Another literature to illustrative conceptual piece for the same class back in 2004. I wish I had spent more time on this piece rather than waiting to the very last minute to put everything together like I usually do. I could have had a LOT more fun with this project otherwise as the literature of Lovecraft is absolutely superfluous for inspiring truly bizarre and enriched visuals.
The story means quite a great deal to me as it was the inspiration for a later written book "Who Goes There?" which was the basis for my all time favorite horror movie, John Carpenter's, "The Thing."
The story means quite a great deal to me as it was the inspiration for a later written book "Who Goes There?" which was the basis for my all time favorite horror movie, John Carpenter's, "The Thing."
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Fanart
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 853px
File Size 243 kB
i actualy Played Dark corners of the earth first. thats what lead me to decide to read Shadows over innsmouth. I have been told by others that i should have read it first then played but oh well.
Dark corners is the best game i have played ever. though it can be ultra frustrating.
Dark corners is the best game i have played ever. though it can be ultra frustrating.
"Shadow over Innsmouth" inspired a legion of sequels, and imitations, many contradicting each other. It became fan-fiction.
"At the Mountains of Madness" was never published as orig. written in Lovecraft's lifetime. Due to its length, it was serialized by "Astounding Stories" and even then was abridged.
Somebody who did a sickening color pic of a man whose brain was eaten out by Martian monsters in a Clark Ashton Smith story , was somehow reluctant to show professor Lake AFTER the Elder Things got done with him (most of flesh dug away, bones split for the marrow....).
"At the Mountains of Madness" was never published as orig. written in Lovecraft's lifetime. Due to its length, it was serialized by "Astounding Stories" and even then was abridged.
Somebody who did a sickening color pic of a man whose brain was eaten out by Martian monsters in a Clark Ashton Smith story , was somehow reluctant to show professor Lake AFTER the Elder Things got done with him (most of flesh dug away, bones split for the marrow....).
FA+

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