User:The boy who cried godzilla/sandbox/camazotz: Difference between revisions

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|image            =RCO003.jpg
|image            =RCO003.jpg
|name            =Long-tailed Pterosaur
|name            =Long-tailed Pterosaur
|species          =Pterosaur
|nicknames        = flying dragon, dark god, Camazotz<ref name="Doc Savage 133">{{cite book|title=[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]|date=26 February 2013|publisher=Atlus Press|page=133|isbn=??}}</ref>
|species          =''Rhamphorhynchus''{{sup|[[Doc Savage: Skull Island|DS:SI]]}}
|wingspan        =40 feet<ref name="KKoSI">{{cite book|title=[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]|date=4 January 2005|publisher=[[Dark Horse]]|page=??|isbn=9781595820068}}</ref> 50 feet<ref name="Doc Savage">{{cite book|title=[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]|date=26 February 2013|publisher=Atlus Press|page=??|isbn=??}}</ref>
|allies          =
|allies          =
|enemies          =[[Human]]s
|enemies          =[[Human]]s, [[Kong's species]]
|relationships    =
|relationships    =
|firstappearance  =''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]''
|firstappearance  =''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]''
}}
}}
Species of '''Pterosaur with long tails''' have been a mainstay of [[DeVito Artworks]]' take on the [[King Kong (franchise)|King Kong]] universe. They have never been given an official name, but have been described as "a '''flying dragon'''" by [[Carl Denham]], and as '''Camazotz''' by Mayan sailors. While the exact details of their appearance has changed from project to project, likely due to artistic interpretation, it appears each time as a loosely described "pterosaur" with a long, whip-like tail. It debuted in [[Joe DeVito]] and Brad Strickland's [[2005]] novel ''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]'', and its [[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|2007 comic adaptation]], and later reappeared in [[2013]]'s crossover novel ''[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]'' by [[Will Murray]], and again in the [[2017]] comic special ''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]'' from [[BOOM! Studios]].
{{Sandbox}}
Species of '''Pterosaur with long tails''' have been a mainstay of [[DeVito Artworks]]' take on the [[King Kong (franchise)|King Kong]] universe. They have never been given an official name, but have been described as "a '''flying dragon'''" by [[Carl Denham]], and as '''Camazotz''' by a Mayan seaman before it was imagined as a descendant of ''Rhamphorhynchus'' by [[Doc Savage|Clark Savage, Jr]]. While the exact details of their appearance has changed from project to project, likely due to artistic interpretation, it appears each time as a loosely described "pterosaur", sometimes with an emphasized long tail. It debuted in [[Joe DeVito]] and Brad Strickland's [[2005]] novel ''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]'', and its [[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|2007 comic adaptation]], and later reappeared in [[2013]]'s crossover novel ''[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]'' by [[Will Murray]], and again in the [[2017]] comic special ''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]'' from [[BOOM! Studios]]. While their appearance has varied, each instance sees it as a gigantic pterosaur hunting on Skull Island's coast, and prove a formidable barrier for entry for almost all visitors.
{{TOC}}
{{TOC}}
==Design==
==Design==
These pterosaurs are originally described by Brad Strickland in ''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]'' with leathery orange skin, a crested head and a forty-foot wingspan and a silhouette "like a flying dragon". However, in the [[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|comic adaptation]], artist Dan O'Connor depicted the pterosaur as a crestless, green-skinned, long-tailed beast with a tuft of feathers on the back of its head. This created the first significant discrepancy in the creature's design, as the visual in the adaptation is nothing at all like that which was described in the source material.


