Tag: Michael Crichton

  • Coma 1978 A Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Rant

    Coma 1978 A Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Rant

    Last week, Roy and I enjoyed a digression-filled discussion about Michael Crichton’s “Runaway” (1984), which starred Tom Selleck and Gene Simmons and was full of speculative tech we now take for granted. I guess this put Roy on the scent of “Coma” (1978), Crichton’s adaptation of the novel by Robin Cook, as it’s our topic for the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.

    This post-Watergate hospital thriller scores points for reflecting the nation’s growing distrust of institutions and the observation that medical care has become big business. But oh, what a great film it would have been had it been directed by Alfred Hitchcock (with Judith Anderson in Elizabeth Ashley’s role)!

    But everyone does a good job with what they’re given: Genevieve Bujold is a resourceful heroine, again reflective of the times – plucky and determined and alternately dismissed as hysterical or uppity by the men, even boyfriend Michael Douglas, who are clearly troubled by this “new woman.” She doesn’t want to be called “honey,” so everyone keeps telling her to relax or sending her to therapy. Of course, you know in the end it’s going to be Douglas who’s going to get credit for blowing the lid off the conspiracy. It’s what he does. (Think “The China Syndrome.”)

    Rip Torn is reliably menacing (after all, this is the guy who hit Norman Mailer in the head with a hammer) and Richard Widmark is given a good role for an actor who broke into Hollywood playing sociopaths in the 1940s. Look fast for Lois Chiles, Tom Selleck, and Ed Harris (as Pathology Resident #2).

    We’ll be raging against the machine, if we don’t go comatose, on the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” Brace yourselves to be ripped and torn in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Friday evening at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner


    Here’s a link to last week’s show. Every once in a while, we even talk about the movie!

  • Runaway Chat Postponed Vikings on KWAX Tonight

    Runaway Chat Postponed Vikings on KWAX Tonight

    Our scheduled discussion about the Michael Crichton science fiction thriller “Runaway” (1984) on tonight’s Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner has been postponed until Sunday at 7 PM. Which means you are now free to enjoy my Viking show on “Picture Perfect” – that’s right, all music from Viking movies – tonight on KWAX at 8:00 EST (5:00 PST)! Stream it at the link.

    ODINNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!!!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Runaway 1984 Robots Tom Selleck & 80s Cheese

    Runaway 1984 Robots Tom Selleck & 80s Cheese

    In some ways, the transparently lean budget of “Runaway” (1984) makes its vision of the future that much more realistic. How many science fiction projects throw good money after bad to try to make us believe our robot overlords will be sleek, impervious, and totally bad-ass. When the robots go haywire in “Runaway,” they look like a future we might truly inhabit, in which we know domestic robots will be every bit as cheap as our printers, our vacuum cleaners, our coffee makers, and our digital clocks. When one breaks, we’ll toss it in the dumpster and go to a gross box-store and buy a new one.

    In contrast, Roy and I, both issued back in the 1960s, just keep chugging along, week after week, for nearly four years, as a matter of fact, on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, saving you the labor of having to overthink sci-fi screen entertainment of yore.

    In “Runaway,” writer-director Michael Crichton revisits some of the preoccupations he explored in “Westworld” and later resurrected for “Jurassic Park.” You can bet your bottom dollar at some point the tech is going to run off the rails. At the same time, he draws on a good many clichés from 1970s cop pictures. (Long-suffering Chief of Police: “You screwed up good, Ramsay. We got two dead officers, understand me, mister?”)

    If the movie were made today, undoubtedly it would be much edgier and self-consciously dystopian, with the themes of terrorism, technology run amok, media exploitation, and all-pervasive surveillance, ramped up and heavily, heavily underlined. And most certainly, there would be a weightier emphasis on the moral complications of harnessing artificial intelligence. But this was the 1980s, when the cotton candy billowed as profusely as Cynthia Rhodes’ perm.

    Poor Tom Selleck, whose movie career never caught traction from the time he was forced to turn down “Raiders of the Lost Ark” because of his “Magnum P.I.” contract, has charisma and screen presence, but his efforts for the multiplex (“High Road to China,” “Lassiter,” “Quigley Down Under”), while undeniably entertaining, are all pretty disposable.

