Supermarionation Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Supermarionation (standing for super marionette animation) is a puppetry technique devised by the British production company AP Films and used extensively in its numerous children's action-adventure series, the most famous of which is undoubtedly Thunderbirds.The system used marionettes suspended and controlled by thin wires. The fine metal filaments doubled as both suspension-control wires for puppet movement, and as electrical cables that took the control signals to the electronic components concealed in the marionettes' heads.
The heads contained solenoid motors that created the synchronized mouth movements for dialogue and other functions. The puppets' eyes were also controlled in this way. The voice synchronisation was achieved by using a specially designed audio filter which was actuated by the signal from the pre-recorded tapes of the voice actors; this filter would convert the signal into a series of pulses which then travelled down the wire to to the solenoids controlling the puppet's lips, creating lip movements that were precisely synchronised with the dialogue.
Because the marionettes could not be made to walk convincingly, most scenes depicted the characters either standing or sitting, or placed them in settings that allowed the use of vehicles and other mechanical transportation systems. The personal hovercraft used in Thunderbirds were one of the devices the producers used to covercome this problem.
Occasionally, close-ups of an real actor's hand would be inserted to show actions such as turning keys, pressing buttons, etc. This was affectionately parodied in the 2004 Thunderbirds feature film, in which director Jonathan Frakes included a brief shot of a puppet hand, suspended by wires, operating the controls of Thunderbird 2.
The control mechanisms were originally placed within the puppets' heads, which meant the heads had to be disproportionately large compared to the bodies, like many comic strip characters. The advent of miniaturised electronic components in the mid-1960s meant that, beginning with Captain Scarlet, a new type of puppet was designed, with a correctly-proportioned head and control mechanisms in the chest, connected to the mouth and eyes by narrow rods through the neck. This resulted in a far more realistic appearance for the puppets.
In many cases, the puppets were modelled on the actor voicing the role; two good examples are Lady Penelope in Thunderbirds, which closely remembled Sylvia Anderson, and Captain Blue in Captain Scarlet who looks like his voice actor, Ed Bishop). Other characters were based on well-known film stars, such as Capt. Troy Tempest in Stingray who was based on James Garner, and Captain Scarlet, who was modelled on Cary Grant. Stingray also featured the only non-speaking Supermarionation puppet - the mermaid, Marina.
The term was coined by Gerry Anderson, possibly in imitation of Ray Harryhausen's stop motion technique, Super Dynamation.
Anderson's 'supermarionated' television shows were:
- Four Feather Falls (1960)
- Supercar (1960)
- Fireball XL5 (1962)
- Stingray (1963)
- Thunderbirds (1964)
- Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons (1967)
- Joe 90 (1968)
- The Secret Service (1969)
Two feature films based upon Thunderbirds were also made with Supermarionation: Thunderbirds Are GO (1966) and Thunderbird 6 (1967).
A later show, Terrahawks, used hand-controlled puppets, mostly controlled from beneath using a system called Supermacromation, which was broadly similar to the techniques developed by Jim Henson.
A recent US television advertisement for the Orbitz online travel service is styled to suggest supermarionation, though whether it could correctly be called by the term is open to question.
, a 2004 movie by South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, is inspired by and uses the same style of puppetry as Thunderbirds.
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