THE ICS FILES
The Official Newsletter of The Imaginative Cinema Society
September
'05************************************************************************************#80
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CLUB NEWS FAREWELLS
JUST READ ALL THE CLUB NEWS! Old friends, now gone
THE LAST WARD
TV NEWS From ICS member John Ward
What is happening with our faves
ICS CALENDER
MOVIE NEWS Put this up on the Fridge!
The hottest news out on ICS genre films
DAVA‘S DELVINGS _____________________________________
A Review from the eyes of an ICS member Editor-Betsy Childs
Staff Writers- Regina Vallerani, Andrew Kent
FILMS COMING OUT John Ward, Dava Sentz, Mike Laird,
Joe Plempel, Charles Wittig, Jim Childs
______________________________
ICSClubnewsClubnews All About Us ClubnewsClubnewsICS
ICS LOSES SUE FEDER
Sue Feder has been a member of the ICS since our early days. She
joined on her very first meeting. We saw very little of her afterwards,
because she was receiving treatment for non-Hodgkins lymphoma. But she
stayed in touch with the club during that time and returned to become a
regular fixture.
Sue was always in the front row for the presentation and movie - and
when Dave had an important issue to discuss, you could always count on
Sue to chime in with an opinion or idea. Unfortunately, Sue's health began
to take a turn for the worse and I am sorry to announce, that on September
9th, she lost her battle with cancer. Sue became feverish and because her
immune system was weak due to cancer treatments, her body could not fight
back.
At our next meeting, we will remember Sue and discuss what we can
do to honor her memory.
SHERBLOM-WOODWARD SISTERS MECHA GOOD
Blake and Taylor Sherblom-Woodward once again took us into the world of
anime – this time to a realm of giant robots, aka mecha. ―Mecha‖ is short for
―mechanical‖ and can refer to robots and androids of any size, although most mecha are
as large as a skyscraper, and usually humanoid in appearance. A mecha is a machine
whose origins are either (1) mechanical and made by man or (2) mystical – in that they
are made from a substance or technology that is not fully understood or connected to an
enemy or mysterious event. And to further subdivide the mecha categories, it‘s also
important to note how mecha are controlled by their pilots – (1) by mechanical means, as
in levers or buttons or (2) by a telepathic link. Mecha are most commonly seen in
Anime, or Japanese animated films and shows. Because Tokyo has often been invaded,
mecha are frequently seen as protective warriors against large armies or enemies.
We also saw ‗best of‘ clips including an underwear thief, whiny boy mecha pilots
and a very cool, dark mecha on mecha limb ripping battle.
It‘s always a good time when club members share their passionate love for a
genre with the club. Blake and Taylor, you were no exception – it was an excellent
presentation! Thanks for the mecha lessons!
MECHA-TV
Instead of showing a single film, we had the choice of 2 episodes each from
mecha shows. The club chose 2 episodes of Neon Genesis Evangelion and 2 episodes of
RahXephon (with Japanese soundtrack and English subtitles of course). Imaginative was
truly the word for these series – the artwork was striking and the story lines were quite
sophisticated.
PREMUTOS VS. DEAD-ALIVE
Those of you who left early missed the zombie film to end all zombie films. Our
late night feature was PREMUTOS: LORD OF THE LIVING DEAD from German
splatter king Olaf Ittenbach. We finally have a debate that tops ALIEN vs. ALIENS –
it‘s Ittenbach‘s PREMUTOS vs. LOTR Peter Jackson‘s DEAD-ALIVE!! The film is
notable for terrible dubbing, crude and unintentional humor, non-stop violence and a
body count odometer at the finale. Of course, we can thank Courtney Spies for bringing
in this awful piece of cinema! Ok – you caught me pulling your leg… it really wasn‘t an
awful piece of cinema, it was an underground masterpiece.
WELCOME ROBIN RICHARDS!
Once again, the Charles Theater strikes! Our newest member, Robin Richards,
found our flyer at the Charles and decided to give our anime night a whirl. Robin said
she enjoys many genres. Luckily, so do the rest of us as evidenced by the diverse themes
of our meetings. Welcome to the club, Robin!
PIZZA NIGHT – ALWAYS A SUCCESS!
August was our annual pizza night. There were about 6 slices left by the end of the
night. It‘s a great night to enjoy pizza and have a chance to mingle with the other club
members. Thank to the board for arranging it!
T-SHIRT DESIGNS
Jim Childs and Troy Farwell have submitted front and back t-shirt designs for the
club. We will have online voting set up on our website, www.icsfilm.net. More
information will be forthcoming.
NEWS OF OUR NEXT MEETING
Our next meeting will be held on Saturday September 24th at 5:30 P.M. at the church
hall behind the Perry Hall Presbyterian Church located at 8848 BelAir Road. Take
Baltimore Beltway exit 32 north on Belair Road. Turn left onto Joppa Road. Immediately
past the miniature golf course turn left into the parking lot. If you miss it there are ample
turn-around opportunities. If you get stuck call 443-570-6455. That's Dave Willard‘s cell
phone. He'll talk you in.
MS. ADVENTURES
Ignore the calendar – a night of Irwin Allen is on the wayside. This September, Gary
Roberson is hosting a night of Butt-Kicking Babes. He requested that all female club
members wear black leather to get into the spirit of the night. Better watch out, Gary –
never tell a butt-kicking babe what to wear!
