Gene Warren Jr.
„The reason I mentioned at length my early days as a grip and dolly/crane operator was beause the dolly job most often positions you in the middle of the on set discussions between the Director, DP and the actors. There was no school like it. And since I was interested in my craft and film making in general I always paid attention and listened in“ – said the acclaimed visual effects supervisor. A few examples of films and TV that he worked on most or all of principal photography in those years were: Walk Don’t Run, Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner, Murderers Row, Enter Laughing, Three On A Couch, Trouble With Angels, Dead Heat On A Merry-Go-Round and the Monkees TV show.
In 1969, not wanting to remain in the grip department the rest of his life, Gene Warren Jr. left the steady job and began working off and on at his fathers visual effects company, Excelcior Animated Motion Pictures. It was one of the few small effects companys in Hollywood before Star Wars changed everything. The animation done at Excelcior was stop motion and it turned out that Gene Warren Jr. had a natural talent and worked on and animated many Dough Boy, Hamburger Helper, Swiss Miss and Chuck Wagon comercials during the almost 12 years he worked at Excelcior. They also produced the miniature work and dinosaur stop motion for the Saturday morning childrens show Land Of The Lost. Also the miniature effects work for the TV series The Man From Atlantis, the Roger Corman film Avalanche and John Frankenheimers Black Sunday.
Through the hands on work G. Warren Jr. became an acomplished cinematopher, model maker, sculpter and stop motion animator. He also helped break down scripts and plan how to do the effects. Since his fathers studio did not have an optical printer until the last 2 years before he closed, they would try and do as much as possible in camera.
Excelsior was closed in 1979 and Gene Warren Jr. and two partners, Leslie Huntley and Peter Kleinow opened Fantasy II film effects in 1980. They now had an optical department but continued to do as much work in camera as we could. Both because it was usually more cost effective and tended to look better. „I believe that even today, in the digital age, the above holds true“.
G. Warren Jr., and my partners received an Emmy for visual effects in the mini series Winds Of War in 1983. Then in 1991 he received an Oscar for Terminator II Judgement Day. The last signicant miniature work hewas involved in was Wes Anderson’s Moorise Kingdom. The last facility was closed at the end of 2013.
Gene Warren Jr. work on an occassional intertainment job and also teach a class on special, visual and in camera effects, at USC Film School with my son, Gene Warren III.