Today we’ll finish up with 2019’s “Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man,” when we left off we were down in the catacombs, working our way back to the ruins of Frankenstein’s castle...
One of my favorite scenes in the maze was Dr. Frankenstein’s ruined library with its scores of books that hold the secret to life. Once again, we drew inspiration for this scene from the 1943 film and Bernie Wrightson’s amazing illustrations for the 1983 graphic novel
In our version, Dr Frankenstein’s library has been ravaged by fire after his monster threw the switch that caused that massive explosion at the end of Bride of Frankenstein. Here’s a pic I took when our props and dressing team had started work in that scene...
And here’s some pics of the final scene, where the Wolf Man makes his entrance through the gothic window!
The lab scene was pulled straight from the 1943 film, with a few additions. Chris and I both loved the visual of Frankenstein and the Wolf Man strapped to gurneys and designed the scene so the path went right between them!
There was quite a lot going on in this scene so I’ll try to point out a few details. First off, Dr Frankenstein didn’t make it out of the castle after his monster threw the switch in bride...that’s his charred corpse slung over the giant turbine/dynamo!
With Dr Frankenstein otherwise occupied (ie dead), Ygor has assumed the role of doctor in the scene. Here’s a few pics of him in action...always loved this mask!
And as for the poor bride...we’ll in our 2018 maze, she was in pieces when the lab exploded so obviously she couldn’t walk out of there. So the Bride is like an overcooked hot dog...but still alive. Here’s a pic of the scene and a close up of her finished mask.
We exit the lab into the frozen caverns of the castle, a scene inspired by the 1943 film and its sequel “House of Frankenstein.” I always loved those sequences and wanted to try and recreate it for our maze. This meant we had to come up with alternate looks for our characters...
These are the “frozen” versions of Frankenstein’s Monster and The Wolf Man masks we first created for Universal Monsters in 2018...I really liked the way these turned out.
And here’s a few shots of that sequence. We pumped cold air into the scene to make it feel “chilly” Just look at the difference between these pics when some tries to shoot a maze with a flash and when they don’t. Changes the whole look (no flash photography!)
The final scene was originally going to be a tableau of frozen Frankenstein’s Monster and The Wolf Man locked in mortal combat. While that would have been a cool visual it wasn’t scary so we changed it to a return to the film vault with the monsters busting through the posters.
Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man trivia - the key art for the maze was inspired by this statue by Sideshow toys that I have in my Monster Room. The Latin inscription on the grave marker translates to “Death conquerors all.”
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We’re going to close out the week with a look back at “Universal Monsters: Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man” from 2019. I always envisioned The Universal Monsters maze from 2018 as being like “The Avengers” movie that we would spin-off if it worked. This was the first spin off...
This maze was loosely based on the 1943 Universal film “Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man.” We also combined elements from 1939’s Son of Frankenstein and 1944’s House of Frankenstein. I’ll show examples of that inspiration as we go along
The facade statement for the maze was the gypsy camp which was something we designed but didn’t use for the 2018 maze. Slash created an original score for the maze including a gypsy theme for this section.
Today we’re gonna take a look at Stranger Things from HHN 2019, this was the second maze we created for the Netflix series and like the previous one it was housed inside Stage 29. The original idea was to do a maze based solely on season 2 but it ended up with a tease of Season 3
The maze began where season 1 ended, with Will in his bathroom vomiting up that strange parasite that would eventually become the Demo Dogs. This scene utilised our “disappearing room” effect, changing from a normal bathroom to a Upside Down version...
From there we took you back through the Byers house that we visited in 2018, only now you’re doing it in reverse and the walls are covered with Will’s tunnel maps that he drew after encountering The Mind Flayer. All of these drawings (and there were a ton) were created by hand...
Greetings Boils and Ghouls. Today we’re going to take look back at HHN 2019’s “Creepshow.” I’ve always been a big fan of this film since I first saw it back in 1982. When our good friend Greg Nicotero told us he was producing a new series...we jumped at the chance to be involved!
From the beginning, we new this maze was going to be a mash up of segments from the original film and episodes of the new series. We eventually settled on 5 stories. “Father’s Day,” “The Crate,” “They’re Creeping Up on You,” “Grey Matter” & “Bad Wolf Down.”
We also know we wanted to pay homage to the EC comic book style of the film/series, both with the set design and the exaggerated blue and red lighting. We also knew we wanted The Creep to be the “connective tissue” of the maze, just as he was in the movie/series...
OK...let’s see if I can take you through “The Curse of Pandora’s Box” by only using the text from the poem I wrote for Pandora to narrate in the maze. This is either going to be cool or a complete disaster! So let’s do this...
“Come inside...come inside
Anything can be acquired...
Anything your heart desires...”
“Come inside...come inside...
Anything can be acquired...
Anything your heart desires...”
Today were going to look at “The Curse of Pandora’s Box.” Chris & I both had ideas for an original maze. Chris had the basic idea for Pandora while I was developing a Latino themed maze (like La Llorona & El Cucuy). We decided to go for Pandora so I shelved my idea for later.
Chris’ idea was to have guests enter Pandora’s Box and then transition the environment to UV with black light sets and characters (which we hadn’t really done since Clowns in 2014). So I set about doing what I always do at the start of a maze...tons of research.
I started with the obvious...the story of Pandora which first appears with the poet Hesoid in 700 BC. I learned that Pandora wasn’t given a box in Hesoid’s tale...it was a jar. Someone improperly translated the story from Greek and the box stuck, which is good. A jar isn’t scary
Today we’ll continue our look behind the scenes of HHN 2019 with House of 1000 Corpses, a maze we’d previously featured at the event in 2010 and 2011 (and once as Rob Zombie’s American Nightmare in the era before we brought HHN back in 2006). So let’s step inside...
Obviously Chris and I have had a long history working with Mr. Zombie (he even performed in the maze that predates my time with HHN). Hard to believe this pic on the red carpet from 2011 is 10 years old now...and that Sid Haig (far right) is no longer with us. RIP Good sir!
The two previous HOTC mazes were built in the then T2 attraction’s exterior queue line, which is a much taller/larger space. They were also 3D mazes so this time we decided to do it non-3D. The approach was still Captain Spaulding’s Museum of Monsters and Madmen...