HALLOWEEN POTLUCK
The October meeting pot luck tradition continues. It‘s always a night of surprising
dishes and good food. The sign up list is below. If cooking is not your forte, consider
bringing in sodas or helping set-up or clean-up. Regina is keeping the list, so if you have
an update or want to add yourself to a category, email her at
RVALLER107@HOTMAIL.COM or see her at the next meeting.
APPETIZERS/CHIPS
??? – Doritos & onion/garlic DESSERTS
Skip – Chicken Wings Norman – some random yummy
SALADS thing
???? Andrew – cake
MAIN DISHES
Sushi BEVERAGES
Sam Diblasi – Casserole? Rick Arnold
Donna – Chili
Charlie – Hot Dog Extravaganza
SPECIAL NOTICE FOR ICS MOVIE FANS
Inspired by the dark and seamy streets of turn-of-the-century London, 'London After
Dark' is curated by the Charles Theatre's John Standiford and runs in conjunction with the
BMA's fall exhibition, Monet's London: Artists' Reflections on the Thames, opening
October 2.
These rarely shown classic reels will be screened in the BMA's Auditorium on October
7, 14, 21 & 28 at 8 p.m. Admission is $7 per film and $20 for a series pass (Free for
BMA Members). For tickets, call the BMA Box Office at 410-396-6001.
"There are a lot of 19th century references to the Thames and London as being filthy
and corrupt," said John Standiford, co-owner of the Charles Theatre and curator of the
film series. "These four directors seem to share this sentiment, and in these films a dark
and mysterious London becomes a character in itself."
October 7 Night and the City (film noir, 1950)
This film noir masterpiece is one of director Jules Dassin's crowning achievements. Two-
bit hustler Harry Fabian (Richard Widmark) aches for a life of ease and plenty. Tailed by
a history of go-nowhere schemes, he stumbles upon a chance of a lifetime in the form of
legendary wrestler Gregorius the Great (Stanislaus Zbyszko). But there is no easy money
in this underworld of shifting alliances, bottomless graft, and pummeled flesh--and
Fabian soon learns the horrible price of his ambition. This dark and moody drama by a
blacklisted American director was shot on the streets of London.
October 14 Peeping Tom (thriller, 1960) *
Although this ahead-of-its-time shocker nearly ended the career of British director
Michael Powell upon its release, Martin Scorsese hailed the film as a masterpiece and
rescued it from obscurity a decade later. It has since developed a cult reputation and
remains the definitive film about the voyeuristic nature of cinema and its effects on the
human psyche. Subjected to bizarre experiments by his scientist-father as a boy, Mark
Lewis (Carl Boehm) works as a focus-puller for a London movie studio and murders
women using a camera to film their dying expressions of terror.
October 21 The Servant (drama, 1963)*
The first of directorJoseph Losey's collaborations with playwright Harold Pinter, this
tightly woven psychological thriller was nominated for eight British Academy Awards,
and won three. Flamboyant playboy Tony (James Fox) hires Barrett (Dirk Bogarde), a
seductive and insidious manservant, to take control of his newly established household.
The servant gradually takes over the life of his master. Rarely screened in the United
States, the print of this film is being specially shipped from England.
October 28 Frenzy (thriller, 1972)*
Alfred Hitchcock's Frenzy is a masterpiece crime thriller from the end of this career.
While London is being terrorized by "the necktie murderer," down-on-his-luck Richard
Blaney (Jon Finch) is suspected of being the killer. He goes on the run, determined to
prove his innocence.
*Recommended for ages 17 & older.
tv news tv news tv news the glass teat tv news tv news tv news
INVASION STRIKES CLOSE TO HOME
Shaun Cassidy, creator and executive producer of ABC's new SF series Invasion—
which kicks off with a hurricane in Florida— told SCI FI Wire that he has a unique
perspective on living through a hurricane, thanks to someone close to him. "There have
been numerous disasters of late, and yet a lot of us are still here, and we don't know what
the ramifications really are yet," Cassidy (American Gothic) said.
"That's the universe our show is set in. ... And it's also personal for me. My wife is from
Homestead, Fla. She went through Hurricane Andrew," the real-life 1992 storm that
helped inspire Invasion, well before Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the
surrounding areas.
Cassidy said that his wife was a senior in high school at the time and had to live for
months without electricity. He said her perception of what happens to a community when
a hurricane hits has helped color his approach to Invasion.
Cassidy's description of the series sounds eerily similar to the real-life drama that is
playing out on CNN in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Invasion is "a show about a
family and community in recovery, post-hurricane, and a lot of people are traumatized by
the initial event," Cassidy said. "It's really the aftermath that is the breeding ground for
ongoing mysteries. Aberrant behavior in the population, changes in the population that
initially are attributed to the trauma as a result of the hurricane."
According to Cassidy, the show's hurricane will lead to the quarantine of the small
Florida town in the series "because of the stuff released from the hospital, and there are
bodies missing. They don't know what the state of the water is. It serves to isolate a lot of
these people, and there may be darker forces at work here. The sheriff seems to have
another agenda beyond just protecting this community. He may want his community and
the people to survive, but he may want certain things to survive more than others."
Cassidy said that he plans to keep his "suspense thriller" series as grounded in science
fact as possible. "If at the end of the season it doesn't come off as science fiction at all,
that would be fantastic," he said.
