Tag: Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

  • Star Trek III The Search for Spock Revisited

    Star Trek III The Search for Spock Revisited

    The combination of Spock with “Where’s Waldo?” is a million-dollar idea. Too bad it appears I didn’t get there first. But even if I did, I probably would have thrown it away for free on Facebook or tossed it off as a quip to entertain my friends, like I do with so many of my other million-dollar ideas, and then leave it out in the sun to blanch with the rest of my cavalier creations. If only I had a Boswell to follow me around and document my genius, or a sheepdog to nip at my shanks and corral me into actually doing something with them.

    Be that as it may, this post isn’t about me; it’s about Spock. I’m not quite sure why “Star Trek III” (1984) bears the subtitle “The Search for Spock.” It’s not like nobody knows where he is. The big question, once it’s figured out WHY he is, is how to get him back. Undoubtedly, this conundrum will be addressed as part of our conversation this week, when we talk about the film on “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.”

    Spock, of course, nobly sacrificed himself at the climax of the greatest of the “Star Trek” movies, “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.” “Kahn” was popcorn entertainment with resonance, the installment that proved, after a lumbering start to the celluloid franchise, that “Star Trek” could successfully make the leap to the big screen, with an exciting adventure story and compelling characters (Ricardo Montalban, clearly making use of his gym membership), and still honor its sacred roots.

    I remember at the time there was a lot of behind-the-scenes wrangling, with Leonard Nimoy wanting to leave the series. After all, this is the guy who titled his autobiography “I Am Not Spock.” (He later recanted with a second memoir, titled “I Am Spock.”) Clearly, this was a guy who was conflicted about his legacy. But he never played Spock, in whatever incarnation of “Star Trek,” without great integrity. Perhaps it’s for this reason that Spock remains, arguably, the most fascinating (you see what I did there?) character in the entire “Star Trek” canon.

    Anyway, that tension hung over “Star Trek II,” and, in those days before the internet, fandom was abuzz with the question, “Will Spock die?” Kirk even tosses off a coy remark, early in the film: “Aren’t you dead?” “Star Trek III” continues to play with audience expectations by not listing Nimoy among the actors in the opening credits. But hey, he directed the film, and his character’s name is right there in the title. He had better come back!

    “Star Trek III” hopes to replicate some of that “Kahn” magic by coming up with another sacrifice to equal the emotional wallop of Spock’s loss, and I’m sure it’s one that hit hardcore Trekkers where they live. But come on, it ain’t Spock. At the end of the day, when the fanboy tears dry, what’s sacrificed can be easily replaced, and has been, how many times?

    But looking back, as someone who graduated from high school in 1984, the loss takes on a certain loaded significance, I admit, as, like the crew of the Enterprise, my ongoing mission to seek out new life and new civilizations would never again be quite the same. The life would be there, but where’s the joy in uncovering new civilizations without the comfort of old, familiar things?

    Roy and I will reflect on this and other matters, as we take a nostalgic trip back to “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock,” for the 40th anniversary of its release. We’ll be joined by our friends, Mike & Marybeth of SciFi Distilled, who certainly know a thing or two about “Trek.” In fact, one of them will be joining us from the Star Trek Original Set Tour in Ticonderoga, NY. Without their kind assistance, no doubt, Roy and I would run long and perspire.

    We’ll be searching for you in the comments section for a group mind meld, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. To miss it would be illogical, as we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner


    For the Trekker who has everything (provided he or she hasn’t picked it up since it’s publication in 2017): Robb Pearlman’s “Search for Spock”

    REVIEW: Robb Pearlman’s “Search for Spock”

  • Saturn 3 How Could It Go So Wrong Sci-Fi

    Saturn 3 How Could It Go So Wrong Sci-Fi

    With a creative team like that assembled for “Saturn 3” (1980) – Hollywood legend Kirk Douglas, ‘70s icon Farrah Fawcett, and Scorsese veteran Harvey Keitel, in a story by “Star Wars” production designer John Barry, developed into a screenplay by acclaimed novelist Martin Amis, directed by “Singin’ in the Rain” maestro Stanley Donen, with a score by “Magnificent Seven” composer Elmer Bernstein – how could it possibly fail? And yet when I saw it in the theater, even as a 13 year-old, I couldn’t believe how bad it was.

    But you know, sometimes the worst movies make for the best discussions. I can only guess that that’s our motivation, in selecting it as our topic for the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Roy and I will offer our saturnine assessments of this claustrophobic would-be thriller, about a love triangle between a feather-haired Angel, a dimple-chinned methuselah, and a pin-headed robot.

    To help dull the pain, there will also be some fun recollections from special guest Suzanne Peterson, who was Farrah’s stand-in on the film.

    Join us in hectoring Hector in the comments section. We’ll do our best to eclipse “Saturn 3,” when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Excalibur A Bloody Brilliant Review

    Excalibur A Bloody Brilliant Review

    I remember when “Excalibur” opened in April 1981. I was 14 years-old, a sensitive kid, and its R-rating made me nervous that there might be arm-loppings.

    There were arm-loppings. And violent death. And gore.

    But the tension only enhanced the film’s gravitas, with its weighty armor and weighty themes, and its brooding Wagnerian soundtrack was promptly assimilated into the underscore of my tragic-heroic teens. I would get up in the middle of the night if I saw the movie was going to be shown on HBO and greet the new day with grim determination.

    It is with the weight of the world upon me that I will rouse myself from my torpor for yet another year of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. At long last, Roy (from the French “Roi,” for “King,” not incidentally) has granted me my request to discuss this extraordinarily rich film.

