Tag: SciFi Distilled

  • Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein Resurrected

    Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein Resurrected

    The monsters came along at just the right time for Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. By the late 1940s, the comedy team had fallen into a rut. Universal Studios’ faith in their popularity was wavering and behind the scenes, tension between the two was through the roof. Ironically, it was their first crossover with the undead that breathed fresh life into the team’s box office.

    You might say history is about to repeat itself, then, in that, in the fifth year of the existence of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, Roy and I have been invited to look past our own flagging fortunes and personal animosity to join Mike and Marybeth on SciFi Distilled for a Halloween-week discussion about “Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein” (1948).

    Even though I was never an enormous Abbott and Costello fan, like anyone else within broadcast range of New York’s WPIX in the 1970s, I saw more than my share of their movies (and also, on some channel or other, the Abbott and Costello television show, featuring everyone’s least favorite Stooge, the even more annoying Joe Besser).

    Sure, Bud and Lou had a few funny bits (the Susquehanna Hat Company and of course “Who’s on First?”), but even as a kid I found the formula exasperating: Abbott (the taller, thinner, smooth-talking straight man), oblivious, dismissive, or heaping abuse on his partner (hard to classify them as friends), Costello (the short, rotund, perpetually-tormented, childlike patsy). This got old in a hurry, as every kid could basically identify with Lou, even if he was an idiot man-child. As with Tom Cat and Jerry Mouse, on the rare occasions when the tormenter got his, I was elated. (Even as a child, I was infuriated by injustice.)

    However, once Abbott and Costello fell in with the monsters, it was another story entirely. I paid little attention to the duo’s dynamic, because I was transfixed by the Wolfman, Dracula, and Frankenstein’s monster. And I was not alone. As I say, Frankenstein was a reanimating force for the team. Thanks to the film’s success, Universal Studios greenlit further meetings with the Invisible Man, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the Mummy, and “the Killer, Boris Karloff.”

    If I’m not mistaken, this will be Roy and my fifth annual Halloween crossover with Mike and Marybeth. As always, we will discuss the film in costume. This will be the first time, to my knowledge, that either show has dipped back into the 1940s, which after all is really my wheelhouse, so it will be interesting to see where the conversation goes. M&M are usually pretty good about keeping the proceedings to an hour (Roy and I often sprawl to two), so it will be a quick visit, but guaranteed to be a lively one.

    I hope you’ll join us for a monstrous good time, as we meet for “Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein,” on “SciFi Distilled,” to be livestreamed on Facebook and YouTube, this Wednesday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/distilled

  • Exorcist Postponed Fright Night Next

    Exorcist Postponed Fright Night Next

    The gap to Pazuzu remains unbridgeable! I am sorry to announce that once again we have to postpone our discussion of “The Exorcist.” And since next Sunday is our annual Halloween crossover celebration with Mike and Marybeth of SciFi Distilled (during which we’ll talk about the 1985 film “Fright Night”), the postponement is indefinite. We will cover “The Exorcist” at some point in the near future. Perhaps I’ll try to convince Roy to make it our Christmas movie! In the meantime, if you’re desperate for a taste of tie-dye, you can scroll through our archived shows at Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Keep the holy water handy. We hope to see you for “Fright Night,” next Sunday evening at 7:00 EDT!

  • Munsters World Series Watch Party & TV Retrospective

    Munsters World Series Watch Party & TV Retrospective

    Hey, if we could do “Rollerball” opposite the Super Bowl, we can do “The Munsters”(1964-66) opposite the World Series!

    I hope you’ll join us during commercial breaks on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, when the Phillies face off against the Astros, as we throw out the first pitch on Halloween weekend with a salute to the classic TV series. What’s more, for the third year in a row, we’ll be joined by Mike and Marybeth of SciFi Distilled.

    For anyone weaned on the black-and-white Universal Pictures monster movies of the 1930s and ‘40s, “The Munsters” was line-drive entertainment for much of its two-season run; but the streak was finally stopped short by the saturated color camp of “Batman.” Even so, Herman, Lily, Eddie, Marilyn, and Grandpa rose again in syndication, as a staple of afterschool television during the 1970s and ‘80s, and they’re still flitting around on cable, on stations like Cozi TV.

    Revisiting “The Munsters” is very cozy indeed. Sure, it’s the same old schtick – generally, someone trying to get over on the residents of 1313 Mockingbird Lane, or the guileless Herman trying to perform a selfless act – either of which invariably culminates with anyone outside the family fleeing the macabre mansion – but that’s what makes it cozy.

    There are two kinds of jokes: jokes that are funny because the punchline comes out of nowhere; and jokes where you see the punchline coming from a mile away, but still experience a kind of satisfaction in seeing it land. “The Munsters” made a specialty of the latter. In a pinch, Al Lewis could spin comedy out of the most gossamer of situations.

    The cast was ably supported by a bullpen of veteran character actors, comedians, and familiar faces of classic television, such as Foster Brooks, Charlie Callas, John Carradine, Richard Deacon, Dom DeLuise, John Fiedler, Bonnie Franklin, Pat Harrington, Harvey Korman, Paul Lynde, Gavin MacLeod, Gary Owens, Don Rickles, Charlie Ruggles, Dick Wilson, and Jane Withers, among others, and an omnipresent, chortling laugh-track.

    A subversive take on the wholesome American sitcom family from the writers of “Rocky and Bullwinkle” and the creators of “Leave It to Beaver,” “The Munsters” provides ample material for in-between-plays World Series chatter.

    The hosts and guests will be in costume – with spooky libations, for when the Phils score (or not) – on the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” Bring your hexes to the comments section. Grandpa will be in the dungeon, working on a potion to bury the Astros, this Friday evening at 7:30 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Star Trek City on the Edge of Forever Discussion

    Star Trek City on the Edge of Forever Discussion

    Only Dr. McCoy would leap through a time-displacing doughnut for a shot at a pot of Joan Collins’ coffee. After all, you can’t have doughnuts without coffee.

    And you can’t discuss “Star Trek” without Mike and Marybeth of SciFi Distilled. Thanks to both for dropping by last night for our discussion about the original series episode “The City on the Edge of Forever” (1967). Lots of interesting insights into the episode’s genesis. In the end, what was filmed wound up being quite different from writer Harlan Ellison’s original vision.

    This is the “Trek” episode most fans genuflect before. Our conversation on “the Edge of Forever” went by very quickly, if I do say so myself. The show is now archived here:

    We’ll be BACK with yet another time-travel adventure, supposedly, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Roy will be making the announcement by the end of the weekend. Set your clocks for the next Facebook livestream, next Friday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • City on the Edge of Forever Star Trek Review

    City on the Edge of Forever Star Trek Review

    McCoy goes sweaty crazy, Kirk falls for Joan Collins, and Spock does his best Michael Nesmith impression. That’s right, it’s what many consider to be the greatest of the original “Star Trek” episodes, “The City on the Edge of Forever” (1967).

    Roy and I will be slumming it in a Depression-era soup kitchen with our esteemed colleagues, Mike and Marybeth of SciFi Distilled, as we mop up the minutiae of this fan favorite.

    We’ll search for “Bones” in a time-displacing doughnut, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Construct your mnemonic memory devices using stone knives and bear skins in the comments section. It will be a “flop,” even if the show’s a hit, when we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

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