Tag: Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner

  • The Devil Rides Out Hammer Horror Christopher Lee

    The Devil Rides Out Hammer Horror Christopher Lee

    “Don’t look at the eyes, Rex… DON’T LOOK AT THE EYES!”

    But of course, nobody in this movie listens.

    Roy Bjellquist and I will continue our month-long celebration of Halloween with a discussion of my favorite Christopher Lee film, “The Devil Rides Out” (released in the U.S. in 1968 as “The Devil’s Bride”).

    Lee gets to play the hero for a change, aristocrat and occultist Nicholas, Duc de Richlieu, who alone possesses the arcane knowledge to do battle against a web of Satanists. Richlieu is the hero of no less than ELEVEN novels by Dennis Wheatley – of which only THREE have supernatural themes. WTF? Elsewhere, he’s frittering away his time solving mysteries, battling Spanish anarchists, rescuing relatives from Soviet prison, fighting Nazis, or otherwise engaged in colorful globetrotting.

    But perhaps that’s all just as well. Having read “The Devil Rides Out,” I can tell you it’s nothing to write home about. Thankfully the movie is another story, surely one of Hammer’s best!

    We’ve already made our sacrifice to the Goat of Mendes, so hopefully we’ll be spared the connectivity issues we suffered on Friday night.

    I hope you’ll join us, with your comments and insights, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, to be live-streamed on Facebook this Sunday night at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner/

    Since the movie itself doesn’t appear to be available for streaming through official channels in the U.S., here are a couple of links to Dailymotion, where it’s been posted in two parts.

    https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x38ggi5

  • Soylent Green Discussion Silenced!

    Connectivity issues delayed last night’s discussion of “Soylent Green” (1973), a conversation, apparently, the corporatocracy didn’t want you to hear! Fortunately, people will do anything for what they need. And what they need is Soylent Green…

    Sincere thanks to our viewers who held tight for the hour, as Roy figured out a workaround. We’ve already made our sacrifice to the Goat of Mendes, so hopefully tomorrow night’s discussion of “The Devil Rides Out” (a.k.a. “The Devil’s Bride”) will take place as scheduled.

    Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner live-streams on Facebook Fridays and Sundays at 7 pm EDT (supposedly). Congratulations to Shari Bethman-Bjellquist, who withstood seeing “Soylent Green” twice in the theater, on her “Roy’s Tie-Dye” debut!

  • Soylent Green Movie Discussion Livestream

    Soylent Green Movie Discussion Livestream

    I think I can see what happened here. Charlton Heston, giddy from his sci-fi success with “Planet of the Apes” – a film that features one of the greatest twist-endings of all time – is handed the script for “Soylent Green.” He gets to the last page and says, “Yesssssssssssssss!”

    Not that anyone who is half-way paying attention doesn’t see the pay-off coming from 90 minutes away.

    Still, far be it from me to spoil it – at least until tonight, when Roy Bjellquist and I will be joined by special guest, “Soylent Green” enthusiast Shari Bethman-Bjellquist, to discuss this 1973 dystopian classic on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.

    Chime in with your colorful insights and feedback, as we live-stream on Facebook, this Friday night at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner/

  • Soylent Green Edward G Robinson’s Final Role

    Soylent Green Edward G Robinson’s Final Role

    Is this the end of Rico?

    Edward G. Robinson, who was propelled to stardom as Caesar Enrico Bandello in 1931’s “Little Caesar,” made his final screen appearance 42 years later, in “Soylent Green.”

    Richard Fleischer’s adaptation of Harry Harryson’s dystopian novel “Make Room! Make Room!” is that rare film that can be spoiled by revealing but a single line. So we’ll save it for tomorrow, when Roy Bjellquist and I will be joined by special guest – and Roy’s wife – Shari Bethman-Bjellquist, for a discussion of this ‘70s sci-fi classic, a horror story set in the year 2022, now getting just a little too close for comfort.

    Robinson’s scenes are lent an added poignance, when you realize he was already aware that he was terminally ill. In fact, he died only twelve days after shooting his final scene. His character, Sol, is a cultivated dinosaur, much like the real-life Robinson, an art connoisseur who spoke seven languages. Sol the librarian puts on a recording of Mozart’s “Kegelstatt” Trio as he introduces Charlton Heston’s Frank Thorn to honest-to-goodness vegetables and beef stew. Then, when it’s time to “go home,” he departs to a medley of Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, and Grieg.

    Interestingly, a few years earlier, Robinson was cast to play Dr. Zaius, opposite Heston, in “Planet of the Apes,” but already, health concerns caused him to drop out.

    Climate change. Greenhouse gases. Dying oceans. Pollution. Poverty. Overpopulation. Depleted resources. Corporatocracy. And gruesome solutions. If anything, this film has become more chilling – and more likely – with the passing of the years, than it ever was in 1973.

    All hail plankton! Green is the new black, on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Join us for this special three-way conversation. We’ll be looking for your comments, when we live-stream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner/

  • Star Trek Halloween Spock’s Catspaw

    Even Mr. Spock could be catty in this one.

    Last night, we celebrated Roy’s 50th episode with a discussion of the classic “Star Trek” Halloween episode “Catspaw,” and some Johnnie Walker Red.

    On Friday, we’ll be joined by special guest (and Roy’s wife) Shari Bethman-Bjellquist, as we make a meal of “Soylent Green” (1972); and then on Sunday, Roy and I will be back in the saddle for one of my personal Halloween favorites, “The Devil Rides Out” (1968), starring the great Christopher Lee.

    Get ready for some serious hooves-on-hooves action. Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner live-streams on Facebook every Friday and Sunday at 7 pm EDT!

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