Stan Winston (April 7, 1946 – June 15, 2008) was an American visual effects supervisor, make-up artist, and film director. He was best known for his work in the Terminator series, the Jurassic Park series, Aliens, the Predator series, Iron Man and Edward Scissorhands.He won four Academy Awards for his work.
Winston, a frequent collaborator with director James Cameron, owned more than one effects studio, including Stan Winston Digital. The established areas of expertise for Winston were in makeup, puppets and practical effects, but he had recently expanded his studio to encompass digital effects as well.
One of the founders of visual effects companies Digital Domain, Stan Winston Digital and Stan Winston studios.
Only the second special effects artist to be honored with a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Stars.
He studied painting and sculpture at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and graduated in 1968.
He moved to Hollywood in 1968. At first he wanted to be an actor, but no jobs came his way and the following year he became an apprentice in the Makeup Department at Walt Disney Studios.
He has become known primarily as a “creature creator.” His first such assignment was for the TV movie Gargoyles (1972) (TV).
Father of actor Matt Winston and daughter.
Made a living as a stand-up comedian before moving into make-up effects.
Helped out on some Special Effects scenes in The Thing (1982) when Rob Bottin was suffering from exhaustion at the time due to his immensely heavy workload.
Father-in-law of Amy Smallman.
Has four grandchildren.
Has a brother.
While filming Predator (1987), Winston returned to his hotel one day, to find his shower crawling with frogs. Convinced that this was a prank by Arnold Schwarzenegger, he called in the help of members of his special effects crew in catching the frogs in a pillow case and releasing them into Arnold’s bed. Neither Stan nor Arnold dared to bring up the subject the next day. Years later, Winston was on a talk-show and recounted the entire story, knowing Arnold would be a guest in that show the next day. But the next day, Arnold commented on the story by swearing he had nothing to do with the prank, upon which Winston’s crew members finally confessed they had played the prank on him. They knew Arnold was innocent but had decided to let Winston get even with him anyway.
He was awarded the Virginia Film’s Festival Virginia Film Award in 1999 and was a member of the festival’s advisory board.
Child’s Play is a 1988 American horror film, written by Don Mancini and directed by Tom Holland. It was released on November 9, 1988. The film met with moderate success upon its release, and has since developed a cult following among fans of the horror genre. The film is the first in the Child’s Play film series, which was originally a whodunit film in contrast to the latter sequels. This was the only film in the series released by MGM/UA, as the rights to the series were sold to Universal beginning with the sequel.
Taglines
You’ll wish it was only make-believe.
Andy Barclay has a new playmate who’s in no mood to play.
This doll is killer.
Cast
Catherine Hicks … Karen Barclay
Chris Sarandon … Mike Norris
Alex Vincent … Andy Barclay
Brad Dourif … Charles Lee Ray/Chucky
Dinah Manoff … Maggie Peterson
Tommy Swerdlow … Jack Santos
Jack Colvin … Dr. Ardmore
Neil Giuntoli … Eddie Caputo
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Make Up Department
Michael Hancock … makeup artist
Marina Pedraza … hair stylist
Special Effects Department
Howard Berger … shop supervisor: chucky construction crew
Richard O. Helmer … special effects supervisor
Rick Lalonde … lab technician: chucky construction crew
Ron Pipes … hair: chucky construction crew
Zandra Platzek … hair: chucky construction crew
James D. Schwalm … special effects
Carl Sorensen … lab technician: chucky construction crew
Christopher Swift … lab technician: chucky construction crew
Kevin Yagher … designer and executor: “Chucky” doll
Mark C. Yagher … shop assistant: chucky construction crew
James Kagel … lead sculptor
Child's Play Chucky Doll
Visual Effects Department
Peter Donen … visual effects supervisor
Joseph Yanuzzi … visual effects editor
Puppet Master (also known as Puppetmaster and Puppet Master I) is a 1989 horror film released on October 12th 1989 and was written by Charles Band and Kenneth J. Hall, and directed by David Schmoeller. It is the first film in the Puppet Master franchise and stars Paul Le Mat, Irene Miracle, Matt Roe and Kathryn O’Reilly as psychics who are plotted against by a former colleague, using puppets animated by an Egyptian spell. The film’s cult status has led to the production of nine sequels. Originally intended for theatrical release in summer 1989, before being released on home video the following September, Puppet Master was ultimately pushed to a direct-to-video release on October 12, 1989, as Charles Band felt he was likely to make more money this way than he would in the theatrical market.
