Designing the creatures for Jim Henson’s The Dark… | Little White Lies

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Design­ing the crea­tures for Jim Henson’s The Dark Crystal

30 Aug 2019

Sketch of a dishevelled, spiky-haired creature with a large beak.
Sketch of a dishevelled, spiky-haired creature with a large beak.
Prac­ti­cal effects whizzes Bri­an and Wendy Froud dis­cuss their work on Netflix’s new pre­quel series.

The Dark Crys­tal: Age of Resis­tance, Netflix’s 10-part pre­quel to Jim Henson’s cher­ished 1982 fan­ta­sy, fea­tures a daz­zling mix of hand-craft­ed and dig­i­tal spe­cial effects. Cen­tral to bring­ing the mys­ti­cal realm of Thra to life for a new gen­er­a­tion were Bri­an and Wendy Froud, who worked on the orig­i­nal film 37 years ago as crea­ture and cos­tume design­er and pup­pet builder respectively.

The Froud fam­i­ly are leg­ends on the prac­ti­cal effects scene – not only are they respon­si­ble for design­ing the Gelfling, Ske­sis and many oth­er char­ac­ters in The Dark Crys­tal, but Wendy is known as the moth­er of Yoda’ hav­ing been part of the pup­peteer­ing team on The Empire Strikes Back along­side Frank Oz. Bri­an and Wendy also worked togeth­er on Jim Henson’s Labyrinth, in which their son Toby (now grown up and a renowned pup­pet mak­er in his own right) played the infant who is abduct­ed by David Bowie’s Gob­lin King.

To find out more about what goes into design­ing crea­tures and build­ing pup­pets on the scale of a major series like Age of Resis­tance, we sat down with Bri­an and Wendy at BFI Southbank’s The Dark Crys­tal exhi­bi­tion, which runs until 6 Sep­tem­ber. They shared con­cept sketch­es, per­son­al anec­dotes and plen­ty of insight into their craft, explain­ing how green screen tech­nol­o­gy and the tra­di­tion­al Japan­ese pup­peteer­ing tech­nique bun­raku allowed them to expand the world of The Dark Crystal.

The Dark Crys­tal: Age of Resis­tance arrives on Net­flix 30 August. Read our review of the series and our inter­view with direc­tor Louis Leterrier.

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