Tag: Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

  • Isis Tribute on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

    Isis Tribute on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

    The trees continue to demonstrate their disdain for all things Roy. Another downed sequoia knocked out his power for most of the day yesterday and apparently internet connectivity could only be achieved through his smartphone.

    In the end, he was able to join us from the dark side of the moon (i.e. Phillipsburg, NJ) for a “Journey to the Center of the Earth” (1959). Hey, it’s to be expected that the Wi-Fi would be terrible at the earth’s core. Nevertheless, we soldiered on, probably talking over one another on occasion, but if you pretend that Roy took the red pill and is now living in the Matrix, you’ll be just fine.

    That gives us a week to the straighten it all out, as next time we’ll be slipping into our footie jammies and pouring ourselves heaping bowls of Cap’n Crunch for a journey back to 1970s Saturday morning television and a tribute to the late Joanna Cameron. Those of a certain age will recognize her as mighty “Isis” (1975-77). At a point, she was also listed in the Guinness Book as having appeared in the most national television commercials in advertising history! Cameron died last month at the age of 73.

    Joining us will be Lisa Everetts of the podcast “POP ninja,“ who was a personal friend of Cameron. Like us, “Pop Ninja” exudes an inordinate amount of affection for 1970s and ‘80s nostalgia. Check it out. It’s fun.

    Then join us for our recollections of “Isis” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Leave your moral lessons in the comments section. We’ll be crowing “Tut!” when we livestream on Facebook, next Friday evening at a special time, 8:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Dr Strangelove & Journey to Earth Movie Discussion

    Dr Strangelove & Journey to Earth Movie Discussion

    If you’re wondering about my peculiar garb last night, it was not my intention to kick off the holidays with my Bob Cratchit impression. I’ve been trying to beat a sore throat the last couple of days. But a mug of tea with honey and lemon had me good-to-go for Roy and my discussion of “Dr. Strangelove” (1964). On the whole, the show got me out of my head and made for a cheering evening, especially some of the digressions, including an unexpected shout-out to Marlin Perkins!

    Next week, we “Journey to the Center of the Earth” (1959) with Jules Verne and James Mason. Composer Bernard Herrmann pulls out all the stops on this underground classic – quite literally, with cathedral organ and four electronic organs, alongside an obsolete Renaissance instrument called the serpent.

    Watch the movie, then join us for a subterranean chat, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Monitor those monitor lizards (really rhinoceros iguanas) in the comments section. We’ll be carrying the torch when we livestream on Facebook, next Friday evening at 7:00 EST!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Sterling Hayden Easton PA? A Lost Encounter

    Sterling Hayden Easton PA? A Lost Encounter

    Is it possible Sterling Hayden once poured me a drink at a party in Easton, PA? This would have been in the mid-1980s. My bosom chum Matt Anthony seems to think so. But I think by then surely I would have known who he was? Hayden was the hard-bitten noir antihero of John Huston’s “The Asphalt Jungle” (1950) and the title character in Nicholas Ray’s campy, kinky western “Johnny Guitar” (1954).

    Granted, at that point I may not have seen those movies, but I did see “Dr. Strangelove” (1964), which we’ll be discussing tomorrow night on “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” Hayden plays the rogue, cigar-chomping, machine gun wielding Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper, who hates commies, but sure does value his essence.

    Hayden himself was always a maverick. As early as 1941, he expressed dissatisfaction with Hollywood, calling himself more of a sailor than an actor. He enlisted in the U.S. Army, hoping to fight in World War II, but broke his ankle in basic training. Undeterred, he joined the Marines under an alias, and distinguished himself for his courage, running supplies and conducting rescue missions behind enemy lines.

    After the war, he intimated to the press that he thought it was his patriotic duty to return to the movies. It was an altruistic impulse that was not to last. In 1958, following a bitter divorce, he dropped out again. He defied a court order and took off with his four kids, sailing for Tahiti. Again, he considered himself a sailor, not an actor, and decided to make a go at writing. He had little patience for phonies and turned that same hard judgment on himself, considering himself a failure. Even so, somehow whenever he needed money, there always seemed to be a part waiting for him in Tinseltown.

