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45's and a Boy and His Dog [message #5199] Mon, 19 April 2004 19:14 Go to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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Funny how good some of those old 45's sound now. Try the Zombies "Time of The Season", lots of reverb but real live sounding. Have a version of the Leaves doing "Hey Joe", what a blast! And they make great drink coasters. Who seen the movie,"A BOy and His Dog", starring a young Don Johnson who remains after the atomic bomb and finds women using his dog who can talk after the nuclear explosion improves his mind. He's captured by a society that exists underground lead by fanatical fundamentalist christians who need his sperm because they are infertile. They have robot farmers who chase rebels and twist off their heads if they misbehave. Very tricky ending.

Re: A Boy and His Dog [message #5200 is a reply to message #5199] Mon, 19 April 2004 21:53 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
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Illuminati (2nd Degree)
from a story by late talk fave of the 70's Harlan Ellison.


I have read a lot of Ellison and also his 3 volumes
of stories called Dangerous Visions.


They left out one of the good parts in A Boy and His Dog.

E-mail me if you want to know.




oops [message #5201 is a reply to message #5200] Mon, 19 April 2004 21:57 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
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that should be late _night_ talk fave. Far as I know
Ellison is still alive.


Other Ellison trivia: he was instrumental in getting
Stephen King published in the early days.


Also the reference to the Ellison story "I Have No Mouth
and I Must Scream" in Matrix I.

Re: 45's and a Boy and His Dog [message #5203 is a reply to message #5199] Tue, 20 April 2004 07:21 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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I remember that! What a gass!

Re: oops [message #5204 is a reply to message #5201] Tue, 20 April 2004 07:27 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Manualblock is currently offline  Manualblock
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Harlan Ellison, it figures. Been a long time since I read those. "I Am Legend", is another but I can't remmember if they made a movie unless it was night of the living dead which I consider still to be the top ten of sci-fi movies. Anybody like the TV show The Prisoner?

Re: oops [message #5207 is a reply to message #5204] Tue, 20 April 2004 12:15 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
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We must have all grown up watching the same things. I was very
influenced by that. The Prisoner put me in the direction of wanting
to do theatre for a living.


When the DVD set was released, I requested that the local
public library purchase it. They did. I can't think of anything
better that was made for TV, but "OZ", another prison show, was
extremely well-done also.


Though I don't read s-f anymore, I came across a reference
to a subgenre lately called "Steampunk" That's Cyberpunk but
set in the Age of Steam when Victoria was queen. Recent
example is "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen." "The Difference
Engine" by Gibson and Sterling is Steampunk too and I always thought
that would be a good film project.



Time After Time (1979) [message #5209 is a reply to message #5207] Tue, 20 April 2004 12:49 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
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Yeah, that's a cool genre too. One that I liked of that type is "Time After Time." It's a story about H. C. Wells chasing Jack the Ripper in his time machine. First movie I saw with Malcolm McDowell after "Clockwork Orange." Time After Time also stars Mary Steenburgen, David Warner and has a great soundtrack. It's a pretty cool flick, 25 years old and still well worth seeing (again).



Re: Time After Time (1979) [message #5210 is a reply to message #5209] Tue, 20 April 2004 14:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
lon is currently offline  lon
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Illuminati (2nd Degree)

I don't know how the reviews went, but I enjoyed the new
version of the Time Machine (2002, whatevs) better than the
George Pal original. I got it when it hit the 50 cent
remainder rack at the local store. I find gems in there but
lots of clinkers too. There was even a retro 'sky car'
in the Hallmark version of The Snow Queen.


And I consider that anything with airships in it is steampunk.
So the current Matrix knock-off called "Equilibrium" qualifies.
Wild Wild West of course, and the Michael Moorcock Captain Bastable
stories.


Not enough good s-f film being produced these days. The tools
are all there. But if you read about mother=mega-millionaire Peter
Jackson from Lord of the Rings, the only idea he has for a new
project is to remake King Kong.

Re: Hint: Yum, Yum, slurp,chomp (nt) [message #5212 is a reply to message #5200] Tue, 20 April 2004 16:16 Go to previous message
BillEpstein is currently offline  BillEpstein
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Illuminati (2nd Degree)
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