Tag: Science Fiction

  • Aliens Outland Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi

    Aliens Outland Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi

    I’m happy to report, Roy and I survived our encounter with “Aliens” (1986), James Cameron’s testosterone-soaked sequel to Ridley Scott’s haunted-house-in-space original. It’s interesting that the women – one of them a child – are all tougher than the men, even the Space Marines. But the “Alien” franchise has always been full of fascinating inversions. At the core of the mythos are anxiety and revulsion at the biological process of birth. Or maybe the films are just metaphors for a really nasty cold. Either way, the men aren’t equipped to handle it. We may love our explosions and our military hardware, but give us an impacted toenail and we start shopping for gravesites. Roy and I do our best to put on a brave face, but I’ve got my handkerchief with me, just in case.

    Next week, we’ll hang on to our grim determination when mining “Outland” (1981), which to me always seems to occupy the same universe as “Alien.” “Blade Runner” too, for that matter. There’s certainly plenty of corporate greed and corruption to revile as workers are put in peril on a mining colony located on one of the moons of Jupiter. Sean Connery plays the righteous marshal who won’t look the other way.

    It was not lost on critics and some audience members at the time that the film owes a fair amount to “High Noon.” It’s yet another example of how, after “Star Wars,” all the good westerns moved to space. We’ll be looking to deputize you in the comments section on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. I’ll be riding shotgun when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., next Friday evening at 7:30 EST!

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  • Mars Movies Music Conspiracy & Adventure

    Mars Movies Music Conspiracy & Adventure

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’re off to Mars – or are we?

    “Capricorn One” (1978) posits, in true conspiracy theory fashion, that the first manned mission to Mars is a fabrication, filmed on a sound stage. However, when the actual capsule burns up upon re-entry into the earth’s atmosphere, the government attempts to cover it up, and the astronauts are sent scrambling for their lives. This is the film in which O.J. Simpson eats a rattlesnake. The cast also includes Elliott Gould, James Brolin, Sam Waterston, Hal Holbrook, and Karen Black. Jerry Goldsmith wrote the propulsive score.

    The Red Planet is also the destination of the crew of Mars Gravity Probe 1, in “Robinson Crusoe on Mars” (1964). In events which loosely parallel the trajectory of Daniel Defoe’s classic novel, commander Paul Mantee survives a crash on the seemingly desolate planet, along with the mission’s test monkey. Later, he develops a friendship with an escaped alien slave, whom he names Friday. The composer is Van Cleave.

    Van Cleave had much in common with Ferde Grofé. Yes, THE Ferde Grofé – he of “The Grand Canyon Suite.” You’ll recall Grofé acted as an orchestrator for the Paul Whiteman Band. His most celebrated achievement in that capacity was his arrangement of George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue.”

    Cleave had also served as an arranger for Whiteman. Later, he pioneered the use of the theremin in his television scores, for series like “The Twilight Zone.”

    It was Grofé who allegedly introduced the theremin to outer space, with his music for “Rocketship X-M” (1950). “Rocketship X-M’s” unlikely premise is that the spacecraft of the title overshoots its target, the moon, and inadvertently ends up on Mars – a difference of many, many, many millions of miles! Lloyd Bridges heads the cast.

    Sadly, “John Carter” (2012), Walt Disney’s long-overdue adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Martian tales, was branded a colossal flop. It’s a sad state of affairs when a 300 million dollar take is considered a disappointment! Though the film failed to live up to box office expectations, and some of the tropes established by Burroughs 100 years ago seem a little overly-familiar in the decades since the release of “Star Wars,” “John Carter” was nowhere near as bad as one was led to believe. It was certainly no worse than any other film of its kind made in recent years, and in fact a good deal better than many. And I would include in that assessment any of the recent Tolkien adaptations.

    True, most of the potential magic is lost in the usual over-reliance on computer effects, and the screenplay makes some unnecessary alterations to the books. But all in all, “John Carter” is a satisfying Martian adventure. Edgar Rice Burroughs never aspired to be Joseph Conrad. The film’s epic, evocative score is by Michael Giacchino.

    Prepare to see red with music from movies about the fourth planet, when Mars is our destination – whether by design, by accident, by conspiracy, or by unexplained means – on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!

  • Unpacking The Man Who Fell to Earth

    Unpacking The Man Who Fell to Earth

    “The Man Who Fell to Earth” (1976) may have traveled without luggage, but there certainly is a lot to unpack.

