1960s and 1970s
Harryhausen worked on a series of fantasy films in
the 1960s, most importantly
Jason and the
Argonauts (1963). Many critics have
identified this film as Harryhausen's masterwork for
its
stop-motion
animated statues, skeletons,
harpies,
hydra,
and other mythological creatures. Other Harryhausen
fantasy and science fantasy collaborations from the
decade include the 1961 adaptation of
Jules Verne's
Mysterious
Island, the critically panned
One Million
Years B.C. starring
Raquel Welch,
and
The Valley of
Gwangi (1969).
Otherwise, the 1960's were almost entirely devoid of
fantasy films. The fantasy picture
7 Faces of Dr.
Lao, in which
Tony Randall
portrayed several characters from Greek mythology,
was released in 1964. But the 1967 adaptation of the
Broadway musical
Camelot
removed most of the fantasy elements from
T. H. White's
classic
The Once and
Future King, on which the musical had
been based.
Fantasy elements of
Arthurian legend
were again featured, albeit absurdly, in 1975's
Monty Python and
the Holy Grail. Harryhousen also
returned to the silver screen in the 1970s with two
additional Sinbad fantasies,
The Golden
Voyage of Sinbad (1974) and
Sinbad and the
Eye of the Tiger (1977). The animated
movie
Wizards
(1977) had limited success at the box office but
achieved status as a
cult film.
Some would consider 1977's
Oh God!,
starring
George Burns
to be a fantasy film, and
Heaven Can Wait
(1978) was a successful Bangsian fantasy remake of
1941's Here Comes Mr. Jordan (not 1943's
Heaven Can Wait).
A
few low budget "Lost World" pictures were made in
the 1970s, such as 1975's
The Land That
Time Forgot. Otherwise, the fantasy
genre was largely absent from mainstream movies in
this decade, although 1971's
Bedknobs and
Broomsticks and
Willy Wonka &
the Chocolate Factory were two
fantasy pictures in the public eye.
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