Tag: Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

  • Haunted Hill with Roy & Dracula Next!

    Haunted Hill with Roy & Dracula Next!

    Roy and I were locked in a Frank Lloyd Wright house with a gliding hag, a floating skeleton, and a roomful of captive Zoom followers for last night’s discussion of the William Castle-Vincent Price classic “House on Haunted Hill.” View the digression-rich conversation as we collect our $10,000 here:

    Then consider joining us next week, as we continue our countdown to Halloween and sink our fangs into “Dracula” (1979). Frank Langella brings his acclaimed Broadway characterization to the big screen, Sir Laurence Olivier is Van Helsing, and John Williams provides an overheated, romantic score.

    There will be plenty of “coffin” as we flap our wings for “Dracula,” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Go bats in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, next Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • House on Haunted Hill Vincent Price Horror

    House on Haunted Hill Vincent Price Horror

    “I am Frederick Loren, and I have rented the house on Haunted Hill tonight so that my wife can give a party. She’s so amusing. There’ll be food and drink and ghosts, and perhaps even a few murders. You’re all invited. If any of you will spend the next twelve hours in this house, I will give you each ten thousand dollars, or your next of kin in case you don’t survive.”

    Vincent Price clearly relishes his part as a sociopathic millionaire in “House on Haunted Hill” (1959), oozing disdain for his equally contemptuous spouse and distributing macabre party favors to his guests: tiny coffins with pistols inside! In kind, we’ll savor our discussion of the film, though perhaps with a little less polish, on the next “Roy’s Tie Dye Sci Corner.”

    This Halloween camp classic was the brainchild of William Castle. Castle was notorious for spicing up his B-movie entertainments with in-theater gimmickry, like wiring seats for electricity, including breaks so that audiences can pass judgment on a villain or scream away monsters, and issuing $1,000 life insurance policies in case anyone should die of fright. For “House on Haunted Hill,” a skeleton was sent hurtling over the audience at a key moment in a technique he dubbed “Emergo.”

    The film’s disproportionate success is said to have caught the notice of Alfred Hitchcock and inspired Hitch to undertake his own low-budget black-and-white thriller, “Psycho.” At a lean 75 minutes, “House on Haunted Hill” never outstays its chilly welcome.

    Roy and I will be haunted housesitting and swapping acid remarks on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Lend us a little rope in the comments section, as we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Road Trip with “The Car” & House on Haunted Hill

    Road Trip with “The Car” & House on Haunted Hill

    You might say Roy and I were “men possessed” last night during our road trip with “The Car” (1977).

    Of course, as with any road trip, after a while the fatigue begins to set in, you start to get punchy, not all the witticisms land, and by the end you’re just looking for a restroom.

    Still, some of the comments were good. As Phil Merkel observed, “If Satan possessed a Car, what he’d do would be to drive at 25 miles per hour in the fast lane with the left blinker on.”

    The conversation is archived for posterity here:

    Next week, our topic will be William Castle’s camp classic “House on Haunted Hill” (1959), one of Vincent Price’s most entertaining films. Price plays an eccentric millionaire who invites five people to a spooky mansion for a “haunted house party” in honor of his fourth wife’s birthday. Anyone who can make it through the night will receive $10,000.

    It’s evident from the start the millionaire and his wife despise one other. Furthermore, the guests are given party favors in the form of tiny coffins with pistols inside. That’s a pretty good indication that you should probably leave.

    Even so, the Price is right, when we discuss “House on Haunted Hill,” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Post your comments in Emergo as we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

    Watch the haunting trailer now!

  • David Frankham Stories on Roy’s Sci-Fi Corner

    David Frankham Stories on Roy’s Sci-Fi Corner

    Warm thanks to David Frankham and Jonathan David Dixon for their return appearance last night to Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.

    Frankham shared anecdotes about Vincent Price, Walt Disney, Alfred Hitchcock, Barbara Stanwyck, Ernie Kovacs, his guest shot on the original “Star Trek,” and many more. A born entertainer, his recall is enviable, his stories colorful and amusing, and his joie de vivre, even at the age of 95, palpable.

    The show has been archived here:

    If it piques your interest, there’s plenty more in Frankham’s memoir, “Which One Was David?” I’ll be placing my order today!

    I hope you’ll join us on Friday, as Roy and I continue with our month-long celebration of Halloween and do our best to jumpstart your weekend with a discussion about “The Car” (1977), part of a befuddling trend in the 1970s of possessed vehicle movies (“Duel,” “Killdozer,” “Herbie the Love Bug”). James Brolin subjects himself to 98 minutes of Satanic honking and harassment in a remote town in the American Southwest. Drop by and oil our pistons in the comments section. We’ll be grinding our gears on “The Car,” this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Kronos Vampire Hunter & David Frankham Discussion

    Kronos Vampire Hunter & David Frankham Discussion

    Last night, Roy and I were armed to the teeth for a discussion of “Captain Kronos, Vampire Hunter.” For once, the digressions were practically necessary to the conversation about this off-the-wall Hammer cult classic, in which basically anything goes. Is it horror? Swashbuckler? Spaghetti western? Japanese chanbara? The program has been archived for your belated enjoyment here:

    Tomorrow night, we’ll speak with actor David Frankham, on a special Sunday edition of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Frankham’s resume encompasses a colorful cross-section of classic film and television. In particular, he has been elevated to a kind of “Star Trek” nobility for his role in the original series episode “Is There in Truth No Beauty?” He also co-starred in the film “Master of the World,” with Vincent Price and Charles Bronson, which we only just discussed the week before last.

    Regrettably, because of technical issues at Trekonderoga, our conversation had to be rescheduled. We hope you used that extra time to prepare! Leave your questions in the comments section, during a frank discussion with David Frankham, when we livestream on Facebook, tomorrow evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

    In the meantime, watch Frankham transform into a monstrous skeleton, as a “magician,” in the opener of this classic episode of Boris Karloff’s “Thriller.” The episode also features Henry Daniell and Marion Ross, later “Mrs. C” on “Happy Days!”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkKHxCBPLv8

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