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It is inevitable that the screen actor Kerwin Mathews, who has died aged 81, should be forever associated with children's fantasy films, using stop-motion special effects, almost as if he were an animated figure himself. But the handsome Mathews was flesh and blood, and worked hard to make the rather bland heroes, whether Sinbad, Gulliver or Jack the Giant Killer, more than one-dimensional, acting realistically with the many animated creatures he had to confront.
Mathews had to interact with nothing facing him, because all the monsters were added later. "His eyes were always concentrated on the unseen subject," explained legendary animator Ray Harryhausen, who created the spectacular stop-motion effects for two of Mathews' biggest successes, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958) and The 3 Worlds of Gulliver (1960).
In the former, Mathews battled a 30-foot cyclops, a giant roc and its two-headed chick, a fire-spitting dragon and, most famously, a warrior skeleton,...