William Hickey as Puppetmaster Andre Toulan in his workshop
Puppet Master has been reissued several times. It is available in a box set featuring the first seven installments of the series, an 18-disc Full Moon Features collection and a Spanish-subtitled import collection of the first three Puppet Master films. In 2007, Razor Digital released an uncut DualDisc version of Puppet Master, featuring both the standard and stereoscopic versions of the film. The uncut version restores a number of deleted scenes, including additional footage of Frank and Carissa having sex, extra frames added to Dana’s death which make the slash across her throat more visible, and Neil’s death scene being extended to contain more gore. In December 2008, Band authorized Puppet Master for digital download through the iTunes Store; his first foray into the digital market.
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The film starts in 1939 Bodega Bay, California with an old puppeteer named Andre Toulon putting the finishing touches on a living puppet called Jester. A living oriental puppet stares out of the window at Blade, another living puppet, as Blade scouts the grounds of the Bodega Bay Inn that Andre is staying at. Two Nazis get out of a car and head for Toulon’s room but Blade beats them there and Andre puts Blade, Jester and the oriental puppet into a chest, before hiding the chest in a wall panel. As the Nazis break down the door, Toulon shoots himself in the mouth with a pistol. The oriental puppet is not seen for the rest of the movie.
The film now cuts to 1989, with a psychic named Alex. Alex has a dream that there are leeches on his stomach. Seconds later, he dreams of a man that he recognizes putting a gun to a woman’s head. The film cuts to Dana, another psychic, who has visions of being slashed across the throat with a knife. Carissa and Frank, two other psychics who are apparently lovers, are reading the mind of another woman when they get a call from Alex. Frank tells Alex that they also got a call from Dana, and the four psychics assess that the visions they’ve been having were sent from a former colleague, Neil Gallagher.
The psychics meet at the Bodega Bay Inn that Neil is staying at and meet Neil’s wife, Megan, as well as the housekeeper, Theresa. The psychics are skeptical that Neil took a wife but it is forgotten when Megan tells them that Neil shot himself. Theresa, Megan, Dana, Carissa, Frank, and Alex leave the body and Pinhead, another living puppet, jumps from the casket.
Later, Carissa has visions of Neil violently attacking a woman in an elevator. Dana warns Theresa to stay away from the fireplace and later, at dinner, Dana makes several remarks about Neil that causes Megan to leave the table. Alex goes after her and explains about the powers of he, Dana, Carissa, and Frank.
When night falls, Theresa goes near the fireplace and is murdered when Pinhead hits her with a poker. The psychics hear a scream and find Megan passed out nearby Neil’s body that has been moved into a chair by someone. Carissa and Frank spend some intimate time together in one of the hotel rooms but two more living puppets, Tunneler and Leech Woman, enter. Tunneler kills Carissa by drilling into her face and Leech Woman vomits leeches onto Frank’s body, which drain his blood. Meanwhile, Dana sits around with her strange, dead and preserved dog until she has her leg broken by Pinhead. Pinhead chases her and repeatedly strangles and punches her until she manages to knock him away, only to have her throat slashed by Blade, using his knife-hand.
Alex has recurring nightmares of Megan having a gun put to her head by Neil and the other psychics being found dead, but is eventually awoken by Megan who takes him into the room that Andre Toulon was in, and tells him that Neil found Andre’s secret to bringing inanimate objects, such as puppets, to life. Alex has a vision and they go downstairs to find the dead bodies of the psychics sitting around a table. They are stopped by the newly resurrected Neil. He explains that “metaphysically speaking”, he did commit suicide, but he used Toulon’s formula to give himself eternal life. He fights with Alex and beats him up, until Neil hurts Jester and the puppets revolt against him. They lock him in an elevator and murder him by having Pinhead hold Neil’s head as Tunneler drill into his neck, Blade cut off his fingers, and finally Leech Woman vomits a leech into his mouth.
The film cuts to Alex saying goodbye to Megan and leaving the hotel. Now alone, Megan picks up Dana’s taxidermic dog, and by the following scene, the dog becomes completely animate, indicating that she too has learned Toulon’s method (although the film’s sequel dispels that she has become the next Puppet Master).