After Hurricane Katrina, ABC initially pulled all on-air promotion of the show, a
companion to ABC's hit SF series Lost. But the network plans to go forward with
Invasion's premiere, as planned, on Sept. 21; the show will air Wednesdays at 10 p.m.
ET/PT, immediately after Lost.
SCI FI ASKS WHAT IF?
SCI FI Channel announced that it is developing What If, a "speculative future" series
that poses intriguing scenarios of alternate realities. The program, from NBC Universal
Television Studio in association with New Line Television, asks, "What if a moment in
time could change the world forever?"
What If is being developed as a weekly, one-hour series. Some scenarios: What would
happen if the meteor had missed the Earth and dinosaurs co-existed with the development
of humans? What if Germany had developed the first atomic weapon, bombed New York
and was victorious in World War II?
"This project has universal appeal," Mark Stern, SCI FI Channel's executive vice
president of original programming, said. "Who hasn't wondered what our daily lives
might be like if certain moments in history had gone a different way? What If will take an
exciting, thought-provoking approach to imagining such possibilities."
What If is inspired by the book series of the same name. The production will work with
Byron Hollinshead, president of American Historical Publications and producer of the
best-selling anthologies, which are published by Putnam in the United States.
GORSKI BONKERS FOR CAMPBELLS BRAIN
Tamara Gorski said that she had a blast filming the upcoming SCI FI
original movie Man with the Screaming Brain and added that co-writer-
producer-director-star Bruce Campbell has crafted a unique horror-action-
comedy hybrid. "I had a really, really amazing time," Gorski said. "The
further along we went in the shooting, the more I saw the layers being uncovered."
In Brain, Campbell plays William, a snooty American industrialist, who has part of his
brain replaced by that of Yegor (Vladimir Kolev), an Eastern European taxi driver, after
they're both killed by Tatoya (Gorski), a mysterious Gypsy woman. Once they're merged
by a mad scientist (Stacy Keach), William and Yegor seek revenge against Tatoya. Ted
Raimi co-stars as Keach's hip-hop-loving assistant.
"There's some flat-out comedy," Gorski said. "Ted Raimi and I always said we were in
two completely different movies. They were in a comedy, and I was in a horror-action
film. There's stuff there for all kinds of audiences. It'll appeal to the SF people.
It's a horror film, but not in a classical sense. It's not blood-and-gore horror, but it's
conceptually horrific. And it was not easy taking direction from Bruce with that pate on,
that surgical pate, as it got more and more infected. He'd come up to me with this weird
Three Stooges hair sticking out of his head. So I was appreciative and excited to find out
what we were doing next and, at the same time, completely grossed out." Man with the
Screaming Brain premieres Sept. 10 at 9 p.m. ET/PT.
MEDIUM GETS HIGH CONCEPT
René Echevarria, creator and executive producer of NBC's Medium, said there are some
high-concept episodes "coming out of the box." "The challenge for me is that I'd like to
see a little bit more continuing storylines," Echevarria said. "One thing we're aware of:
The first season was very much about Allison figuring out how this thing works."
Now that Allison (Patricia Arquette) understands her powers better, she still has to try
to strike a balance between work and her family, Echevarria said. And her husband, Joe
(Jake Weber), will be "continuing to deal with the fact that he married a witch," he said
with a laugh. "We just want to be true to the reality of that."
In last season's cliffhanger, Capt. Kenneth Push (Arliss Howard) put his life in jeopardy
to try to stop a serial killer. As season two kicks off, look for the completion of that story.
Howard has also been tapped to direct an episode later in the season.
According to Echevarria, this season Allison will dream that she's in a mental asylum,
and there will also be a 3-D episode. There's also "a show where Allison wakes up, and it
starts with a musical number. And Allison is singing 'I Will Survive,'" he said with a
laugh. "She wakes up from sort of a fantasy dream, and the song's still playing in her
head, and she can't make it go away. The song is literally stuck in her head. She's like,
'Joe, you don't ... ' He says, 'Yeah, I've had that happen.' She yells, 'You don't understand!
I can't hear you!'"
And look for baby Marie to finally get her first scripted line of dialogue. Season two of
Medium premieres Sept. 19 at 10 p.m. ET/PT. NBC is owned by NBC Universal.
DON’T CALL SURFACE SCI FI
Jay R. Ferguson, who co-stars in NBC's new SF series Surface, said that the show has
fantastic elements, but that he doesn't think of it as true science fiction. "To me, sci-fi is
Star Trek or Star Wars," Ferguson said.
"This is almost like something that could be real. You think of a new species popping
up in the ocean, and if you saw that in the headlines of today's paper, you wouldn't be that
shocked. It's very, very likely, in fact, that there are several species and several animals
that we have yet to see that are in the deep depths of the ocean."
When describing the show, Ferguson feels the term "speculative fiction" is more
appropriate than science fiction. "To me, even as a sci-fi fan, speculative fiction sounds
so much more interesting," he said.
In Surface, Ferguson plays an expert diver who believes his brother's death was caused
by a mysterious sea creature. His storyline makes up one-third of the series, which also
stars Lake Bell and Carter Jenkins.
"I suppose that while you have Lake's character, that's the brain, and Carter's character,
who's kind of the heart, my character is kind of the muscle," Ferguson said.