    He was still active in the 1970s, appearing in “The Godfather” (1972) and in the television miniseries “The Blue and the Gray” (1982, as John Brown no less). It’s sobering to realize, at the time he played Capt. McCluskey in “The Godfather,” he was probably about my age! That may be one of the few times you’ll read the words “Hayden” and “sober” in the same paragraph. He died in Sausalito in 1986 at the age of 70.

    Anyway, I’ve always been fascinated by classic movies, even before I entered elementary school, and by 1985 I would have seen “Dr. Strangelove.” Granted, by that point, Hayden was notorious for having grown a castaway beard and basically living on a barge in Paris. When he wasn’t in the U.S., that is. He also kept homes in Connecticut and California.

    As I say, he hated Hollywood, but he loved money, and he was often in need of it. For all his bluster, on some level he probably also liked acting, since he continued to do theater toward the end of his life. Of course, he also had a few problems with the tax man.

    I’m thinking the best shot that there is any validity to this story of Hayden having poured me a shot is if he happened to be appearing in a show in the Lehigh Valley or New Jersey. Or possibly New York. But I can’t find any record of that being the case online. Does anyone have any recollection of it being so?

    The only other wrinkle is that the party was thrown by a showboat lawyer, who’d gained a degree of notoriety well beyond the boundaries of Easton. Who knows, maybe somehow he attracted the attention of a grizzled, malcontented movie star who didn’t give a damn if we happened to be under 21?

    Everything about life is stranger than fiction in “Dr. Strangelove.” We’ll chuckle about Stanley Kubrick’s doomsday comedy of errors, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. See to the purity of your essence in the comments section. It will be an Armageddon arms race, when we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Mad Monster Party Rankin Bass Livestream This Friday

    Mad Monster Party Rankin Bass Livestream This Friday

    The only feature film of Arthur Rankin, Jr. and Jules Bass – who gained a kind of immortality through their stop-motion holiday specials – “Mad Monster Party” (1967) unites everyone’s favorite feature creatures – Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster, the Wolfman, the Invisible Man, the Mummy, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the Hunchback of Notre Dame, and the Creature from the Black Lagoon (among others) – with the voices of Boris Karloff and Phyllis Diller.

    Furthermore, the screenwriter and character designer are both from the stable of Mad Magazine. How could it possibly miss?

    Well, maybe there is something to “too much of a good thing…”

    But what’s a party without excess?

    We are happy to announce that SciFi Distilled’s Mike and Marybeth will array themselves in their Halloween finery to join Roy and me for an undead discussion about the film and perhaps a reminiscence about some of our favorite Rankin-Bass creations, among other digressions.

    We’ll do our best to breathe some life into “Mad Monster Party.” Our motion will be unstoppable, as we’re Rankin’ on Bass. Leave your Peter Lorre impressions in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, during a special crossover edition of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Langella’s Dracula A Retro Review

    Langella’s Dracula A Retro Review

    Frank Langella’s characterization of Bram Stoker’s Dracula drove the critics wild when the play by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston was revived on Broadway in 1977. It was the same adaptation that propelled Bela Lugosi to the big screen. But when the film “Dracula” (1979) was released a couple of years later, reviews were mixed.

    Langella retained his dreamy magnetism, and the producers managed to secure Sir Laurence Olivier and Kate Nelligan for the parts of Van Helsing and Lucy, respectively, but I wonder if John Badham was the best choice for director. Badham had just come off the enormous box office success of “Saturday Night Fever,” and it looks as if his Dracula retains John Travolta’s hair. You know, just for luck.

    I haven’t seen the film for decades, and having rewatched it now after rereading the book (for the first time in 30 years), I’ve got a few bones to pick. I hope you’ll join Roy and me tomorrow night, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, when I sink my fangs into “Dracula.” Enjoy some extra garlic on your pizza as you share your thoughts in the comments section. We’ll livestream with the undead on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner


    I remember being so excited, watching this trailer as a 13 year-old at the movies. When Langella leaped through a window and transformed into a wolf in mid-flight to John Williams’ music, it was almost more than I could bear. Watch the trailer (so much crisper and more intoxicating in the theater) here:

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