Blade from Puppet Master
Cast
Paul Le Mat – Alex Whitaker
William Hickey – Andre Toulon
Irene Miracle – Dana Hadley
Jimmie F. Skaggs – Neil Gallagher
Robin Frates – Megan Gallagher
Matt Roe – Frank Forrester
Barbara Crampton
Kathryn O’Reilly – Carissa Stamford
Mews Small – Theresa
Barbara Crampton – Woman at Carnival
David Boyd – Man at Carnival
Peter Frankland – Assassin #1
Andrew Kimbrough – Assassin #2
Voice Performers
Ed Cook – Pinhead
Linda Cook – Leech Woman
Tim Dornberg – Tunneler
Bert Rosario – Blade
Michael Laide – Jester
Featured puppets
Oriental puppet
Blade
Jester
Pinhead
Tunneler
Leech Woman
Make Up Department
Valerie McKnight … makeup artist
Steve Neill … special effects makeup artist
Special Effects Department
Mark Rappaport … animatronics engineer
Patrick Simmons … special effects makeup
Tunneler
Visual Effects Department
Dave Allen … puppet animator
Dave Allen … visual effects supervisor
Sally Chow … puppeteer
Paul W. Gentry … effects photography
Dennis Gordon … puppet fabrication and miniatures
Beth Hathaway … puppeteer
Justin Kohn … puppet animator
Donna Littleford … visual effects production assistant
Harvey Mayo … puppet fabrication and miniatures
Jene Omens … puppet fabrication and miniatures
Mark Rappaport … animatronic engineer
Patrick Simmons … special effects makeup
Cindy Sorennen … puppeteer
John Teska … puppet fabrication and miniatures
Brett B. White … puppeteer
Plot: Set a few days after the original, a championship basketball team’s bus is attacked by The Creeper, the winged, flesh-eating terror, on the last day of his 23-day feeding frenzy.
Make Up Department Germicka Barclay … assistant hair stylist
Roy Ceballos … shop foreman
Denise Fischer … assistant makeup artist
Elisabeth Fry … key makeup artist
Elvis Jones … makeup artist
Lori McCoy-Bell … hair department head
Brian Penikas … creature & makeup effects supervisor
Brian Penikas … key makeup effects artist
Tim Phoenix … makeup artist
Richard Redlefsen … assistant prosthetic makeup artist
Richard Redlefsen … creeper makeup and lead suit
Special Effects Department Barry Crane … moldmaker
Derrick Crane … special effects crew
Dave Fedele … fabricator and lab technician
John E. Gray … special effects coordinator
Richard O. Helmer … special effects coordinator
Boyd Lacosse … special effects technician
Javier Lomeli … special effects technician
Karen Mason … fabricator and lab technician
Nicole Michaud … creature effects coordinator: makeup & monsters
Robert Pendergraft … fabricator
Robert Pendergraft … lab technician
Brian Penikas … creature & makeup effects supervisor
Brian Penikas … creature effects designer
Brian Penikas … special effects makeup
Tim Phoenix … fabricator
Richard Redlefsen … sculptor/painter: Makeup and Monsters Studios
Christopher A. Suarez … special effects technician
Erick de la Vega … fabricator and lab technician
Mark Viniello … foam runner
John R. Ziegler … special effects foreman
Dirk Rogers … corpse fabricator: Ghostride Production (uncredited)
Visual Effects Department Jance Allen … visual effects artist
Kevin Baillie … CG supervisor
Brendan Bolles … match mover
Geraud Brisson … visual effects editor
Daniela Calafatello … creature models
YouJin Choung … visual effects
Paul Curley … visual effects
Michelle Deniaud … creature painter
David Emerson … opticals
Arin Finger … visual effects coordinator
Kameron Gates … character animator
Daniel Gloates … senior staff
Rainer Gombos … digital compositor
David ‘Rudy’ Grossman … creature supervisor
Jonathan Harman … digital artist: The Orphanage
Matthew Hendershot … digital artist: The Orphanage
Sarahjane Javelo … digital paint/rotoscope artist
Bomsok Ku … lighting technical director
Moonsung Lee … CG animator
Stu Maschwitz … senior staff: The Orphanage
Ian McCamey … editorial supervisor
Nicholas McDowell … systems engineer
Phil ‘Captain 3D’ McNally … character animator
Yvette Memory … visual effects coordinator
Luke O’Byrne … visual effects producer
JaeWook Park … technical director
Alex Prichard … digital artist: The Orphanage
Dav Rauch … visual effects artist
Jonathan Rothbart … visual effects supervisor
Jesse Russell … digital compositor
Marc Sadeghi … executive visual effects producer
Carsten Sørensen … senior staff: The Orphanage
Yuko Takeshita … visual effects assistant
Ryan Tudhope … digital environment supervisor
Kristi Valk … digital artist: The Orphanage
Christopher Walsh … animation supervisor
Carl Walters … visual effects editor
Jeepers Creepers 3: The Creeper Walks Among Us
In March 2006 Jeepers Creepers 3: The Creeper Walks Among Us was announced.
Jeepers Creepers 3 is set 23 years after the events in the first film. Trish Jenner is the mother of a teenage son named Darry, named after the brother she lost 23 years ago. Trish has a recurring nightmare where her son suffers the same fate as her brother did, killed by the Creeper. Determined to prevent this from happening, Trish, who is now a rich and powerful woman, sets out on a final quest with Jack Taggart Sr. and Jr. to end the Creeper’s reign of terror once and for all.
Natural Born Killers is a controversial 1994 satirical crime film directed by Oliver Stone about a husband and wife pair of mass murderers and the media coverage given to them. It stars Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis, and features appearances by Rodney Dangerfield, Robert Downey, Jr., Tom Sizemore, and Tommy Lee Jones. It is based on a screenplay by Quentin Tarantino that was heavily revised by Stone with writer Dave Veloz and associate producer Richard Rutowski. Notorious for its violent content, the film was named the 8th most controversial movie of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
The film was promoted with the tagline “A bold new film that takes a look at a country seduced by fame, obsessed by crime and consumed by the media.”, and was released theatrically in the United States on August 26, 1994.
Plot: The story of a husband and wife who are serial killers involved in a cross country killing spree that elevates them from fugitives into media celebrities.
Make Up Department Cydney Cornell … hair designer
John E. Jackson … makeup artist
Matthew W. Mungle … key makeup artist
Matthew W. Mungle … special makeup effects artist
Gordon J. Smith … special makeup effects artist
Melissa Yonkey … hair stylist
Complete Guide to Special Effects Makeup
Special Effects Department Larry L. Fuentes … special effects foreman
Steve Luport … special effects
Frank L. Pope … special effects
Jim Schwalm … special effects
Bob Stoker … special effects foreman
Lucinda Strub … special effects
Matt Sweeney … special effects coordinator
G. Peter King … special effects (uncredited)
Visual Effects Department Daniel Chuba … visual effects producer: PDI
Rebecca Marie … visual effects supervisor: PDI
Alex Olivares … optical effects coordinator
Wendy Rogers … lead animator: PDI
Cathy Wagner … animator: PDI
Aaron Dem … assistant to the producers: PDI (uncredited)
Al Magliochetti … visual effects (uncredited)
Carter Tomassi … animation camera (uncredited)
Invasion Earth: The Aliens are Here! a 1988 Sci-fi/comedy film with none other than the legendary horror/sci-fi archivist and historian of props, Bob Burns, as “creature operator” for the film.
Insect-like aliens invade a small town. The local teenagers have been watching a sci-fi marathon in the local theater, and from those films they get ideas on how to fight the creatures. Written by Miller Drake. Directed by George Maitland. Starring Janice Fabian, Christian Lee, Larry Bagby and Dana Young.
Make Up Department Kris Rosenberger … body makeup artist
Kris Rosenberger … hair stylist
Jim Towler … makeup artist (uncredited)
Special Effects Department Roger George … special mechanical effects
Alan Hoffman … creature consultant
Donald J. Long … special effects assistant: credited as production assistant
Michael McCracken … creature creator
Lise Romanoff … special mechanical effects
Visual Effects Department Bob Burns … creature operator
Tom Campbell … production assistant
Steve Fagerquist … creature operator
Eric Gerds … visual effects gaffer
Judith Larsen … visual effects camera
Rob Maine … visual effects assistant
Carl Martin … graphic designer
Pat McClung … visual effects second unit director
Michael McCracken Jr. … creature crew
Jim McPherson … creature crew
Patrick Simmons … creature crew
Dennis Skotak … visual effects supervisor
Jim Towler … chief visual effects technician
Mark Williams … model maker
Night of the Creeps is a 1986 horror film written and directed by Fred Dekker. Night of the Creeps stars Tom Atkins, Jason Lively and Jill Whitlow. The film is notable as an earnest attempt at a B movie and a spoof of the genre. While the main plot of the film is related to zombies, the film also mixes in takes on slashers and alien invasion films.