    Nicholas Roeg’s determinedly experimental adaptation of Walter Tevis’ novel (he also wrote the books that formed the bases for Paul Newman’s “The Hustler” and the recent Netflix sensation “The Queen’s Gambit”), “The Man Who Fell to Earth” is kind of like E.T.’s lost weekend.

    David Bowie, in his big screen debut, is the ethereal visitor from a dying planet who plans to return home with the necessary resources to save his people. However, he becomes increasingly mired in earthly distractions: media saturation, addiction (both chemical and interpersonal), human foibles, and institutional interference. Also, everyone he meets seems to spend so much of their time naked. And I’m talking really ‘70s naked.

    Disorienting at times to the point of semi-coherence, “The Man Who Fell to Earth” is the perfect metaphor for a Roy and Ross conversation. You’ll need something stronger than water when ranking your favorite Rip Torn nude scenes in the comments section, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Interplanetary travel has seldom been so trippy as when we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:30 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • E.T. at 40 A Sentimental Education

    E.T. at 40 A Sentimental Education

    A four-handkerchief science fiction fantasy? Steven Spielberg managed it 40 years ago, and audiences went for it in a big way. “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial” has been touching hearts with a great big glowing finger since the film’s release on June 11, 1982. And thank God for it. In a world that very badly needs to remember what it’s like to embrace its humanity, we could use more movies, more stories, more music like it. Never mind Flaubert. “E.T.” is a crash course in sentimental education.

    We’ll talk about it tomorrow night on “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” I confess, even though I was the one to suggest it, I am also a little reluctant to discuss it. But Roy and I certainly didn’t want the 40th anniversary of this cinematic milestone to pass unremarked. It’s the one movie where, depending on where the discussion goes, I may have to turn off my video. And maybe even the audio. If you have any baggage, “E.T.” will unpack it in a hurry.

    Spielberg and screenwriter Melissa Mathison draw on everything from the Bible to “Peter Pan” to craft an emotionally honest bedtime story that taps into eternal truths about childhood, love, and parting. Remarkably uncynical, full of hope, and just downright beautiful on every level, “E.T.” is a blockbuster with heart. It’s also a remarkably vibrant time capsule of what it was it like to grow up in the 1980s.

    Kudos to Carlo Rambaldi for his animatronic puppetry. Rewatching the film last night, I marveled at what they used to be able to accomplish before CGI became the default.

    And John Williams has never been better. In terms of storytelling, the last 15 minutes of “E.T.” is as good as it gets at the movies. Reportedly Spielberg shut off the projector at the recording session in order to give Williams maximum flexibility in conducting the orchestra, and fine-tuned the sequence later, reediting the images, the better to allow the music to fully breathe.

    This is the film that unhorsed “Star Wars” as the highest-grossing of all time and held the top slot for 15 years.

    Is it Spielberg’s greatest movie? Yes. Yes, it is. I’ll argue why, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. So bring your Reese’s Pieces to the comments section. We’ll be chasing rainbows and clapping our hands for fairies when we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

    If you are one of those obstinate folk who has avoided “E.T.” all these years, and you plan to tune in for our conversation, for the love of movies, do watch it before we spoil it!

    May “E.T.” live long in our hearts!

  • Roy’s Sci-Fi Corner Two Years of Bond & Beyond

    Roy’s Sci-Fi Corner Two Years of Bond & Beyond

    104 weeks of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, and all I got was this lousy t-shirt.

    Last night, Roy and I celebrated two years of delving into a shared nostalgia for science-fiction film and television of the 1950s, ‘60s, and ‘70s, with a conversation about “Dr. No” (1962), the first of the James Bond films – not coincidentally marking its 60th anniversary this year.

    Technically, I didn’t join the show until June 2020 (more to celebrate in June), but the series was initiated by Roy in April, with Phil Merkel the first guest, as a means of bringing everyone together during the doldrums of pandemic isolation.

    We’ve had plenty of laughs along the way. Thank you to all of you in our loyal audience, who show up week after week to share your wisecracks and insights. It’s always a great way to launch a weekend. Most amazingly, Roy and I had not seen one another for a good 35 years, prior to our Zoom reunion.

    You can watch two April fools blather about Bond at the link. We’ll do it again next week, once we decide on our next topic. Mix yourself a Vesper Martini (shaken, not stirred) and join us for the Facebook livestream, next Friday evening at 7:00 EDT.

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