    But shed no tears for Tom. He’s had a very good career, working constantly since at least the ’70s, and he’s been a star since “Magnum.” And in the movie house, he did have one runaway hit with “Three Men and a Baby.” The kid in that film was more believable than the one in this one, which makes Selleck’s acting ability perhaps all the more underrated.

    However, it is Kiss’s Gene Simmons who steals the show, as an arms-dealing sociopath. Simmons’ grins exude menace in a way you would expect of a slippery cinematic psycho. He’s Simmons Bar Sinister.

    None of it is meant to be taken very seriously. There’s one jump-scare that had me howling with laughter, and the long-deferred, though inevitable fade-out kiss goes on forever through the end credits (in a hail of sparks).

    The creative team had the funds to hire film composer Jerry Goldsmith – who wrote the rollicking music for Crichton’s Victorian heist picture “The Great Train Robbery” (1978) – but apparently not an orchestra, so we get wall-to-wall electronica. I love Jerry, but I wasn’t really a fan of his electronic music. (I’m looking at you, “Gremlins.”) Brad Fiedel’s electronic score for “Terminator,” which buried “Runaway” at the box office, was less intrusive.

    Bottom line: “Runaway” is no classic, but it’s a fun slice of ‘80s cheese. Bring your crackers to the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc. We’ll run off at the mouth about “Runaway,” this Friday evening at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Andromeda Strain Still Scares 50 Years Later

    Andromeda Strain Still Scares 50 Years Later

    Is Robert Wise’s adaptation of Michael Crichton’s seminal techno-thriller “The Andromeda Strain” (1971) the most suspenseful boring science lesson ever? Hold my beer.

    Roy and I will be joined by Rob Kash for the next Roy’s Tie Dye Sci Fi Corner and a three-way discussion of this sci-fi classic, 50 years-old and still terrifyingly fresh.

    Surely, if there’s anything more dangerous than a virus from outer space, it’s man: his ignorance, negligence, skepticism, bureaucracy, opportunism, and stubborn inability – or unwillingness – to think ahead. Interestingly, though all of these things are touched upon in “The Andromeda Strain,” it isn’t really what the story’s about. This is not an entertainment predicated on low-hanging fruit.

    Rather, the focus is on the nuts and bolts of research against the clock, exhaustive analysis, the methodical process of arriving at knowledge and solutions, to meet the challenges of containment, immunity, and eradication. You know, SCIENCE. How very quaint.

    The craftsmanship and restraint are impressive. Douglas Trumbull’s low-key, wholly believable special effects are entirely at the service of the story, while Gil Mellé’s insidious electronic score rachets up the psychological tension. There are no big-name actors, no histrionics, no inflated conflicts; just a good, solid, frighteningly believable story, absorbingly told.

    Half a century later, in the middle of a pandemic, “The Andromeda Strain” is, if anything, more relevant, even as it’s unlikely a film like this would ever be released today. It’s too deliberate and thoughtful an enterprise for a world fueled by sound bites, outlandish conspiracy theories, and opinions at the expense of fact.

    Unnervingly, 50 years on, things have gotten a whole lot worse. But those issues can be addressed at another time. In “The Andromeda Strain,” contagion is conflict enough.

    For now, better start slamming the Sterno. It will be like we’re dodging automated lasers on our race to disable an atomic bomb, metaphorically speaking, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Cry your lungs out in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, this Sunday night at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Barbarella to Andromeda Strain A Sci-Fi Shift

    “Barbarella” must have been a real trip – literally – back in the day. But they still haven’t perfected virtual LSD, so now it’s just a slog. At least for me. Still, there was certainly plenty interesting to talk about it. It takes a lot of talented and quirky people to make a movie as bad as “Barbarella.”

    At the risk of inflicting whiplash, we’ll shift gears pretty severely tomorrow night, for a three-way conversation about Robert Wise’s “The Andromeda Strain” (1971). Rob Kash will be our guest, as we don the hazmat suits for a deadly-serious adaptation of this Michael Crichton contagion thriller.

    Your comments are the only antidote, as we livestream on Facebook, this Sunday evening at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (123) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (187) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (138) Opera (202) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS