Matte Paintings and Miniatures at the Epic flms of Samuel Bronston


Producer Samuel Bronston is known for producing a series of epic high spectacle films with impressive casts and huge sets. Although Bronston's preference was always to build life-size sets, on several occasions matte painting and miniature tricks were used to complete large sets. 

Bronston went to Spain in 1958 to make an adventure film, John Paul Jones directed by John Farrow. He found extremely good conditions to finance films in Europe thanks to an American entrepreneur Pierre S. Dupont III. Spanish government gave him a preferential treatment in order to film on historical locations. He also found Spanish’s low rates very affordable for filming. British and American started to used Spanish locations since the middle 50 ´s, and when Bronston arrived, he found a highly qualified crew in all departments.

Samuel’s Bronston created his Studios near Madrid, where they built enormous sets for his epic films played by some of the most famous Hollywood stars.

To recreate those fabulous sets he contracted some of the most prestigious art directors and production designers of that moment.  Other Hollywood epic films like Ben-Hur, Cleopatra or The Ten Commandments, are full of miniatures and matte paintings.  At Bronston films, everything had to be built real size. They have the money and the technicians to make it that way.  There were only a few exceptions to that rule.

His first Epic film was, King of Kings (1960) directed by Nicholas Ray and distributed by MGM.  Art direction under George Whakevich and Enrique Alarcón. Although both of them were frequent and accomplished users of  “in camera” tricks involving foreground miniatures and glass paintings, at Bronston Films they favored the post-production matte painting technique. The few matte paintings on that film were done by MGM matte department under Lee Leblanc, with Matthew Yuricich as a matte painter.






The sets were not as huge as the ones  showed on the next films, but they built some impressive temple and square set. Construction crew built some reduced scale cityscape to be showed behind the walls of the temple square.


They also used some huge background paintings of the city of Jesusalem. Construction department was under Francisco Prosper,  who was also a miniature expert. Among his collaborators were scenic painters like Emilio Ruiz and Antonio de Miguel, who were responsibles for the scenic backings. Although Emilio Ruiz was an accomplished glass painter, in most of Bronston's films, he only did backdrop paintings. Antonio de Miguel also did some work as a glass painter in the sixties, although he did not do too much of it, since his intention was to become an art director, which he achieved in the late seventies. 



Bronston next film was a medieval epic about the Spanish knight El Cid (1961) directed by Anthony Mann, with John Moore and Veniero Colasanti as production designers.

Historical locations and huge sets were built. All the exteriors were full size this time, with no miniatures or matte paintings.

Only to enhance the impressive interior sets they used a matte painting of a hanging miniature for the ceiling of the Throne room. If it is a Matte painting,  it was probably executed at London by any British matte artist, but if it was a hanging miniature (most probably) it was build by the art department constructors, Francisco Prósper and Francisco Asensio.  



The four Bronston film was Nicholas Ray’s  55 days in Peking (1963) again with Colasanti and Moore as production designers. After the success of El Cid Bronston was at the height of his career. They built a gigantic set to represent the city of Peking. No miniatures or matte paintings were required this time.  All buildings were full size, a real delight for Alex Weldon, head of the FX crew that had to destroy it.


Although 55 days in Peking was not a  box office success like El Cid, Bronston,  embarked again on an enormous epic film where they recreated the ancient Rome for The fall of the Roman Empire (1964). The Roman forum set was the biggest ever built with no miniatures or paintings.

A huge roman fortress was also built at exteriors near Madrid. The illustration by art director Pierre Thevenet with the final image on the film.




All the interiors were full size, but there was a couple of ceilings that were done as hanging miniatures. One of them was the ceiling of the impressive set of the Temple.   The second one was another ceiling of different set.T Both foreground miniatures filmed with a nodeal head to provide a tilt dowm camera movement. I have made a composite of several shots of the camera movement to show the miniature with the set.




To show an exterior view of an Armenian city they built part of the walls on location near Madrid, and the rest was a huge foreground miniature that fit perfectly with the far away set. That miniature was made only for one shot filmed with a horizontal panoramic movement. The miniature was built by Francisco Prósper team. 


That´s a Prósper photo showing the set and the miniature under construction.

There is another big set that is shown as medium shots and only once as an establishing shot showing the upper part in which they also used a foreground miniature. 



The last big show for Bronston was The Circus world ( 1964) directed by  Henry Hathaway.  After the lack of success of the last two films, the budget of that one was abruptly reduced. They used reallocation for most of the Circus scenes renting Circo Price. 

Even so,  they built some big sets that required impressive painting backings. They also used a miniature for the Circus fire sequence. Wally Veevers supervised the filming of the miniature with the assistance of Emilio Ruiz. For that film, it was used one glass matte painting to show the Circus at Vienna city. Maybe painted by Emilio Ruiz or Francisco Prósper on location at Madrid, or perhaps it was done during postproduction at Shepperton studios. 

There was another matte painting commissioned for that film made at Shepperton matte department,  London. But it was not used on the final edition. That was painted probably by matte artist Doug Ferris or Peter Melrose.

The image without the painting as it appears on the film.