The comic's depiction seems to have carried over into the [[2013]] novel ''[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]'' by Will Murray. While the nature of the crossover makes the classifications questionable, in the novel, the pterosaurs on the island's coast are given the designation of giant ''Rhamphorhynchus'', with notably crestless heads, black skin, and long "devil-tails". Franchise producer [[Joe DeVito]] provided small depictions of this design on the novel's cover art, but in [[2016]], with the official review and sign-off of DeVito himself, the coastal pterosaurs of Skull Island reappeared in ''[[Kong of Skull Island]]'' in art by [[Carlos Magno]] as large, orange, crested ''Pteranodons'' with tails of unremarkable length. The following year, artist Chad Lewis, in ''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]'' seems to have depicted a mixture of previous appearances, choosing an orange, crested pterosaur with a scruff of feathers and a long, whip-like tail.
==Origins==
==Origins==


==History==
==History==
===''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]''===
===''[[Kong: King of Skull Island]]''===
he take mister denham but he get eated by big big fishy
When the ''[[Wanderer]]'' neared [[Skull Island]], [[Carl Denham]]'s arm was snatched by a creature he referred to as "a flying dragon". He used his free arm to grab onto the ship's railing, and the pterosaur tried to tear his arm off by flying away. He lost his grip on the railing, and it began to fly away, but it was quickly snapped out of the sky by an immense [[Giant mosasaur|marine reptile]], which dragged it beneath the waves for a meal of its own.
 
===''[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]''===
===''[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]''===
doc come to island and then wowie zowie there's a camazotz :O
 
==Comics==
==Comics==
*''[[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|Kong: King of Skull Island]]'' (2007)
*''[[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|Kong: King of Skull Island]]'' (2007)
*''[[Kong of Skull Island]]'' (2016)
*''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]'' (2017)
*''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]'' (2017)
*''[[Kong on the Planet of the Apes]]'' (2017-18)
===''[[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|Kong: King of Skull Island]]''===
====[[Kong: King of Skull Island issue 0|Kong: King of Skull Island issue #0]]====
====[[Kong: King of Skull Island issue 2|Kong: King of Skull Island issue #2]]====
Despite the erroneous depiction in the premiere issue, in a vision of Kong, two green, long-tailed and crested pterosaurs are depicted, alongside other Skull Island wildlife.
===''[[Kong of Skull Island]]''===
===''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]''===
A species of pterosaur with a long tail destroyed the plane of missionary explorer [[James Copland]] when he first discovered Skull Island.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery widths="120" position="center" captionalign="center" spacing="small">
<gallery widths="120" position="center" captionalign="center" spacing="small">
Oconnor tailed pterosaur.jpg|2007 art by Dan O'Connor from ''[[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|Kong: King of Skull Island]]''
Oconnor tailed pterosaur.jpg|2007 art by Dan O'Connor from ''[[Kong: King of Skull Island (comic)|Kong: King of Skull Island]]''
DeVito Rhamphorhynchus.png|2013 art by [[Joe DeVito]] from ''[[Doc Savage: Skull Island]]''
Pterano_square.jpg|2016 art by Carlos Magno from ''[[Kong of Skull Island]]''
RCO003.jpg|2017 art by Chad Lewis from ''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]''
RCO003.jpg|2017 art by Chad Lewis from ''[[Kong: Gods of Skull Island]]''
</gallery>
</gallery>
==Trivia==
*The name "[[Camazotz]]" would later be used for a [[King Kong (Monsterverse)|King Kong]] adversary in the [[2021]] [[Monsterverse]] graphic novel ''[[Kingdom Kong]]''.
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Kong: King of Skull Island}}
{{Kong: King of Skull Island}}
{{Kong: Gods of Skull Island}}
{{Kong: Gods of Skull Island}}
{{Monsters}}
{{Monsters}}
{{Comments}}
{{Comments}}
{{Era|KAI|BOOM|DEV}}
{{Era|BOOM|DEV|KAI}}
[[Category:King Kong Monsters]]
<!--[[Category:King Kong Monsters]]
[[Category:King Kong]]
[[Category:King Kong]]
[[Category:BOOM! Studios]]
[[Category:BOOM! Studios]]
[[Category:DeVito ArtWorks]]
[[Category:DeVito ArtWorks]]
[[Category:Monsters]]
[[Category:Monsters]]-->

Latest revision as of 00:18, 29 July 2023

Long-tailed Pterosaur
The boy who cried godzilla/sandbox/camazotz
Alternate names flying dragon, dark god, Camazotz[1]
Species RhamphorhynchusDS:SI
Wingspan 40 feet[2] 50 feet[3]
Enemies Humans, Kong's species
First appearance Kong: King of Skull Island
MosuGoji sandbox.png This page is a sandbox.
Sandboxed pages are unfinished and not yet approved.
Information found here may be unpolished or unverified.