Surface premieres Sept. 19 and will air Mondays at 8 p.m. ET/PT. NBC is owned by
NBC Universal, which also owns SCIFI.COM.
LAWLESS INVADES GALACTICA
Lucy Lawless, who will guest-star in an upcoming episode of SCI FI Channel's original
series Battlestar Galactica, told SCI FI Wire that footage she shot while playing a
broadcast reporter actually makes it into the final cut, which airs Sept. 9.
"We were shooting video, and they are using footage that I and my crew actually shot,"
Lawless said. "It was really exciting, worrying about the camera angle you are getting,
and you were truly being your character and fully concerned about shooting the footage.
It was like shooting a movie within a movie."
Lawless guest-stars in "Final Cut," the eighth episode of Galactica's current second
season, written by Mark Verheiden and directed by Robert Young. In the episode,
Lawless plays reporter D'Anna Friel, who gets unlimited access to film aboard Galactica
and documents the stress of military life during wartime.
The marines, led by Lt. Palladino (Jeremy Guilbaut), get widely criticized when his
crew opens fire on civilian protesters, killing four and wounding 12. Then there's a death
threat against Col. Tigh (Michael Hogan). Meanwhile, President Roslin (Mary
McDonnell) and Cmdr. Adama (Edward James Olmos) offer Fleet News Service full
access to the pilots and crew. Along the way, the reporter uncovers some major secrets
and faces an ethical dilemma.
Lawless admitted that she wasn't familiar with the Galactica series before she landed
the role, but said that she was impressed with the show's universe. "The sets weren't all
shiny, like the previous Battlestar Galactica," she said. "They were grungy and all beaten
up. It has that post-apocalyptic rawness. It's genius."
The episode also marks the first time in nearly two decades of acting that Lawless was
allowed to use her native New Zealand accent. "I've never wanted to use my real voice
before," she said. "It never seemed appropriate, and I was resistant to it. But for this role
as a reporter, it seemed appropriate."
movienews movienews Silver Screen movienews movienews
NICOLE KIDMAN TO FIGHT THE INVASION
Nicole Kidman is set to play the lead in INVASION, a science fiction thriller being
directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel for Warner Brothers. Originally billed as a remake of
INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, the project is now being touted as an original
story. Apparently, when writer David Kajganich turned in his take, the studio thought it
had something fresh on its hands.
INVASION takes place after a mysterious epidemic alters the behavior of human
beings and follows a Washington psychiatrist (Kidman) who discovers that its origins are
extraterrestrial. She must fight to protect her son, who may hold the key to stopping the
invasion.
The movie is eyeing a late September shoot in Baltimore.
NEW HIGHLANDER SET TO SHOOT
HIGHLANDER: THE SOURCE, envisioned as the first of three new films in the
popular supernatural franchise, will shoot in Lithuania starting in October. Brett Leonard
(LAWNMOWER MAN) will direct, with Adrian Paul playing the immortal Scottish
swordsman Duncan MacLeod. THE SOURCE will tell the story of the Immortals as they
quest to locate the Holy Grail of their world. The entire series of films will chronicle the
origins of the Immortals.
"This is a tremendous opportunity for a storyteller of this genre to take part in the
mythology of 20 years," Leonard said in a statement. "HIGHLANDER is an amazing
ongoing story that I can bring my visual style to. Everything I have done has led me to
this kind of mythical fantasy."
Davis-Panzer Productions is also preparing an anime HIGHLANDER feature film, in
partnership with Imagi and Madhouse of Japan, as well as a video game, in conjunction
with SCI Games Ltd. of London. Lions Gate Films will distribute THE SOURCE in
North America.
JACKSON HEADLINES AFROSAMURAI
Samuel L. Jackson is attached to star in and co-produce a live-action film to be
adapted from the Japanese comic franchise AFROSAMURAI, created by Takashi
Okazaki. Jackson is already signed to lend his voice to an AFROSAMURAI TV series,
set to premiere on Spike TV next year.
AFROSAMURAI is the story of a warrior in feudal Japan who roams the country
trying to avenge the death of his father, whom he saw murdered. His nemesis is a three-
armed gunman.
Production is set to begin in 2006, with a U.S. release targeted for 2007. The
television series, from Gonzo and Fuji TV, will premiere in Japan after airing on Spike.
CLONUS PRODUCERS SUE OVER ISLAND CLONING
Following much discussion among journalists and on-liners about the debt this
summer‘s Michael Bay actioner THE ISLAND owes to Robert F. Fiveson‘s 1979 sci-fi
chiller PARTS: THE CLONUS HORROR, Fiveson and CLONUS co-producer Myrl A.
Schreibman have filed suit over the resemblances. Their movie, recently released on
DVD by Mondo Macabro under the simpler title CLONUS, is about a futuristic
compound where human clones live, unaware of their identities—until one of them (Tim
Donnelly) begins questioning his existence. THE ISLAND tells a practically identical
story for the first half, then jumps into big-scale action once its duplicated hero (Ewan
McGregor) and a female companion (Scarlett Johansson) escape the colony.
