Howard Lydecker(1911-1969)
- Special Effects
- Visual Effects
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Howard "Babe" Lydecker and his older brother Theodore Lydecker were the
undisputed masters of miniature special effects in Hollywood from
1935-1953. Begining their careers with Nat Levine's Mascot Pictures in the
early 1930s, they were swept up in Mascot's 1935 merger with Monogram
Pictures and Liberty Pictures to form Republic Pictures, headed by the
owner of film processing lab Consolidated Film Industries, the
autocratic Herbert J. Yates). The Lydeckers were perhaps the primary
beneficiaries of the merger. It allowed their creativity to run wild,
giving them unlimited access to CFI's optical effects at a time when
most of Republic's product demanded high-caliber special effects. The
production pressures put on them by Yates ironically gave them the
structure and incentive they needed to excel. Babe became the head of
Mascot's old carpenter shop and moved into the back lot of Republic's
studio, eventually supervising some 20 technicians. Babe and Ted worked
closely (they were nicknamed "the twins," despite there being a
three-year difference in their ages) together during the entire
production history of Republic Pictures (until its demise in 1956). The
Lydeckers' effects were the envy of every studio in Hollywood and their
talents can probably be seen to best advantage in Flying Tigers (1942), a WW II
action picture about a squadron of American pilots fighting the
Japanese in China, with loads of dogfights, plane crashes, etc.--and
was shot using only mock-ups and miniatures, with not a single real
aircraft being used throughout the entire picture.