Species of Pterosaur with long tails have been a mainstay of DeVito Artworks' take on the King Kong universe. They have never been given an official name, but have been described as "a flying dragon" by Carl Denham, and as Camazotz by a Mayan seaman before it was imagined as a descendant of Rhamphorhynchus by Clark Savage, Jr. While the exact details of their appearance has changed from project to project, likely due to artistic interpretation, it appears each time as a loosely described "pterosaur", sometimes with an emphasized long tail. It debuted in Joe DeVito and Brad Strickland's 2005 novel Kong: King of Skull Island, and its 2007 comic adaptation, and later reappeared in 2013's crossover novel Doc Savage: Skull Island by Will Murray, and again in the 2017 comic special Kong: Gods of Skull Island from BOOM! Studios. While their appearance has varied, each instance sees it as a gigantic pterosaur hunting on Skull Island's coast, and prove a formidable barrier for entry for almost all visitors.

Design

These pterosaurs are originally described by Brad Strickland in Kong: King of Skull Island with leathery orange skin, a crested head and a forty-foot wingspan and a silhouette "like a flying dragon". However, in the comic adaptation, artist Dan O'Connor depicted the pterosaur as a crestless, green-skinned, long-tailed beast with a tuft of feathers on the back of its head. This created the first significant discrepancy in the creature's design, as the visual in the adaptation is nothing at all like that which was described in the source material.

The comic's depiction seems to have carried over into the 2013 novel Doc Savage: Skull Island by Will Murray. While the nature of the crossover makes the classifications questionable, in the novel, the pterosaurs on the island's coast are given the designation of giant Rhamphorhynchus, with notably crestless heads, black skin, and long "devil-tails". Franchise producer Joe DeVito provided small depictions of this design on the novel's cover art, but in 2016, with the official review and sign-off of DeVito himself, the coastal pterosaurs of Skull Island reappeared in Kong of Skull Island in art by Carlos Magno as large, orange, crested Pteranodons with tails of unremarkable length. The following year, artist Chad Lewis, in Kong: Gods of Skull Island seems to have depicted a mixture of previous appearances, choosing an orange, crested pterosaur with a scruff of feathers and a long, whip-like tail.

Origins

History

Kong: King of Skull Island

When the Wanderer neared Skull Island, Carl Denham's arm was snatched by a creature he referred to as "a flying dragon". He used his free arm to grab onto the ship's railing, and the pterosaur tried to tear his arm off by flying away. He lost his grip on the railing, and it began to fly away, but it was quickly snapped out of the sky by an immense marine reptile, which dragged it beneath the waves for a meal of its own.

Doc Savage: Skull Island

Comics

Kong: King of Skull Island

Kong: King of Skull Island issue #0

Kong: King of Skull Island issue #2

Despite the erroneous depiction in the premiere issue, in a vision of Kong, two green, long-tailed and crested pterosaurs are depicted, alongside other Skull Island wildlife.

Kong of Skull Island

Kong: Gods of Skull Island

A species of pterosaur with a long tail destroyed the plane of missionary explorer James Copland when he first discovered Skull Island.

Gallery

Trivia

References

This is a list of references for The boy who cried godzilla/sandbox/camazotz. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

  1. Doc Savage: Skull Island. Atlus Press. 26 February 2013. p. 133. ISBN ?? Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help).
  2. Kong: King of Skull Island. Dark Horse. 4 January 2005. p. ??. ISBN 9781595820068.
  3. Doc Savage: Skull Island. Atlus Press. 26 February 2013. p. ??. ISBN ?? Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help).

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Joe DeVito's Kong of Skull Island
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