and digital special effects with CGI,
filmmakers relied upon artists laboring over tiny
scaled-down sets, creating little worlds that look totally real until a
normal-sized human hand appears in the scene, one museum in France lets
visitors explore over 100 such sets, each standing out for its incredible
realism, at Musée Miniature & Cinéma in Lyon, you can gaze upon these
miniatures as well as a collection of over 300 full-scale movie props,
painstaking attention is paid to textures and weathering in
the miniature scenes,
a dimly-lit hair barber shop boasts photos of Elvis on the
walls, with stained towels crumpled on the counters, the lighting is half of
the magic, often coming in through windows or illuminating only one small
section of a scene so the rest remains shadowy and mysterious,
you can pick up a magnifying glass and examine the museum’s
1,000-piece collection of arts and crafts in miniature,
or walk onto scaled sets that are somewhere between miniatures
and full-size, which made train crashes and spaceship scenes a lot easier to
film,
the Musée Miniature & Cinéma is owned and curated by Dan Ohlmann, himself a famed miniaturist responsible for many of the scenes that
can be found within the museum, You can even go ‘backstage’ to watch him and
other miniature artists work on commissioned pieces and restore artifacts from
famous films, like the giant Alien Queen body from the movie Alien vs.
Predator, what a fascinating place to look around.
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