David W. Allen
BornOctober 22, 1944
Los Angeles, California, United States
DiedAugust 16, 1999(1999-08-16) (aged 54)
Burbank, California, United States
OccupationStop motion model animator

David W. Allen (October 22, 1944 – August 16, 1999) was an American film and television stop motion model (puppet) animator.

Allen provided special effects on such productions as The Howling, Twilight Zone: The Movie, Young Sherlock Holmes (for which he earned an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects nomination), Willow and Honey, I Shrunk the Kids. He also had a long association with producer Charles Band, working on such films as Dolls, Puppet Master, Bride of Re-Animator, Subspecies and Demonic Toys.

Career

Some of Allen's earliest animation work can be seen in the 1970 16mm student film Equinox, which was expanded from a short film to a feature-length film by Jack H. Harris and re-titled The Beast for VHS video release in the 1980s.

Although he had been working for years in animation, mostly doing commercials like the Pillsbury Doughboy, Allen made a splash on movie viewers when he animated the "Nesuahyrrah" monster who appears at the climax of the semi-porn low-brow parody comedy Flesh Gordon produced by Howard Ziehm in 1974. The film also featured an animation sequence from long-time Allen friend Jim Danforth.

Allen's contributed model animation to a Volkswagen commercial made in 1972 in which King Kong spots a giant version of the car from his Empire State Building perch in New York. Climbing down from the building, Kong puts his human "date" into the passenger seat, gets in the car, and drives down Fifth Avenue out of sight. The spot aired only once on network TV and, in spite of favorable public response, was pulled because VW executives decided that they did not like the image of an ape driving their car.

Allen joined with Jim Danforth, a long-time friend, to provide model animation for the low-budget horror film The Crater Lake Monster (1977). He also animated the aliens in the low-budget science fiction film Laserblast (1978).

With Danforth, Ray Harryhausen, various other model animators, visual effects artists, film producers and directors, Allen helped organize an event in March 1983 at Mann's Chinese Theater commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the release of King Kong, loaning his VW Kong model for display at the Roosevelt Hotel across the street from the theater.

Allen was also hired to animate the little flying saucers for the hit feature-length theatrical film Batteries Not Included (1987), a story that was originally intended to be an episode of Spielberg's Amazing Stories TV series. Allen and his crew animated the hallucinations and creatures in Barry Levinson's 1985 film Young Sherlock Holmes, earning an Academy Award Nomination in 1985.[1]

His production company, David Allen Productions, did visual effects and model animation for the bizarre monster movie Freaked in 1992.

Up until his death from cancer in 1999, Allen had been intermittently working on the stop motion effects for the film The Primevals, his own production. This project dates from early in his career, in the late 1960s, when he pitched an epic fantasy to Hammer Film executives. He developed the idea over the years, and in 1978 he began production with producer Charles Band. The film was the subject of a cover story in Cinefantastique Magazine that year, but despite the interest, the production was shut down, then briefly revived twice more, then shut down again. An Allen protégé, Chris Endicott, has done some further animation work on the film and Band is planning to release a completed version of the film.

David Allen and his production company associates continued to nurture a long-term association with Charles Band, producing animation and other effects for a series of Band produced and/or directed fantasy films released either theatrically and direct to video markets by Paramount Pictures during the 1980s and 90s. Some of the films in this series are the Puppet Master films, the Prehysteria series, the Demonic Toys films, and various impressive one-shot productions such as the skeletons of dinosaurs that come to life and do battle in the film Doctor Mordrid.

Allen's production company, now helmed by Chris Endicott, continues to do effects work on various films.

Personal life

In 1995, Allen was married to Donita Woodruff, whom he met in 1990. Woodruff learned that Allen had previously dated a woman named Valerie Taylor intermittently starting in 1985, which led to a dispute between Woodruff and Taylor. Woodruff suspected that Taylor had a criminal past, and found enough evidence to persuade the police to arrest her in 1996 for a 1979 murder in South Carolina. Taylor pleaded self-defense and served two years. Allen and Woodruff were divorced in 1998.[2]

Visual effects

References

  1. Young Sherlock Holmes Credits and Crew at IMDb.
  2. Donita Woodruff, Deadly Masquerade: A True Story of Illicit Passion, Buried Secrets, and Murder, Far Hills, N.J.: New Horizon Press, 2005. New York: St Martin’s Paperbacks 2007.
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