Fiveson and Schreibman have sued production companies DreamWorks (which also
released) and Warner Bros. over what they see as 90 points of similarity. ―Somebody had
written me asking if THE ISLAND was an official remake,‖ Fiveson said. ―I then went to
the ISLAND website and they had a trailer and I thought, ‗That looks like a trailer to my
movie,‘ right down to where key moments and shots were the same.‖ The filmmaker adds
that when he saw THE ISLAND, ―Honestly, I really liked it, because this is the way the
movie should have been done,‖ but he couldn‘t ignore the fact that the duplication went
―beyond the premise. It‘s specific characterizations, it‘s specific lines, shot compositions
and sequencing.‖
DreamWorks, for whom THE ISLAND has been a box-office disappointment, states
that the movie ―was independently created and does not infringe anyone‘s copyrights,‖
while Warners had no comment. CLONUS was scripted by Fiveson, Schreibman, Bob
Sullivan and Ron Smith, while ISLAND was written by ALIAS‘ Alex Kurtzman and
Roberto Orci, based off a script by Caspian Tredwell-Owen.
SCARY MOVIE 4 PREPARES FOR VANCOUVER SHOOT
Dimension Films' SCARY MOVIE 4 will shoot from September 15th through January
15th in Vancouver. David Zucker returns to direct the film that is aiming for a April 14th,
2006 release. Anna Faris is signed on to return and newcomer Shaun Landers has joined
the cast.
CLIVE BARKER’S THE PLAGUE ABOUT TO SPREAD
Clive Barker‘s new Midnight Picture Show label has cast and is gearing up to shoot its
first feature film effort, THE PLAGUE. The ―really intense‖ (per Barker) horror flick will
star DAWNSON‘S CREEK‘s James Van Der Beek, Ivana Milicevic (USA Network‘s
FRANKENSTEIN) and Brad Hunt. Veteran scream star Dee Wallace Stone, best known
for E.T., THE HOWLING, CUJO and THE HILLS HAVE EYES, will also be featured in
the film. Shooting began August 22 in Winnepeg, Canada under the direction of first-
timer Hal Masonberg (a ‘90s-era Full Moon production assistant), who co-wrote the
script with Teal Minton.
―All the children of the world under 8 years old fall into a coma,‖ co-producer
Anthony di Blasi said of the film‘s plot. ―THE PLAGUE is essentially the story of the
extinction of mankind. After 10 years, the children wake up and want to kill the world.
The 10 years they were asleep served as an incubation period, where the children develop
their powers. When they awake, the bloodshed begins. Basically, in this story, God cleans
house.‖
WEINSTEINS SNATCH UP ROGUE
With Harvey and Bob Weinstein readying to release Greg McLean‘s shocker WOLF
CREEK under the Dimension banner November 18, the brothers have also taken up the
financial backing of the writer/director‘s long-mooted killer-crocodile movie ROGUE.
The Australian McLean first sold the script several years ago to the Down Under
production/distribution outfit Beyond Entertainment, and the film went through a tortured
development period—during which McLean expanded a supporting character intended
for that movie into WOLF CREEK‘s villain. Now the Weinsteins are putting up $10
million for ROGUE, in which a group of vacationers are terrorized by the monster reptile;
an American is likely to have the lead role. Beyond and Mushroom Pictures will produce,
with filming to take place in Melbourne and the Northern Territory.
YOUNG HANNIBAL READY TO ROLL
Producers Dino and Martha De Laurentiis (among several others) are preparing to
shoot BEHIND THE MASK: YOUNG HANNIBAL beginning October 10 in Prague. Peter
Webber (THE GIRL WITH THE PEARL EARRING) will direct from Thomas Harris‘
script based on the author‘s Behind the Mask novel, to be published by Bantam Dell this
fall. Twenty-year-old French actor Gaspard Ulliel (BROTHERHOOD OF THE WOLF)
has been picked to play the junior Lecter, who escapes from an orphanage and is taken in
by Lady Murasaki (Chinese star Gong Li), whom he uses as part of a revenge plot. Also
in the cast are Rhys Ifans (ENDURING LOVE), Richard Brake (BATMAN BEGINS) and
Kevin McKidd (DOG SOLDIERS). The Weinstein Company has U.S. distribution rights
and plans to open the film in summer 2006.
LAWRENCE TAKES ON LEGEND
Warner Brothers has set Francis Lawrence (CONSTANTINE) to direct I AM LEGEND,
fast-tracking the long-gestating adaptation of the Richard Matheson sci-fi novel. Mark
Protosevich (THE CELL) wrote the script.
Lawrence takes on one of the more ambitious films in Warner's repertoire. I AM
LEGEND is a big project that has been at the studio for nearly a decade. At one time, it
had Ridley Scott and Arnold Schwarzenegger attached, and another incarnation had
Michael Bay and Will Smith set.
Set in Los Angeles after a biological war, the film centers on the sole healthy survivor,
a man who finds himself in a battle against nocturnal mutants. The script will undergo a
rewrite under the supervision of Lawrence and the producers, who eye a 2006 start date.
Matheson's post-apocalyptic tale has been filmed twice before. Vincent Price starred in
1964's THE LAST MAN ON EARTH, and Charlton Heston starred in THE OMEGA MAN.
