Tag: Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

  • Patsy Kelly Steals the Show in Freaky Friday

    Patsy Kelly Steals the Show in Freaky Friday

    Well, once again, I’m eating humble pie. The morning after Roy and my discussion of “Freaky Friday” (1976), during which I was not entirely convinced the housekeeper wasn’t played by Marie Windsor, I discover Roy was correct and that the unflattering character was indeed played by Patsy Kelly.

    In common with Windsor, Kelly was another Golden Age actor, a brash supporting player, who often (yes) played a maid. Or a gun moll. Or a wacky sidekick. She was one smart-talking, sassy dame. In 1933, a serious accident that compromised her lungs brought a diagnosis of only ten years to live, but Kelly wound up carrying on for decades. Likely, she was just too cantankerous to die.

    At first, she didn’t think much of Hollywood, but she came to adore film in all its facets. However, it was the stage that was her first love, and she won a Tony Award for her work in the 1971 Broadway revival of “No, No, Nanette.” To my knowledge, the only other “modern” movie I’ve seen her in is “Rosemary’s Baby,” and there, I have to say, she looks quite different, on account of the coke bottle glasses.

    Because of her unfortunate proximity to several actors who suffered untimely deaths (including Thelma Todd, Lyda Roberti, and Jean Malin), early on Kelly developed a reputation for being “bad luck.” So even though “Freaky Friday” is in itself set on Friday the 13th, Kelly only reinforces the appropriateness of our choice.

    As for Windsor, I guess I just assumed that noir can age you hard, what with all the bourbon and cigarettes (to say nothing of the bullets). However, here it turns out Windsor is still looking quite well as Mrs. Murphy, Jodie Foster’s typing teacher. Like most of the supporting cast, she was onscreen for such a short time that if you blink, you’ll miss her. I must have been caught up in the drama of Annabelle’s typing exam.

    In addition to always being easy on the eyes, Windsor had a sharp sense of humor. Though a beauty pageant winner, she got her real break in Hollywood after submitting jokes to Jack Benny under an assumed name. After she retired from acting, she devoted herself to painting and sculpture.

    Favorite line in a Marie Windsor movie? It’s from the 1952 noir “The Narrow Margin,” uttered by Charles McGraw as the hardbitten police detective assigned to protect her, a mob boss’s widow, on a train ride from Chicago to L.A., where she’s expected to testify before a grand jury. Asked by his partner what he thinks of her, McGraw replies, “She’s a sixty-cent special: cheap, flashy, strictly poison under the gravy.”

    Anyway, here she is, pictured upper left, still looking quite the dish, in “Freaky Friday,” and upper right, in her heyday with Sterling Hayden in Stanley Kubrick’s “The Killing.” I guess I must have been distracted by Barbara Harris. I’m glad Windsor didn’t have to suffer Kelly’s indignity of spinning on the back tire of a bicycle during the eyerolling final chase.

    You can watch our whole “Freaky” conversation here:

    Next week, Roy and I will tackle a George Pal classic fondly recollected by his dad, “Destination Moon” (1950). Breathe a sigh of relief in the comments section that we’re actually covering sci-fi, for a change, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. (Robert A. Heinlein contributed to the screenplay.) As always, the journey is the destination when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., next Friday evening at 7:30 EST!

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  • Spielberg, “5-25-77,” & Super 8 Nostalgia

    Spielberg, “5-25-77,” & Super 8 Nostalgia

    Some interesting comparisons can be drawn between Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical “The Fabelmans,” now in theaters, and Patrick Read Johnson’s coming-of-age-in-the-era-of-“Star Wars” comedy, “5-25-77” (2002). Both filmmakers clearly poured their hearts and souls into these creative reminiscences of their early discoveries and explorations of the magic of film, largely through experiments with their families’ home movie equipment. In their cases, the cinema bug bit early and it wound up shaping their lives.

    On the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner,” Roy and I will talk a little bit about Johnson’s “new” film (actually 18 years in the making), but mostly we’ll be using it as a springboard for our own personal recollections of writing and producing Super-8 movies all throughout our teens

    My cousin and Roy’s lifelong friend, Joe Metz, will join us, along with special guests, a few of those who appeared in the films and helped out behind the scenes. We’ll talk about our undiscovered treasures, projects that occupied our formative summers (mostly), including “The Last Plot,” “Omelet,” “Inner Vorzyd,” “AERO/VOID,” “An Hour to Live,” “Journey to Where,” “Leviathan,” “The Pterodactyls,” “Man and Thin Man,” “The Road to Insanity,” and “A Gorgeous Guy in a City of Women.”

    Sadly, the films themselves will not be shown, but we’ll have plenty of stories, a few stills, some first-hand accounts, and boxes of paraphernalia.