Tagline: “The good news is your dates are here. The bad news is… they’re dead.”
Alien brain parasites, entering humans through the mouth, turn their host into a killing zombie. Some teenagers start to fight against them.
Night of the Creeps (1986)
Make Up Department Howard Berger … makeup effects artist
Frankie Campbell … hair stylist
Bonita M. DeHaven … set hair stylist
Bonita M. DeHaven … set makeup artist
Earl Ellis … makeup effects artist
Robert Kurtzman … makeup effects artist
Tim Lawrence … makeup effects artist
Charles Lutkus … makeup effects artist
Mark Maitre … makeup effects artist
Shawn McEnroe … makeup effects artist
David B. Miller … makeup effects and creeps design
Kyle Rae Tucy … makeup artist
Bruce Zahlava … makeup effects artist
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Special Effects Department Roger George … special effects
Anthony Laudati … dimensional animation effects
Todd Masters … dimensional animation effects
Lise Romanoff … special effects assistant
Anton Rupprecht … dimensional animation effects
Diana Allen Williams … special effects technician
Diana Williams … dimensional animation effects
Visual Effects Department Michael Karp … motion control operator
David B. Sharp … supervisor: spaceship interiors
David Stipes … visual effects supervisor: David Stipes Productions
A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989) is an American slasher film. It is the fifth film in the A Nightmare on Elm Street series. The film’s general tone was much more gothic and dark than the films before, and used a blue filter lighting technique in most of the scenes. The film’s main titles do not display the “5″ which was used in all of the promotional material, TV spots, trailers, and merchandise. The main titles simply say “A Nightmare on Elm Street: The Dream Child“.
Freddy Krueger returns to deliver a whole new breed of terror in his most fiendishly perverse frightfest yet!
Unable to overpower the Dream Master who vanquished him in A Nightmare of Elm Street 4, Freddy (Robert Englund) haunts the innocent dreams of her unborn child and preys upon her friends with sheer horror. Will the child be saved from becoming Freddy’s newest weapon or will the maniac again resurrect his legacy of evil?
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For this eye-popping installment, director Stephen Hopkins (Lost in Space, Predator 2) enlisted make-up wizard David Miller (The Terminator), original creator of Freddy’s hideous visage. The result: a face that not even a mother could love, and terror beyond your wildest nightmares!
Trivia:
This is one the only “A Nightmare On Elm Street” movie where the famous song is changed. Original: One, two, Freddy’s coming for you. Three, four, better lock your door. Five, six, grab your crucifix. Seven, eight, gonna stay up late. Nine, ten, never sleep again. Edited: One, two, Freddy’s coming for you. Three, four, better lock your door. Five, six, grab your crucifix. Seven, eight, better stay up late. Nine, ten, he’s back again…
Both horror author Stephen King and comic book writer Frank Miller were offered the job of writing and directing this movie.
During the sequence in which the nun (Amanda) is raped by the criminally insane, Robert Englund is wandering around in the background without his Freddy makeup—including one shot in which the camera lingers on him for a few seconds.
Lisa Wilcox’s name appears on the opening credits, but not on the ending credits. Due to this mistake, New Line offered her top billing on all promotional materials in fear of her suing them.
Bruce Dickinson, famed singer of heavy metal band Iron Maiden, wrote and performed the song Bring Your Daughter… to the Slaughter for this movie’s soundtrack. The song, later re-recorded by the band Iron Maiden itself, went on to be their first (and so far, only) #1 UK single.
Make Up Department Howard Berger … special makeup effects artist
R. Christopher Biggs … special makeup effects artist
Lynne K. Eagan … key hair stylist
Kathryn Miles Kelly … key makeup artist
Nedra Hainey … makeup artist: second unit
Robert Kurtzman … special makeup effects artist
David B. Miller … makeup artist
Gregory Nicotero … special makeup effects artist
Louis Lazzara … makeup artist: Robert Englund (uncredited)
Brian Wade … special makeup effects artist (uncredited)
Special Effects Department Gino Acevedo … effects crew: David Miller Studio
David Beneke … effects crew: Art and Magic
Howard Berger … supervisor: Freddy’s head de-merge effects
Paul Berg … prosthetics creator: Todd Masters Company
Doug Beswick … supervisor: “Diving Board” and “Phantom Prowler” sequences
R. Christopher Biggs … creator: Dan’s mechanical suit and Freddy’s bike
R. Christopher Biggs … special effects makeup
Brian Blair … effects crew: David Miller Studio
Theresa Burkett … fabricator: Doug Beswick Productions
Camille Calvet … effects crew: Art and Magic
Yancy Calzada … stop-motion effects animator: Doug Beswick Productions
Helen Cohen … special effects coordinator: Todd Masters Company
Mitchell J. Coughlin … effects crew: Art and Magic
Barry Crane … moldmaker: Todd Masters Company
Lisa Doering … effects crew: David Miller Studio
Ryan Effner … special effects
Mike Elizalde … effects crew: David Miller Studio
Mike Elizalde … sculptor: Todd Masters Company
Earl Ellis … sculptor: Ted Rae Effects Crew
Thomas Floutz … cosmetics creator: Todd Masters Company
Bruce Spaulding Fuller … sculptor: K.N.B. Effects Group
Mark Garbarino … prosthetics creator: Todd Masters Company
Mecki Heussen … effects crew: David Miller Studio
Robyn Jacobs … special effects coordinator: Todd Masters Company
Robyn Jacobs … special effects technician
Bradford Johnson … special effects technician
Lynette Johnson … miniature costuming: Ted Rae Effects Crew
Adam Jones … effects crew: The Character Shop Inc.
Robert Kurtzman … supervisor: Freddy’s head de-merge effects
Rick Lazzarini … creator: womb with a fetal view canal
Mark Maitre … sculptor: K.N.B. Effects Group
Robert J. Marino … prosthetics creator: Todd Masters Company
Todd Masters … “Gretta” prosthetics and supplemental prosthetic effects
Bud McGrew … effects crew: Art and Magic
Mike Measimer … moldmaker: Todd Masters Company
David Mesloh … armature machinist: Ted Rae Effects crew
David B. Miller … creator: Freddy’s baby and resurrection sequence
Dave Nelson … effects crew: David Miller Studio
Gregory Nicotero … supervisor: Freddy’s head de-merge effects
Scott Oshita … lab technician: K.N.B. Effects Group
Ron Pipes … lab technician: K.N.B. Effects Group
Jon Curtis Price … effects crew: The Character Shop Inc.
Ted Rae … stop-motion animation
Joe Reader … effects crew: The Character Shop Inc.
Mike J. Regan … effects crew: David Miller Studio
James Rohland … effects crew: Art and Magic
William Russell … special effects camera assistant
Andy Schoneberg … additional special effects assistant: Todd Masters Company
Stacie Sharp … special effects coordinator: Ted Rae Effects Crew
Shannon Shea … effects crew: The Character Shop Inc.
Brian Simpson … effects crew: The Character Shop Inc.
Mark Sisson … effects crew: David Miller Studio
F. Lee Stone … mechanical effects: K.N.B. Effects Group
Mark Tavares … lab technician: K.N.B. Effects Group
Candace Van Woerkom … seamstress: Todd Masters Company
Steve Wang … sculptor: Ted Rae Effects Crew
Chuck Williams … sculptor: Ted Rae Effects Crew
George Wong … effects technician: Doug Beswick Productions
Brannon Wright … effects crew: Art and Magic
Roland Blancaflor … special effects technician (uncredited)
Sandy Collora … creature effects crew (uncredited)
Richard Miranda … special effects assistant (uncredited)
Anthony Simonaitis … special effects foreman (uncredited)
Don Waller … special effects technician (uncredited)
Tom Williamson … animatronics (uncredited)
AJ Workman … special effects design: Chris Biggs shop (uncredited)
Visual Effects Department Robert D. Bailey … titles & opticals
Jammie Friday … animator
Tom Gleason … model maker
Peter Kuran … special optical effects photography
Jeff Matakovich … visual effects optical supervisor
Alan Munro … visual effects supervisor
Jim Aupperle … stop-motion crew (uncredited)
Chris Dawson … effects camera assistant (uncredited)
Robert Stromberg … matte paintings (uncredited)
Don Waller … stop motion animator (uncredited)