SKINWALKERS CASTS UP FOR SHOOT
A cast has just been sized up for the upcoming horror film SKINWALKERS, which
begins shooting September 19th. Jason Behr (THE GRUDGE), Elias Koteas (THE THIN
RED LINE), Rhona Mitra (NIP/TUCK), Natassia Malthe (ELEKTRA) and Lyriq Bent
(SAW 2) have joined the cast of the film for Constantin Film and Lions Gate Films. Jim
Isaac (JASON X) is directing the horror-thriller about a 12-year-old boy caught in a war
between two factions of werewolves. Look for the film in theaters sometime in 2006.
DAVA’S DELVINGS
Red Eye, a BULLSEYE!!!
By Dava Sentz
Flying is terrifying experience for many people.
Though it is quite safe, being thousands of feet above ground while the plane dips
through a mass of clouds can be very unnerving for the traveler, especially if they're
afraid of heights. Just the natural elements of air travel can be enough to send a passenger
into a state of panic.
Toss in that the passenger you happen to be sitting next to a psychotic hit man, an
already stressful situation becomes ten times worse. Wes Craven tackles this pulse -
pounding dilemma in his latest nail-biting thriller, Red Eye.
I've always loved the 'edge of your seat' horror genre. There's something so fun about
sitting in the dark, listening to the beat of your own heart as suspense builds on the movie
screen. Wes Craven has forever attempted to keep this spirit alive and has enjoyed much
success.
Still, I've never seen the appeal. Looking at his previous films, it is clear he loves what
he does, but there is no imagination behind the fright. All he ever seems to accomplish in
his work is a series of horror cliches coupled with high intensity screams. Red Eye does
employ an air of predictability, as well as an overly used idea, but does so in a more
subtle and entertaining fashion.
The idea that I'm referring to is what sports moguls call "the home court advantage" a
theory stating that a team will play better if on their own soil. Lisa Reisert, Craven's high-
flying heroine portrayed by Rachel McAdams, gives rise to this belief in the second half
of the movie, when she finds herself back on familiar territory, back on HER territory.
While this is an idea both widely (and falsely) accepted for many years, Craven was
able to work it to a flattering degree. In doing using this cliché, he created a female
character that was crafty, assertive, as well as beautiful. As women are rarely shown this
way on the big screen, (especially in horror films) this was a tremendous nod of respect.
The evil counterpart to which Lisa embraces her 'take no prisoners' attitude is the
sadistic, yet enticing Jackson Rippner played by Irishman Cillian Murphy. True to most
plots of this nature, 'Jack' Rippner appears to be both sweet and charming in the early
stages of the film, armed with a flirtatious nature and charismatic sex appeal.
But, as the saying goes, if something's too good to be true, it probably is, and Jack
shows his true colors all too soon, revealing a hidden agenda of murder and mayhem.
Cillian Murphy seems to be the ideal person for this role, boasting an impressive display
of creepy façade with soulful good looks.
This, in a round about way, adds to the fright. The audience can see this character on
screen knowing full well the danger to come, yet sill are drawn in by the essence of deep
eyes and chiseled features. Together, he and McAdam's are the dynamic duo of the skies.
One thing that sets this film apart from Craven's familiar world of teen slasher
decadence is the inexplicable absence of a supporting cast. Red Eye is, primarily, a two-
man operation consisting of Rachel McAdams, Cillian Murphy, and a list of anonymous
faces that, while memorable, were not important enough to earn a name in the credits.
These included Brian Cox as 'Dad', Angela Paton as 'Nice Lady' (aka Dr. Phil Groupie)
and Max Kasch as 'Headphone Kid'. There was, however, one notable exception; the
ditzsy Lux Atlantic receptionist, Cynthia played by Jayma Mays. New to the world of big
budget films, this Heather Graham look-a-like gives a much-needed comedic element to
this air born chiller.
As a viewer, you almost have to feel sorry for her character because Cynthia is new to
her position at the hotel. On her first night alone she is not only charged with the handling
of disgruntled, snotty patrons, but also with the lives of all of Lux Atlantic's guests. Such
a thing is enough to drive anyone into insanity and she must be given credit for her
capabilities. Well done!
Red Eye is hardly worthy of Oscar or any other form of strong cinematic praise. Still, it
is definitely an enjoyable flick, one that I would deem as fun, sexy and, be it ever so mild,
scary. If nothing else, you will come away from the experience having learned this very
important lesson; never talk to strangers, especially in over crowed airports.
DVD DVD DVD DVD DVD DVD
THE CABINET OF CALIGARI (1962) Release Date: September 6, 2005
A woman's car breaks down. The only residence is a big ol' spooky mansion (what else?!). There
she is taken in by host Dr. Caligari. Slowly she realizes that she is being held against her will as
mind games get creepier and creepier until she is driven to the brink of madness. She finds others
in the household, but they all seem....not quite right either....help! (Fox DVD $15)
ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS (Season 1) Release Date: October 4, 2005
39 Episodes - 1003 minutes of wry, witty, myster thrillers that we grew up with! This is the real
deal! (Universal DVD $35)
THE MAN WITH NINE LIVES (1939) Release Date: October 4, 2005
Stars Boris Karloff, Roger Pryor, Jo Ann Sayers and John Dilson. Boris Karloff tries to find the
cure for cancer, but goes mad because of the circumstances he finds himself in. Holed up in a
sub-basement of an old house he continues his experiments after being revived from a state of
suspended animation. (Columbia Tri-Star DVD $15)
THE SPIRAL STAIRCASE (1945) Release Date: October 4, 2005
Stars Dorothy McGuire, George Brendt, Ethel Barrymore, Kent Smith, Elsa Lanchester and
Rhonda Fleming. A man returns to his home estate and killings begin around the town. An out of
town doctor is trying to take root, and a servant is drunk...who is the killer? First class chills with
a psychopathic murderer loose in a house on a stormy night. Every cast member is perfect. This is
a classic. (Columbia Tri-Star DVD $15)
YOG - THE SPACE AMOEBA - Release Date: October 11, 2005
Stars Taro Kudo, Atsuko Takahashi, Yog and Yukiko Kobayashi. A bunch of enterpenurs start
work on a vacatuion resort only to find it infested with giant mutant alien monsters. The monsters
are flotsam from the beginnings of an alien house-cleaning project. The aliens plan to gut earth,
then take-over. It delays plans on the vacation resort. Includes English language version and
original Japanese version. (Media Blasters DVD $20)
ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN - The First Season (Classic TV - 1952) Release Date:
October 18, 2005
Stars George Reeves. All 26 episodes from the first seaon of this truly classic TV show. Haunted
lighthouses, aliens, thugs, gangsters and evil-doers at every turn. But, the man of steel, along with
Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen are on the scene! Also included in this set is the 1951 movie
SUPERMAN AND THE MOLE MEN. Plus, a featurette, a George Reeves short and vintage
Kellog's Corn Flakes commercials! (Warner DVD Set $35)
BATMAN (1943) - 15 Chaper Complete Serial. Release Date: October 18, 2005
Stars Lewis Wilson, Douglas Croft, J. Carrol Naish and Shirley Patterson. The Bat Man of comic
book fame debuted on the silver screen in this 15 chapter serial. Japanese criminal master mind,
Dr. Daka, is portrayed by J. Carrol Naish. Daka is turning people into zombies, blowing up stuff
with a death ray and needs to be stopped! Batman and Robin to the rescue, and watch out for
Daka's alligator pit! (Columbia Tri-Star DVD $30)
KING KONG (1933) - Special Edition Release Date: November 22, 2005
The original 1933 classic with Robert Armstrong, Fay Wray and Bruce Cabot. An enterprising
promoter (Armstrong) and a young beauty (Fay Wray) travel to Skull Island. Dinosaurs and the
mighty ape -- KONG, preside there. Armstrong captures the giant ape and brings it back to New
York. Kong escapes and knocks New York on its ear. A classic in anyone's book.This DVD
includes the 104-minute restored and remastered B&W film on video in its original full frame,
with Dolby Digital 2.0 mono audio and English, French and Spanish subtitles. Extras will include
audio commentary (by Ray Harryhausen and Ken Ralston, with Merian C. Cooper, Ernest B.
Schoedsack, Ruth Rose, Fay Wray and Robert Armstrong), the 2005 I'm Kong: The Exploits of
Merian C. Cooper documentary, a gallery of trailers for other films by director Merian C. Cooper,
the new RKO Production 601: The Making of Kong, Eighth Wonder of the World documentary
by Peter Jackson (featuring the following featurettes: The Origins of King Kong , Willis O'Brien
and Creation , Cameras Roll on Kong, The Eighth Wonder , A Milestone in Visual Effects ,
Passion, Sound and Fury , The Mystery of the Lost Spider Pit Sequence and King Kong's Legacy
) and Creation test footage (with commentary by Ray Harryhausen). (Warner DVD $25)
KING KONG (1933) - Collector's Edition Release Date: November 22, 2005
The original 1933 classic with Robert Armstrong, Fay Wray and Bruce Cabot. An enterprising
promoter (Armstrong) and a young beauty (Fay Wray) travel to Skull Island. Dinosaurs and the
mighty ape -- KONG, preside there. Armstrong captures the giant ape and brings it back to New
York. Kong escapes and knocks New York on its ear. A classic in anyone's book.This DVD
includes the 104-minute restored and remastered B&W film on video in its original full frame,
with Dolby Digital 2.0 mono audio and English, French and Spanish subtitles. Extras will include
audio commentary (by Ray Harryhausen and Ken Ralston, with Merian C. Cooper, Ernest B.
Schoedsack, Ruth Rose, Fay Wray and Robert Armstrong), the 2005 I'm Kong: The Exploits of
Merian C. Cooper documentary, a gallery of trailers for other films by director Merian C. Cooper,
the new RKO Production 601: The Making of Kong, Eighth Wonder of the World documentary
by Peter Jackson (featuring the following featurettes: The Origins of King Kong , Willis O'Brien
and Creation , Cameras Roll on Kong, The Eighth Wonder , A Milestone in Visual Effects ,
Passion, Sound and Fury , The Mystery of the Lost Spider Pit Sequence and King Kong's Legacy
) and Creation test footage (with commentary by Ray Harryhausen). In additional, this edition
features a limited tin packaging that also features a 20-page reproduction of the original 1933
souvenir program, King Kong original one-sheet reproduction postcards and a mail-in offer for a
reproduction of a vintage theatrical poster. (Warner DVD $35)
VAL LEWTON COLLECTION (9 Movie Set) Release Date: October 4, 2005
Includes: CAT PEOPLE (1942), THE CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE (1944), I WALKED
WITH A ZOMBIE (1943) , THE BODY SNATCHER (1945), ISLE OF THE DEAD (1945),
BEDLAM (1946), THE GHOST SHIP (1943), THE SEVENTH VICTIM (1945) and THE
LEOPARD MAN (1943). The nine movies with loads of extras and a documentary on producer
Val Lewton! (Warner DVD $50)
MOVIE NIGHT MOVIE NIGHT MOVIE NIGHT MOVIE NIGHT
September 2nd The Sound of Thunder
Cast: Edward Burns (Travis Ryer), Ben Kingsley (Charles Hatton), Catherine
McCormack (Sonia Rand), Wilifried Hochholdinger (Dr. Lucas),
Premise: Based on A Ray Bradbury story. Set in a near future where time travel is
possible, this is the story of a travel agency, Time Safari Inc that arranges hunting trips
for wealthy customers back in time to hunt dinosaurs. However, in this case, a nervous
hunter steps off the trail, and steps on a butterfly. Oops.
