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Peter Murton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter William Murton (24 September 1924 – 15 December 2009)[1] was a film art director and production designer.

His father Walter W. Murton was also an art director and production designer.[2] His son Simon Murton is also an art director.[3]

Career

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Murton worked as an art director for production designer Ken Adam on the Stanley Kubrick film Dr. Strangelove. Murton then did art direction on the next two James Bond films - Goldfinger and Thunderball - for which Adam also did the production design. Murton was promoted to production designer on the 1974 Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun. The production team chose Thailand as a primary location, following Murton's suggestion, after he saw pictures of the Phuket bay in a magazine.[4] Bond film historian Steven Jay Rubin faults The Man with the Golden Gun for not making good use of Murton's sets, especially the solar energy room. "Murton's interiors were well up to the standards expected on a Bond film." Rubin believes that the responsibility for the film's artistic failure "lay elsewhere."[5] Murton wrote an article discussing Bond film gimmicks.[6]

Murton worked with producer Harry Saltzman on six films: three Bond films, the first two Harry Palmer films, and Saltzman's unmade pet project The Micronauts.[7]

On King Kong Lives Murton had to create forty miniature sets, which proved a challenge. Never in his career had he to create so many miniatures at once. Further, few of the art department crew had any experience making models.[3]

Filmography

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References

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  1. ^ anonymous (6 February 2010). "Peter Murton, Acclaimed Production Designer, Passes Away". Cinema Retro.
  2. ^ Turner, George (May 1991). "Popcorn: Terror in the Theatre". American Cinematographer. 72 (5): 24–33 (135).
  3. ^ a b Morton 2005, p. 264.
  4. ^ Inside The Man with the Golden Gun (DVD, NTSC, Widescreen, Closed-captioned). The Man with the Golden Gun Ultimate Edition, Disc 2: MGM/UA Home Video. 2000.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  5. ^ Rubin 1981, p. 133.
  6. ^ Murton, Peter (Summer 1966). "Gimmicks in Bond". In the Journal of the Society of Film and Television Arts (24 "Spies on the Screen").
  7. ^ Trott, Walt (8 September 1975). "Bonds, Bugs and Ballyhoo". European Stars And Stripes. p. 19.

Bibliography

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