    Director John Boorman took his share of liberties with the discursive source material, conflating elements mostly from Sir Thomas Malory’s medieval epic “Le Morte d’Arthur” (“The Death of Arthur”), but to this day, no film better captures the true spirit of the Arthurian legends. Boorman blends mystery and mysticism as seductively as the dragon’s breath that accompanies the Charm of Making.

    And what a cast! For a time, every time I rewatched “Excalibur,” somebody else got famous: Patrick Stewart, Gabriel Byrne, Liam Neeson, and Ciaran Hinds join Nigel Terry, Helen Mirren, and a scene-stealing Nicol Williamson (who eschews Merlin’s pointy hat for a glimmering skull-cap).

    I always think of “Excalibur” this time of year, with the blossoms falling from the trees, because of the memorable sequence, in which a wasting Arthur is revived (“The king and the land are one!”) and once more he leads his knights into battle.

    A relic from the days when men were men, devouring game with their hands, growling like animals at even the most unthreatening of challenges, and never pausing to remove their armor while in the act of love, “Excalibur” is both hilarious, in a Monty Python sort of way, and very, very grave. This is King Arthur for people who roll their eyes at “Camelot” and “The Sword in the Stone.”

    I hope you’ll join us for our Fifth Season opener – a ponderous discussion of “Excalibur” – on the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” Arm-loppings will abound in the comments section as I swill Guinness from my grail, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Sunday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • It Came From Outer Space 4th Anniversary

    It Came From Outer Space 4th Anniversary

    It came from outer space? Shouldn’t it be “they?” As in, more than one?

    Or perhaps “Them!,” as the film shares a desert setting with that post-atomic-colossal-ants-run-amok milestone.

    But who are we to quibble over grammar, when our aim is to party like it’s 1953?

    I hope you’ll join us for a special FOURTH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner and a no-doubt-slightly-tipsy discussion of “It Came from Outer Space.”

    This is just about the quintessential 1950s sci-fi flick, replete with theremins, bug-eyed monsters, and shrieking heroines, all presented in eyepopping 3-D. The film was released the same year as “The War of the Worlds” and “Invaders from Mars.” Clearly, there were some serious anxieties churning beneath the veneer of post-war prosperity.

    Ray Bradbury came up with the story, in which liberal and conservative ideologies strike sparks and everyone is suspect, and Jack Arnold directed. Arnold brought his share of young couples closer with such subsequent drive-in fare as “Creature from the Black Lagoon” (1954), “Tarantula” (1955), and “The Incredible Shrinking Man” (1957).

    You know you’re watching a 1950s science fiction movie when it opens with the protagonist, an amateur astronomer and confirmed bachelor, enjoying a night in the desert by candlelight, before a crackling fire, in his tweed jacket with patches on the elbows, smoking his pipe, with his impeccably-dressed, devoted girlfriend at his side. Talk about enjoying all your pleasures at once! But for our astronomer-Adam, it just isn’t enough; so he goes in search of the forbidden fruit of a super-meteorite that crashes among spiders and Joshua trees within range of his telescope.

    And what do you know, in a movie full of scientists, who should turn up but the Professor from “Gilligan’s Island!”

    Technically, I wasn’t brought aboard the sci-fi flagship until June 2020, but Roy broke the champagne bottle across the bow on April 3, launching a virtual life raft for a worldwide community of housebound science fiction lovers. I’m honored to participate in this fourth-anniversary celebration of “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner” – also serving as a memorial of sorts for actress Barbara Rush, who died on March 31st.

    You just know the discussion will exceed the 80-minute running time of the actual movie. Bring your clashing values to the comments section and be sure to have a libation on hand, as we reminisce about Covid, camaraderie, and “It Came from Outer Space.” It will be one meaty meteor, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Sunday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Vikings Handel and Jack Cardiff’s Cinema

    Vikings Handel and Jack Cardiff’s Cinema

    In preparation for Roy and my discussion on Friday night about “The Vikings” (1958), on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, I was brushing up on legendary cinematographer Jack Cardiff, who was responsible for the film’s breathtaking visuals (many of them captured on-location at the fjords of Hardanger, Norway). “The Vikings” was produced by Kirk Douglas and directed by Richard Fleisher (who helmed “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,” “Fantastic Voyage,” and one of my favorite films noirs, “The Narrow Margin”). Cardiff also worked with Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger on “Black Narcissus” and “The Red Shoes,” John Huston on “The African Queen,” and Alfred Hitchcock on “Under Capricorn.”

    Occasionally, he took the director’s chair himself. Riding the box office success of “The Vikings,” he was given the opportunity to direct another Viking adventure, “The Long Ships” (which, alas, has little to do with the absurdly entertaining source novel by Frans G. Bengtsson). He received his greatest acclaim in that capacity for an adaptation of D.H. Lawrence’s “Sons and Lovers,” which was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including one for Best Director.

    This is all preamble to the revelation of my discovery that Cardiff once lensed a film called “The Great Mr. Handel” (1942). Coincidentally, Friday, the day of our “Vikings” discussion, also happened to be George Frideric Handel’s birthday! Here’s a link to the film, surely an agreeable diversion for a Sunday afternoon. It looks like it may even include the episode in which the irascible composer threatened to drop a soprano out the window!

    If you’re interested, Roy and I raise our drinking horns to Odin, as we converse about “The Vikings,” here:

    Roy will welcome back filmmaker Jeffrey Morris, founder and CEO of FutureDude Entertainment, to update viewers on the progress of his current documentary, “The Eagle Obsession.” The film centers on the continued resonance of the iconic spacecraft created for the television series “Space: 1999.” Morris’ appearance will stream at a special time, on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Wednesday evening at 8:30 EST.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

    We’ll be taking off on Friday. More time for me to catch up on half-forgotten composer biopics!

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