Monsterpocalypse – General Hondo III

20 thoughts on “Monsterpocalypse – General Hondo III”

  1. Great progress on Hondo, and really appreciate the forced shadow on the backplate just below what would be his shoulder blades, as for the difference in the colors with the gauntlet, it could be two kinds of metal, or just brighten up the top third to match then putting the rest in shadow.

    Glad you enjoyed the comic, not surprised on the film, as it was divisive when it came out, I enjoyed the movie and all of my children have grown up watching it, and Dark Crystal, which Henson did before this one, which actually made less in the cinema than Labyrinth, people just couldn’t seem to get past a whole movie starring puppets.

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    1. I’m glad you like the highlights and shadows too. It really sells the metal look. I had debated doing a camo pattern on the metal but am glad I didn’t go that route in the end. I have been working on the gauntlet and pushed the highlights a bit more and I think that helps make everything fit better. We’ll see if that does the trick as more of the armor gets finished too.

      I expected to enjoy Labyrinth, the movie version, and I did think it was totally fine but it just didn’t have the magic the comic did for me which I did not expect. I have heard of the Dark Crystal and I should probably give that one a watch too.

      Sadly, its hard to imagine something like the Muppet Show or anything Jim Henson worked on happening again. I think advancements in computer graphics (or whatever the proper name is for digitally created scenes) have probably made the odds of people accepting puppets in a movie even less likely.

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      1. A few years back Netflix did a series set in the Dark Crystal world, was hugely popular, but they wont be making anymore, as it was too expensive to produce.

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  2. Amazing work on Hondo again. The NMM on his armour just blows me away, I’m very much in awe of your skills.

    We somewhat recently rewatched Labyrinth and I have to say that my experience was very different from yours in that I found that I still loved it. In fact, all the bonkers 80s puppetry was even more amusing now that it also bears the sheen of nostalgia. However, my kids also got right into it so I clearly it wasn’t only trading on the nostalgia factor. I’m glad that you enjoyed the comic though.

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    1. Thanks, mate! I’m glad you like him so far. It should get more and more exciting from here as I start to finish parts of the mini.

      I’m really glad to hear that your kids liked it! Labyrinth is a great story about growing up/coming of age. I’ve been thinking about it since I posted this latest article and perhaps this is a case where I really like the first version I was exposed to (the comic book) and that is the way I prefer it now. I’ve seen my wife go through this with her favorite musical, Wicked. She saw that many years ago and the movie just can’t replace it for her. Humans can be oddly finicky when it comes down to it 🙂

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  3. Nice work on that back armour, very smooth blending you got there. Interested to see what you do with the buildings, that’s a really interesting theme for a display base (also exciting to find out what Hondo’s opponent will be!)

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    1. Thank you, Nic! I’m glad to hear you’re anticipating more of the diorama too. I’m in the same camp though we’ll both have to be patient as there’s most definitely weeks of work yet to come!

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    1. Thank you, John! And no views are required on Labyrinth. I was too young to see it when it came out and I’m guessing you weren’t the target audience in 1986 either! 🙂

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  4. Wait, what?? You’ve never watched the movie the labyrinth?? That’s wild and as crazy as my best mate not ever seeing the movie Rocky. There’s just some movies you have to watch brother. I’m glad you enjoyed the comics but you have to watch the movie now too. Let me know what you think.

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    1. Mate, this is really going to send you through the roof. I tried to watch Labyrinth and wasn’t enjoying it so I decided to just finish reading the comic book instead. I don’t know if I’ve ever watched Rocky… I don’t think so. I watched Creed and that was really good though. Boxing in general is great for movies. There’s been a lot of good ones over the years.

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  5. The armour looks perfectly fine to me, but if you really want to make sure the shadows and light values are “perfect”, you can try lighting them starkly with directional light in a dark room and taking photos of them from multiple angles. Then turn those photos into greyscale using your favourite image editing program – you will then have a series of reference images showing the light and dark areas as well as the transitions – all to use as a gudeline for consistency.

    Way more faffing about than I’d use for my models, but for a display project, it could be worth the time investment.

    As for Labyrinth, it may well be a case of “you had to be there, or at least first watch it when you were young”. It’s certainly far from a failure given how entrenched it has become in pop culture for literally decades, though. Surprising to hear that Jim Henson thought as much – but then again as a creator he sees all of the flaws from Day 1 – like we do with our models and the little things we’re unhappy about that noone else cares about.

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    1. I follow a process similar to what you describe to help me see where light hits certain shapes, especially complex ones. I don’t always follow it exactly but its a great strategy for achieving realistic results. I’ll have to try the grayscale part of your suggestion sometime soon as it can’t hurt to have some extra clarity on how light works on a given surface.

      That’s a very good theory on Labyrinth. My experience would definitely support it as well. I agree that Henson has nothing to be ashamed of. Taking chances creatively speaking doesn’t always pay off but it makes you better at what you do or at least that’s the way I look at it.

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