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|    rec.arts.sf.movies    |    Discussing SF motion pictures    |    28,343 messages    |
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|    Message 28,148 of 28,343    |
|    Jack Bohn to All    |
|    Watched in April (1/2)    |
|    01 May 23 14:05:49    |
      From: jack.bohn64@gmail.com              I had extra time in April, and TCM went to an all Warner Bros. schedule to       celebrate their 100th anniversary. [1] Not that Warners had the least       fantastical films of the Great Eight[2] -- I would guess Fox or Paramount over       the course of the century --        but it forms the least part of its "personality" and I'd find it hard to point       out factors which would make one of their sf films (with the exception of the       DC superheroes) particularly Warners'.              But that's beside the point. What I've done with my extra time is to start       randomly checking out some of the DVDs I've been randomly accumulating. My       evening matinee began with the 26-episode anime "Last Exile" as the serial,       but no need to talk about        that here.              The movies, first, the ones everyone has an opinion on:              A.I. (2001)       Avengers (2012)       Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)              The Marvel movies I checked a few favorite scenes (with audio commentary) just       to make sure the disk worked. Watched all of AI. Like ET before it, it       doesn't really need a rewatch. The second disk of extras provided shorts for       several days of the        matinee.              Now some only a few would see:              Alice in Wonderland (1933)       Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1972)              The '33 is a star-studded adaptation before '35's Midsummer Night's Dream.        The only stars that will be readily recognized after these 90 years are Gary       Cooper as the White Knight and W.C. Fields as Humpty Dumpty. Told Cary Grant       was the Mock Turtle, my        response would be, "He was?!?" Cartoon fans might hear the voices of Edward       Everett Horton and Charles Ruggles as the Mad Hatter and March Hare; they did       "Fractured Fairy Tales" and "Aesop and Son", respectively, for Bullwinkle.        Sterling Holloway as        the Frog footman was also the voice of Winnie the Pooh (and the Cheshire Cat       in Disney's). A few others I knew were Ned Sparks, Jack Oakie, and Edna May       Oliver. The costumes and special effects range from good to not. Alice's       growing is a optical        stretching, which doesn't look great, but matches the book's description of       her opening out like a telescope.              The '72 was made in England. The recognizable actors are Ralph Richardson as       the Caterpillar, and Peter Sellers as the March Hare. (There's a '66       adaptation made by BBCTV (and not destroyed!) where Sellers plays The King of       Hearts!)              Atomic Brain (1963) No different from non-atomic brain swapping. About what       you'd expect.              The Beastmaster (1982) Hadn't seen it before, now I have.              Counterblast (1948) British. Nazis escape prison camp near the end of the       war. They are organized enough that after the war they can steal the identity       of an Australian doctor coming to the UK. Their plan is to find the cure for       some plague that they        can then release on the public. The speed at which they do suggests we should       have Paperclipped these guys, but where'd the story be if they couldn't?        Fairly good.              The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus (2009) Midlist Terry Gilliam. Amazing that       he's made enough films to have a midlist. I'm not sure anything was said here       that wasn't in Baron Munchaussen.              In the Shadow of the Moon (2007) A documentary on the Apollo program.        Shocked to see them mixing footage between missions, but in Hollywood accuracy       is not as important as looking cool. DVD includes enough deleted scene       footage to make a B-feature of        its own.              Justice League: Gods and Monsters (2015) A parallel universe where Superman,       Wonder Woman, and Batman still fight for justice, but in a much darker       manner. Superman is still a Kryptonian, not quite the one we know; the other       two have different origins.         Their story is made clear, but the opponents to their tyranny are references       to characters in DC comics that may require you to web search on your phone in       the middle of the movie. I didn't, which left me with the uncomfortable       feeling that I was        missing something about some of them. Otherwise, a very good story.              Morons from Outer Space (1985) British. Dire. The morons of the title are       British lower class. From space, but of British lower class look, clothing,       attitude, names, interests, equipment (well, their RV is a space RV with good       special effects) -- I        suspect only the lack of a product-placement agreement caused a made-up a       brand name for the beer they drink.              Oculus (2013) Karen Gillan! Er, I mean, a horror story about a mirror that       drives people mad. Her family was destroyed by it a decade or so ago, her       parents killed and her brother blamed and put under psychiatric observation.        Away from its influence        long enough, he has come back to his senses, and has been released. She has       figured out a way to destroy the mirror that its mind-bending powers won't       protect against. But first, an array of video, audio, and other electronic       recorders will capture        documentary proof of its influence!              The Raven (2012) Edgar Allan Poe is contacted by the police about a number of       murders containing details from his stories. A common use of historic       authors, perhaps not as common as the trope of their stories having been       inspired by secret hidden        events in their lives. Had this been done with practical effects rather than       cgi, the pit with the pendulum might have been scaled back, or given the       filmmakers insight about the time and money that would have had to been put       into it, but then again,        making sense seems less important than looking cool.              The Southern Star (1969) OK, not sf, but based on a novel by Jules Verne.        George Segal and Ursula Andress in an unlikely caper stealing a        ust-discovered diamond of that name.              X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes (1963) Corman inserted a touch of fake gore at       the beginning and end of what could otherwise be a Twilight Zoneish tale.        Almost lives up to the legends about it.              Anybody else seen any of these?              [1] The month began with Beau Brummel (1924) and ended with Argo (2014), not       that they were all chronological, I suppose even classic movie fans have their       own least favorite decades, and at three days per, would start to wonder what       the channel was good        for. With Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies filling the interstitials!                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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