In Memoriam

Frazetta

By May 10, 2010No Comments

My old friend Joseph Failla wrote me to com­mis­er­ate today:

I just read about Frank Frazetta’s passing, he was 82.
Thanks to cov­er art from the likes of CREEPY, EERIE and VAMPIRELLA magazines, Frazetta became one of the first true Gods of illus­tra­tion I was aware of. But he also pro­duced some of the most enti­cing movie poster art work I can recall. I’ve included a few examples that always caught my imagination:

Frazetta_gauntelet77

Frazetta_after_the_fox66

Frazetta_mad_monster_party66

Frazetta_night_they_raided_minskys68

Frazetta_fearless_vampire_killers67

I won­der if any of his JOHN CARTER OF MARS illus­tra­tions will be acknow­ledged by the upcom­ing film ver­sion? I nev­er thought either of the CONAN films tapped into the sheer oth­er­world­li­ness of his work.”

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  • Jordan says:

    I think the influ­ence of Mad Magazine’s Jack Davis is very strong in these samples…or per­haps the influ­ence went the oth­er way? There seemed to be a per­vas­ive illus­tra­tion style going on dur­ing this era, a kind of styl­ized car­toon real­ism that’s really a lot of fun. Love that Gauntlet poster!
    http://www.americanartarchives.com/davis,jack.htm

  • Owain Wilson says:

    The Gauntlet poster is amaz­ing. I love that 60s and 70s approach to poster illus­tra­tion, where you know full well that the movie itself will not con­tain any­thing even remotely as spec­tac­u­lar as the poster promises.

  • D Cairns says:

    Norman Wisdom drawn by Frank Frazetta? That’s made my day. Although had he depic­ted Norm clutch­ing a giant battle-exe in one hand a a skimpily-clad gal in the oth­er, that might have been even better.

  • Ali Arikan says:

    The the­at­ric­al one sheet for “Conan The Barbarian” was by also Frank Frazetta. Even though I agree that the “oth­er­world­li­ness” of Frazetta’s art was absent in the Conan films, I’ve always thought that the scene in the first flick with the giant snake cap­tured, at least, the essence of Frazetta perfectly.
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/5f/Conan_the_usurper.jpg

  • Very much in agree­ment with Jordan—I see that a num­ber of posters I’d always assumed were Davis were actu­ally Frazetta. I’m actu­ally sur­prised that the influ­ence went that one—one thinks of the high-fantasy guys not being that inter­ested in the Mad-style cari­ca­tur­ists, but it’s nice to see there was­n’t such snobbery.
    As for Conan: I won­der if, in the cur­rent remake mania, we’re due for an Avatar-style reboot of the series (or a John Carter of Mars movie), with CGI pro­duc­tion that can really con­jure those trippy paperback-cover worlds.

  • Matt Miller says:

    Fuzzy, we’re get­ting both. The JCoM movie has Pixar cre­at­ive muscle behind it. The Conan movie has Marcus Nispel and a guy from Stargate.

  • Jordan’s argu­ment for styl­ist­ic intra-influences seems most likely – Davis and FF were cer­tainly col­leagues at EC, and their fel­low EC artist Wally Wood’s com­mer­cial work also bears some resemb­lance to Davis’ very dis­tinct­ive work, which was, by all accounts, pro­duced with alarm­ing speed.
    I missed the Frazetta doc PAINTING WITH FIRE, but my fan­boy youth held him in nearly G‑d-like esteem. It’s true that the Conan films wer­en’t even remotely as myth­ic as those blurry canvases Frazetta painted for the paper­back reprints in the 60’s – not even as much as the legendary Thomas/(Windsor-)Smith Marvel adapt­a­tions. Geez, John Milius, what’s the point of being a right-wing blow­hard if you can­’t deliv­er on myth?

  • Ali Arikan says:

    And the new Conan movie is decidedly, embar­rass­ingly, low budget. I have a feel­ing it will have more in com­mon with the “Kull The Conqueror” movie, than it will with either the Milius film or Franzetta’s artwork.

  • Dan Coyle says:

    That’s the best Sondra Locke’s ever looked. Hi-YOOOOOOOOO!

  • The Gauntlet poster is sweet!!! I love how FF was able to put enough details in the art without cramp­ing the poster. He will surely be miss and it is really an hon­or to see and be inspired by his works.