Tag: Silent Running

  • Roy’s Sci-Fi Corner Silent Running & This Island Earth

    While it is true that Roy’s power went out yesterday, I think he was glad for an excuse to grab a drive-through coffee while leeching off the free wi-fi.

    Watch Roy confound the suits on last night’s “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner,” as he hits the road and easy-rides his Electric Kool-Aid Acid Bus – not entirely inappropriate to our discussion of “Silent Running” (1972), the we’re-all-screwed-but-there’s-still-hope-for-the-future-I-guess sci-fi cult classic, with crazy Bruce Dern going crazy. (Yes, you read that correctly.)

    Speaking of crazy, in the wake of yesterday’s stunt broadcast, Roy will be rocketing off to Rhode Island to visit with Lew Place, who will be his cohost for a very special, on-location Sci-Fi stop-by, this Sunday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    We’ll reconvene next Friday for a discussion of “This Island Earth” (1955). In the meantime, I’ll be assembling my interocitor!

    Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner livestreams on Facebook. Look in on Lew’s Place on Sunday; then sidle up to “This Island Earth” on Friday. Both broadcasts begin at 7:00 pm EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Arbor Day Silent Running Sci-Fi Grief & Catharsis

    Arbor Day Silent Running Sci-Fi Grief & Catharsis

    Friday is Arbor Day.

    Coming at the end of a week in which way too many trees have been hacked down in my neighborhood by a bunch of butchers enlisted by the idiot property association, it’s perhaps ironic that our topic on the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner” – formulated by Roy and me on Earth Day – will be the environmental cult classic “Silent Running” (1972).

    This was one of only two movies directed by special effects legend Douglas Trumbull (of “2001: A Space Odyssey” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” fame).

    Space botanist Bruce Dern – a little borderline even under the best of circumstances – is driven to employ desperate measures to ensure that he and his robot sidekicks, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, can continue to carry-out their reforestation mission in a floating geodesic greenhouse near the rings of Saturn.

    None other than Peter Schickele wrote the music. Folk icon Joan Baez generates a queasy air of counterculture flower-powerlessness.

    “Fields of children running wild
    In the sun
    Like a forest is your child, growing wild
    In the sun
    Doomed in his innocence
    In the sun

    Gather your children to your side
    In the sun
    Tell them all they love will die
    Tell them why
    In the sun

    Tell them it’s not too late
    Cultivate, one by one
    Tell them to harvest and rejoice
    In the sun.”

    In short, you’re doomed, everything you care about will die, but it’s not too late to cultivate… Sounds pretty hopeful to me.

    It would be cathartic to hack off a few arms to avenge every tree limb right about now. Dern doesn’t quite deliver on that scale, but “Silent Running” can still put a lump in the throat of anyone who cares at all about wildlife and the environment. It conveys the essential truth that no matter what century you live in, the majority of humankind is at best clueless.

    “Tears of sorrow running deep
    running silent in my sleep
    running silent in my sleep…”

    Join us as I preach a gospel of despair on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. The only plant will be my fist in the face of all butchers, as we livestream on Facebook. Fill the comments section with your lamentations, this Friday evening at a special time – one half-hour later than usual – 7:30 EDT.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Plan 9 to Silent Running Sci-Fi Movie Chat

    Forget Plan 1 through 8. “Plan 9” is where it’s at.

    We’d like to thank Michael Rizzo and Marybeth Ritkouski for dropping by last night to break bread over Ed, and the “Citizen Kane” of bad movies, “Plan 9 from Outer Space.”

    Earlier in the week, M&M kindly had us to their table to talk about Tim Burton’s biopic, about resourceful – though perhaps a little out of touch – “Plan 9” director, “Ed Wood.” Their show, SciFi Distilled, is livestreamed on Facebook every Wednesday at 7 pm EDT. You can eavesdrop on our conversation here:

    Friday is Arbor Day. It was actually on Earth Day that Roy and I decided our next topic should be “Silent Running” (1972), a sci-fi cult classic with environmental overtones.

    Join us as we chat about space botanist Bruce Dern and his robot sidekicks, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, on their reforestation mission in a floating geodesic greenhouse near Saturn. Peter Schickele wrote the music. Folk icon Joan Baez lends just the right touch of counterculture verisimilitude.

    This is one of only two movies directed by special effects legend Douglas Trumbull (of “2001: A Space Odyssey” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” fame).

    I think you’ll agree, Dern must have been raising more than just trees in that greenhouse. Join us for a trippy discussion of “Silent Running,” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Our pupils will be dilated, and we’ll be fanning the room with psychedelic album covers. Everyone will be spacing-out, as we livestream on Facebook, next Friday evening at a special time – one half hour later than usual – 7:30 EDT.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

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