Showing posts with label sf movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sf movies. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2012

RiffTrax - Plan 9 From Outer Space



Just to prove that I haven't been abducted by aliens, here's the RiffTrax take on Ed Wood's chef d'œuvre. Originally titled Grave Robbers from Outer Space, the movie was most likely inspired by Alex Schomburg's cover for the September 1939 issue of  Startling Stories.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

The Last Man on Earth (1964)



As a follow-up to my last post, here's The Last Man on Earth (1964) starring Vincent Price. Although the antagonists here are vampires this film is the direct inspiration for today's "zombie apocalypse" movies.

From The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction:
L'ultimo uomo della terra

Film (1964; vt The Last Man on Earth). La Regina/Alta Vista. Directed by Sidney Salkow, Ubaldo Ragona, starring Vincent Price, Franca Bettoia. Screenplay Logan Swanson (pseudonym of Richard Matheson, who disliked the rewrite), William P Leicester, based on Matheson's I Am Legend (1954). 86 minutes. Black and white.

This Italian/US coproduction was the first film version of Matheson's novel about the lone survivor of a plague whose victims become vampires, a metamorphosis for which the novel, unlike the film, provides an ingenious medical explanation. Each night the survivor is besieged in his house by "vampires", and each day he kills as many as he can while they sleep. Finally, however, they succeed in trapping and killing him. The film has a reputation as being dreadful, but arguably it captures the brutalization of its hero in the human world's last gasp better than the remake, The Omega Man (1971), and it is certainly truer to the novel. The film truest to the novel's spirit, though with a different plot, is Night of the Living Dead (1968). [PN/JB]

Sunday, October 30, 2011

RiffTrax: Night Of The Living Dead



In ancient times is was said that even the Olympian gods themselves were not safe from Momus, the god of mockery. Today the RiffTrax crew proves that goes double for critically acclaimed sf movies. George A. Romero's landmark Night of the Living Dead (1968) bit so deeply into the collective imagination that today "zombies" have infected every nook and cranny of pop culture. While some of his shambling imitators are more deserving of ridicule than he is it's still a treat to see this classic get the iconoclastic MST3K treatment.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Wild Zero

Director Tetsuro Takeuchi's Wild Zero (2000) is an off-beat, garage horror movie that perfectly captures the raw attitude of Guitar Wolf.



The film opens with a fleet of UFOs racing toward Earth. As the radio broadcasts news of a meteorite crashing to earth, young Ace (Masashi Endo) is combing Brylcreem into his pompadour. He's off to see his idols, Guitar Wolf, in concert. As for the Wolves, they've had enough of Captain (Makoto Inamiya), the eccentric and sleazy club owner who gave them their start. Ace interrupts the ensuing Mexican standoff, blurting out the unforgettable line, "Rock 'n Roll is NOT over, baby! Rock 'n Roll NEVER DIES!" After the resulting shootout, Guitar Wolf makes Ace his blood brother. He also gives him a wolf whistle, telling him to blow it if he needs help. For his part, Captain, who just lost several fingers, is out for revenge against the Wolves.

Meanwhile, three friends, Toshi (Yoshiyuki Morishita), Hanako (Taneko), Masao (Masao), are on a road trip to see the meteorite. They pull into a gas station where they find Tobio (Kwancharu Shitichai), a young hitchhiker. Suddenly, Masao snaps, pulls some knives and tries to hold the place up. Just then who should show up but Ace? When he opens the door it hits Masao in the face, and the three friends flee. Ace is glad to play the hero for Tobio, and the two take to each other immediately. Elsewhere, a soldier (Haruka Nakajo) waits by the roadside. She's planning to sell weapons to some yakuza, who unbeknownst to her have been ambushed by zombies. As the zombies rampage and the UFOs swarm the cities of Earth, all these characters will intersect in ways they might not have expected.