    Self-indulgent? You bet. But Spielberg and Johnson’s passions were not unique. They just happened to be blessed with that magic combination of calling, talent, drive, and good luck to get where they are today. I’m sure there will be others among our viewers who’ve had parallel experiences.

    We’ll be ready for our close-ups on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Join the paparazzi in the comments section when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc. The geekery and nostalgia will be strong with this one, this Friday evening at 7:30 EST!

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    PHOTO: Whipping up “Omelet” (1981), written and directed by Joe Metz, with yours truly, center, and Roy, obscured, on far right

  • Poseidon Adventure & Star Wars Memories

    Poseidon Adventure & Star Wars Memories

    Bottoms up! Oh, I mean…

    Roy and I toss back a few in our discussion of “The Poseidon Adventure” (1972) here:

    Worst New Year’s Eve ever? I’ve had a few that have run it pretty close.

    Be that as it may, if “The Poseidon Adventure” (1972) teaches us anything, it’s that there’s got to be a morning after.

    To anyone obsessed with the movies and especially to any sci-fi fan who lived through it, the date 5-25-77 takes on an almost totemic significance. That’s the day “Star Wars” was unleashed on an unsuspecting world and, for better or worse, changed everything. Next week, we’ll be talking about a new film, “5-25-77” (2022) – actually two decades in the making – that reflects that first wave of “Star Wars” mania, with its story about a young midwestern filmmaker caught up in the excitement. One of the producers for the project was none other than Gary Kurtz, who produced the original “Star Wars!”

    To sweeten the pot, we’ll be joined by my cousin and Roy’s lifelong friend, Joe Metz, as we use this discussion about the film as a springboard for our own personal reminiscences as nascent young filmmakers back in the 1970s and ‘80s, punctuating the conversation with stills and paraphernalia from those early, ambitious projects. Of course, none of us wound up devoting ourselves to making movies, which was probably a good thing, but we had a heck of a lot of fun while it lasted.

    Yeah, it was a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. I hope you’ll join us in the comments section for what’s bound to be the biggest digression in the show’s history, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. It will be all about us, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., next Friday evening at 7:30 EST.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Scrooge 1970 Uplifting Christmas Spirit

    Scrooge 1970 Uplifting Christmas Spirit

    So, it ain’t “Oliver!” What it is is a surprisingly potent bowl of warming Christmas punch. Just as Albert Finney’s Scrooge imbibes from the Cup of Human Kindness, so the viewer is uplifted, welcome or welcome not, by the high Spirits of “Scrooge” (1970). Leslie Bricusse’s hit-and-miss musical adaptation of Charles Dickens’ Christmas classic ends in an explosion of joy unrivaled in its boisterous onscreen ecstasy. Thank you very much, indeed!

    I can’t say that last night’s discussion scaled quite those same delirious heights, but we did our best to wring the Dickens out of it.

    Next week, it’s our hope to conclude 2022 with something very special indeed. Unless it falls through, which it probably will, in which case we’ll have to push it back to January and do something else instead. Watch this space for further developments!

    At the very least, I won’t make the same mistake as last night and will be sure to have a cup of cheer on hand to toast you, when you join us in the comments section. We’ll be slow-dancing to Guy Lombardo on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., next Friday evening at 7:30 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Scrooge 1970 A Christmas Carol Holiday Review

    Scrooge 1970 A Christmas Carol Holiday Review

    Is there a more jubilant conclusion to any version of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol?” Oh my! Thank you very much, indeed!

    Albert Finney’s make-up as “Scrooge” (1970) is a bit of a distraction (he was only 33 at the time, in this, his first big-screen “character role”) and Leslie Bricusse’s hit-and-miss score makes “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang” seem like Noel Coward, but the choreography and energetic commitment to the enterprise make it a satisfying entry in the unlikely craze for Dickens musicals, unleashed by Lionel Bart’s “Oliver!”

    This characterization of the Humbug-spouting miser isn’t as straightforward as some. Finney and director Ronald Neame (“The Horse’s Mouth,” “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,” “The Poseidon Adventure”) offer us premature glimpses of Scrooge’s nascent goodness and almost childlike humor, stirred by metaphoric spiritual visitations and the “milk of human kindness,” but willfully tamped down by obstinate backslidings. Until, of course, his redemption inspires the usual eruption of joy.

    I have to confess, I was a little cranky when I sat down to watch it late last night, but the film succeeded in instilling a little holiday spirit and made me miss what movies used to be able to accomplish.

    The discussion will be generous when Roy and I dive headlong into this Christmas pudding, on a special holiday edition of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. All the punch will be in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., at a special time, THIS THURSDAY EVENING AT 7:00 EST!

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