including lots of stuff from Pan's Labyrinth and his ideas for Smaug in the Hobbit movies and for his new Madness movie ... but be warned, it's quite a long article
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2...urrentPage=all
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I paused at what looked like an image of a double-bitted medieval hatchet. “That’s Smaug,†del Toro said. It was an overhead view: “See, he’s like a flying axe.†Del Toro thinks that monsters should appear transformed when viewed from a fresh angle, lest the audience lose a sense of awe. Defining silhouettes is the first step in good monster design, he said. “Then you start playing with movement. The next element of design is color. And then finally—finally—comes detail. A lot of people go the other way, and just pile up a lot of detail.â€
He pointed at the notebook drawing, which depicted a wizened creature. Originally, he said, the ogre was “going to have an old man’s face,†to indicate that he had been cursed for centuries, but he “didn’t like how trivial it seemed.†To emphasize the Pale Man’s monomaniacal hunger, del Toro asked his designers to render the ogre’s face blank, except for a mouth and tiny nasal punctures. He told them, “Let’s take out the eyes and put them on a platter before him.†The eyes are an allusion to St. Lucy: “I saw a statue when I was a kid where she had the eyes on a little plate. That was pretty freaky, and I liked it.â€
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2...urrentPage=all
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