding Jeremy Northam as he was trying to flatten his own
refined British speech patterns. "It ended up sounding like
a Monty Python-in-drag sketch, degrading eventually into
hoots and bird calls, with other smart-alecks on the crew
joining in. That's when the A.D. said "ENOUGH!", Lazzarini
laughs. Lazzarini thrives on variety, bouncing back and forth
between the cutesy and the scary. After creating the sharp,
sleek, and slimy monsters of "Mimic", he's happy to have
just completed a darling little doll for Hostess's popular
"Where's the Cream Filling?" campaign. It's a far cry from
mutant insects. What's next? "I'll do a couple more commercials before I
start on the next film," ["Mephisto's Bridge", with
Guillermo del Toro], Rick says. "Then it's back to scary
monster time!" Just as Lazzarini and crew take five and chill out from
the intensity of the on-set experience, it looks like he'll
let us relax, breathe, and smile a bit...that is, until he
and his "special forces" break out their next batch of
creepy creatures! SOURCE: The Character Shop, Inc. What's New | Features
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