Tag: Disaster Movie

  • Poseidon Adventure 50th Anniversary Review

    Poseidon Adventure 50th Anniversary Review

    It’s not Red Buttons’ bow-tie that spells doom for the SS Poseidon. Rather it’s a 150-foot tsunami that overturns the ship, just minutes after “Auld Lang Syne,” no less. Roy and I join Gene Hackman in putting on a brave face against an indifferent universe, when we end the year with a sinking feeling in our discussion of “The Poseidon Adventure” (1972), to mark the film’s 50th anniversary.

    The first and perhaps the best of the 1970s big-budget disaster flicks unleashed by Irwin Allen, “The Poseidon Adventure” struck the box office like a rogue wave. It was a smash on its release and hung on to become the highest-grossing film of 1973. It’s nice to see composer John Williams enjoy a little success for a change.

    I don’t know, maybe it was all that Oscar gold that capsized the ship. The all-star cast includes no less than five Academy Award winners, including Hackman, Ernest Borgnine, Shelley Winters, Buttons, and Jack Albertson. Lending additional ballast are Stella Stevens, Roddy McDowall, Carol Lynley, Pamela Sue Martin, Arthur O’Connell, and Leslie Nielsen.

    And behind the camera: none other than Ronald Neame, also no stranger to Oscar, whose previous film, “Scrooge,” we just discussed last week!

    I hope you’ll leave a little room for upside-down cake when you join us for our titanic conversation about “The Poseidon Adventure,” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Put on your finest ruffles and hang around in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Friday evening at 7:30 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • “Meteor” Movie Review A Disasterpiece!

    “Meteor” Movie Review A Disasterpiece!

    Lord, do I hate “Meteor.” Despite having seen it under optimal conditions – at the late, lamented Loewe’s Astor Plaza in New York City, back in 1979 – it has persisted in my memory as one of the most excruciating couple of hours I have ever passed in a theater.

    Now, 41 years later, thanks to Roy Bjellquist, I bite down hard on a strip of leather and re-subject myself to the torment, having been invited for the third week in a row to guest co-host on “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” I hope you’ll join me, as I join Roy, in offering exhaustive background and sardonic insights into this stunning misfire – a disaster movie so disastrous that it cured even the most undiscriminating audiences of their mania for imperiled airplanes, capsized ocean liners, earthquake-ravaged cities, and blazing skyscrapers, until the advent of CGI. Falling close on the heels of “Hurricane” and “The Concorde… Airport ’79,” “Meteor” ensured that the genre went out in a blaze of ignominy.

    An all-star cast (led by Sean Connery), a comet, a five-mile asteroid, and a five-dollar budget add up to a recipe for disaster! This had to be the blackest mark on the resume of even the lowliest intern. Even as a viewer, I still bear the scars.

    If that’s not incentive enough for you to punch us up, I don’t know what is. I hope you’ll join Roy and me for the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” The show will be live-streamed on Facebook this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT. It may not be the greatest thing since sliced bread, but it still promises to be meatier than “Meteor.”

    https://www.facebook.com/events/2765874766978123/

    To quote a wide-eyed Karl Malden, “That meteor is five miles wide, and it’s definitely gonna hit us!!!”

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