Like one of Guitar Wolves songs, this movie belts itself out with an energy all its own. Although descended from films like The Return of the Living Dead (1985), it has more of the underground feel of a cult classic like Repo Man (1984). It rides a wave of raucous garage punk by the likes of Teengenerate, Bikini Kill, Oblivians, The Devil Dogs, and of course Guitar Wolf themselves. What the Wolves lack in dialogue they make up for in presence, with Drum Wolf and the late Bass Wolf slicking back their hair every chance they get. Inamiya-san turns in a brilliant performance as the flamboyant Captain, and almost steals the show. And there's a welcome nod to George A. Romero when the characters begin asking if any of them has seen Night of the Living Dead.

The zombies here have a ghastly blue pallor, giving them a garish menace that only adds to the film. Rest assured that their heads explode with the the graphic regularity that zombie movie fans expect. And in a clever twist on conventions, Ace has a moment of erotic panic when he discovers that Tobio is a ladyboy. The spirit of Guitar Wolf appears to admonish him, "Love has no borders, nationalities, or genders!" For surprisingly this quirky splatter flick is ultimately about the power of love to overcome all obstacles.

According to Wikipedia, Guitar Wolf has begun looking for a sponsor for the sequel, Wild Zero 2. After the credits roll we see Captain rise for the dead, still set on revenge. If that second film ever gets made he just might get his chance.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Rock 'N' Roll JET-Movie

Here's something for the weekend's viewing. Wild Zero, a grindhouse zombie flick starring Japanese rock 'n' roll rebels, Guitar Wolf.



I haven't seen it yet myself, but I can't imagine being disappointed. There's nothing quite like a Japanese zombie film. And in my book zombies + Guitar Wolf = win. The soundtrack alone makes it worth watching.

[via Dangerous Minds]

Thursday, June 30, 2011

The Dark Side


VW The Dark Side by Kato_Tuttle

Now that's what I call détournement.

UPDATE: As fast as they try to ban this video I'll try to repost it.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Monday, March 28, 2011

Friday, March 25, 2011

Damnation Alley



Roger Zelazny's post-apocalyptic novel Damnation Alley (1969) is one of the few books to have both a song and a movie based on it. The film version, which has almost nothing to do with the original story, and the Hawkwind song, which does, both  make for a great mashup.

Friday, February 18, 2011

EVolution

An ongoing and amusing series of flash animations by EVanimations hosted over at Newgrounds.

Beauty is Humanity, a prologue


EVolution, pilot


EVolution, episode 01

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Space is the Place (1974)



That far out cat Sun Ra lays some of his "alter-destiny" rap on us in this snippet from his groovy 1974 film Space is the Place.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

MST3K: Monster A-Go-Go



This is the last episode available on-line starring Joel. Nothing against Mike, but it was Joel's languid, unpolished delivery that really made the show for me.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Godzilla 2012 teaser



This is going to be another American version of ゴジラ, and they don't even have a script yet, so it could end up being a debacle. But then Final Wars wasn't all that great, so the bar is set pretty low.

[via Doc 40]

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Saturday, January 15, 2011

MST3K: The Giant Gila Monster



There are way too many commercials in this, but it's Joel and the 'bots so they're worth putting up with. And I could use some of those Renaissance festival punching bags.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Purple Death From Outer Space



Happy 77th anniversary Flash Gordon (even if I am a day late).

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Gulliver's Travels (1939)



Max Fleischer's animated version of Gulliver's Travels from 1939. It should actually be called Gulliver's Travel since it only covers his trip to Lilliput and not his later voyages to Brobdingnag, Laputa, and elsewhere, but it's still fun. It's a loose interpretation, and most of the social satire of the original is missing, but you can tell WWII was looming when this cartoon was made.


via the Internet Archive

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Hercules vs. Tarzan



Steve "Hercules" Reeves teams up with Gordon "Tarzan" Scott to reenact the lives of Romulus and Remus, the twin sons of Mars (Ares) who founded Rome. If only they had hired Ray Harryhausen to add a few monsters this movie would be a classic.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Fire and Ice (1983) Trailer



Vintage sword-and-sorcery from the legendary Ralph Bakshi and Frank Frazetta with a script by Marvel Comics' Conan alums Gerry Conway and Roy Thomas. Scream, Teegra, scream!