I loved watching those cartoons run and fight so realistically. It was as if their monotone, ink-outlined flesh were real. With the rise of CGI, rototoscoping made less sense. There's no reason not to use real actors for fantastical stories now. If you're going for realism that is.
Fire and Ice was a unique picture when it premiered and we'll never see its like again. I suspect that its closest film relative is Sin City, another picture from a lone wolf director that explicity used an artist's style as entire guiding aesthetic force. With Sin City, the artist even got co-director status.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrSs3JWX6cY7ZDS5eZk_EQL_V4vAPC-JubzIhqApje4650WNlXtxCbDw2Z8GDLFkwymyofEdFj51Fz7b3eiN_aA-Pwhqoln5R2V4AdfpsxvKLk8rZWBR12K2CyCw5UvgoDituzs711EF6i/s320/Picture+33.png)
That's not the only upcoming movie that may owe Frazetta a large debt. There's also John Carter of Mars in 2012. That sci-fi/fantasy movie will star Taylor Kitsch (Friday Night Lights) and Lynn Collins (Wolverine) who both have the appropriately flawless bodies for their roles. Though the movie might well risk an R rating if they take Frazetta's barely clothing concepts too literally as aesthetic guide. The weird thing is that Mars is totally cold. Like freezing. Shouldn't they be dressed like eskimos?
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhG_-kG50w1J1ZTTfvgJiVhISBp3Iz_ecA3RLKLjzD26ZFKdXVwIhTExlFUtac8nZnJ5Wp_jHKdf6dMkgweFl64RiCHE9dn54lr1rsPq_ba0oyBkwUQSGPwi7KCRgl2b842TI1lHULj6yNw/s400/johncarter_cast.jpg)
Are you looking forward to either of these pictures or was Lord of the Rings you're only real fantasy fancy?
Further Reading
Austin Translation an art blog says goodbye to a hero
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