I think we can all agree that the really deep, dark ocean depths are a scary place. We don't know what's down there -what we DO know is that we don't know. It's a perfect place to set a scary story, and many authors have. I'd been eying H G Wells´ short story "In the Abyss", where a scientist in a bathysphere encounters amphibious humanoids, indeed; he's shown their whole civilization on the sea floor. Eventually, I decided to cook up my own tale exploring Talassophobia, which as phobias go, seems to be a trendy one. A lot of people have it. It's basically the fear of the deep ocean, but could just as well say that it's about being averse to dark, unknown places. I decided to make the monsters of my story enlarged versions of real deep sea fish. All the fish I based my puppets on are quite small in real life. Making them bigger turned them into creepy monsters.
The rubber skin bits were glued onto the foam padding with liquid latex. Tinted latex was then applied along the edges of each piece with a pointy dental tool to make all bits blend together.
When the ribs were firmly attached, I pressed down a piece of Monster Clay over each fin section until the ribs went halfway down into the clay. Latex was then applied over and in between the ribs. When two layers of latex had dried, the clay was peeled off, and a pretty decent, semi-transparent fin was the result.
The long teeth were also made from tissue paper and latex. The eyes were made with scrapbooking pearls with flat backsides. The body of the puppet was dabbed with tinted latex using a sponge. I forgot to say that where the jaw joins the body I added a threaded 3 mm nut, so I could attach my animation flying rig.
These sculptures had a fair few nooks and crannies, so to make sure the tinted latex got in everywhere, It was applied with Q-tips.
Like with the anglerfish, this puppet has Polymorph lining the inside of the head, with a wooden dowel placed across the head as an attachment point for the aluminum wire going through the body.
I used thin polyurethane foam to pad the body over the 3 mm aluminum wire.
I wanted a smooth surface for the body and dabbed the latex on the texture-less backside of a plaster mold to create a piece of skin covering one side of the puppet's body.
The finished puppet has a "beard" made from cotton dipped in latex. The teeth were made the same way. The body is painted with tinted latex and touched up with acrylic airbrush colors. More scrapbooking pearls were glued to the body to simulate the look of organic lights, common in deep sea fish. The eyes were clear acrylic domes with photoshopped images glued to the flat backside using transparent glue. Again, this puppet has a flying rig attachment point just behind its jaw.
The threaded bolt here marks the attachment point for the flying rig. The bolt is there to allow me to cover the puppet with latex skin without cover up the attachment point hole.
This puppet has the same thin latex fins that I put on my Viperfish. The shiny blue eyes are drops of UV resin put on metallic candy wrappings.
I cast the whole head as one single piece of latex from a single plaster mold. Again, a single aluminum wire makes out the body, padded with a wrapping of foam.
The eyes are just painted onto the flat areas on the sculpted head representing the eye areas. I then added drops of UV resin to create a transparent lens.
I found a whole bunch of rendered CG images on Depostphotos.com. Originally I'd planned to build a model diving bell from a plastic lamp globe. But when I found these CG images I thought they were already so perfect I really didn't have to build that model.
To place me inside the diving bell I just filmed me in front of my puppet green screen tage. I was so lazy I couldn't even be bothered putting up my regular green screen, but it worked out perfectly in the end. In Photoshop I cut out the front-facing window in the CD diving bell images, stuck me behind that layer in After Effects, and then stuck yet another layer behind me, showing the inside of an old submarine, with pipes, levers and stuff.
If the final giant fish swallowing the diving bell seems familiar it's because it's my "Dagon" monster puppet, or rather a photographic representation of it, 2D animated in After Effects. I actually don't have that puppet anymore, I sold it to a collector in California a couple of years ago.
I really enjoy making these shorter, atmospheric films, especially with a little bit of silliness added. The music was composed my my friend Marco Zanelli. It's not our first, nor our last collaboration. Fortunately for me, a big enough number of my YouTube audience seems to be suffering from Talassophobia to have been both creeped out and entertained by this little film.