September 16th Lord of War
Cast: Nicolas Cage (Yuri Orlov), Ethan Hawke (Jack Valentine), Jared Leto (Vitaly
Orlov), Bridget Moynahan (Ava Fontaine), Eamonn Walker (Andre Baptiste),
Premise: A wily arms dealer dodges bullets and betrayal as he schemes his way to the
top of his profession, only to come face to face with his conscience. But it's not easy to
leave a life of girls, guns and glamour when no body wants you to stop, not even your
enemies.
September 23rd Flightplan
Cast: Jodie Foster (Kyle Sherin), Peter Sarsgaard, Erika Christensen (Fiona), Sean Bean,
Haley Ramm (Brittany Loud), Marlene Lawston (Julia), Kate Beahan (Stephanie),
Michael Irby (Obaid), Brent Sexton (Elias)
Premise: After the death of her husband, woman decides to return home to America with
her young daughter, but while on the flight, the daughter mysteriously disappears. The
flight attendants seem to think she never brought a child on board with her
September 23rd Tim Burtons Corpse Bride
Cast: (voices) Johnny Depp (Victor), Helena Bonham Carter (The Corpse
Bride), Emily Watson (Victoria), Albert Finney, Christopher Lee, Richard E.
Grant, Joanna Lumley
Premise: (9/21/03) The core gist of the fairy tale this movie is based upon
is that a young man accidentally marries the corpse of a murdered bride, who
is then resurrected, expecting her new (living) husband to love her. Stop
motion Animation.
Sept 30th Serenity
Cast: Nathan Fillion (Capt. Malcolm Reynolds), Gina Torres (Zoe), Alan Tudyk (Wash),
Sean Maher (Simon), Jewel Staite (Kaylee), Summer Glau (River), Ron Glass (Shepherd
Book), Morena Baccarin (Inara), Adam Baldwin (Jayne)
Premise: Based on the tv series Firefly. .This is a long awaited and much desired Movie.
When Captain Malcolm Reynolds takes on two new passengers - a young doctor and his
unstable, telepathic sister - he gets much more than he bargained for. The pair are
fugitives from the coalition dominating the universe, who will stop at nothing to reclaim
the girl.
farewellsfarewellsfarewells Good bye farewellsfarewellsfarewells
BOB DENVER
1935-2005
Best known for his television roles as Maynard G. Krebs and Willie Gilligan.
Good bye little buddy.
Mel Welles, 81, the character actor who played the florist Gravis Muchnik in Roger
Corman's 1960 black comedy THE LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS, has died.
Welles appeared in dozens of movies, including THE GOLDEN BLADE, THE SILVER
CHALICE, ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET THE MUMMY, ATTACK OF THE CRAB
MONSTERS, THE 27TH DAY, WOLFEN, CHOPPING MALL, INVASION EARTH and
RAISING DEAD. He was also in the early rock movies HIGH SCHOOL
CONFIDENTIAL, and ROCK ALL NIGHT in which he played Sir Bop and for which he
wrote the "Unabridged Hiptionary" to help moviegoers understand the dialogue.
Besides his acting, which included many television roles, he directed B movies, mostly in
Europe; produced and directed concerts in Australia, did voice overs; was a teacher, and,
in later years, was a script supervisor.
Alexander Golitzen, Academy Award-winning art director and production designer who
for 40 years made entire civilizations rise out of the back lots of Hollywood, has died.
From 1953 the supervising art director at Universal Pictures, Mr. Golitzen is credited on
more than 300 films. He was nominated for 14 Oscars and, with colleagues, shared three
of them: for PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1943), SPARTACUS (1960) and TO KILL A
MOCKINGBIRD (1962). Active from the mid-1930's until his retirement in the mid-70's,
Mr. Golitzen was responsible for the look of many classic films of the mid-20th century.
He worked with some of Hollywood's most renowned directors, among them Alfred
Hitchcock, Orson Welles, Ernst Lubitsch, Douglas Sirk and Fritz Lang.
His credits include such films as FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT, THAT UNCERTAIN
FEELING, SCARLET STREET, LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN, THE FAR
COUNTRY, WRITTEN ON THE WIND, TOUCH OF EVIL, IMITATION OF LIFE, THE
BLACK SHIELD OF FALWORTH (―Yonda lies da castle of my fodda‖), FATHER
GOOSE, THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE, MADIGAN, DEATH OF A
GUNFIGHTER, AIRPORT and PLAY MISTY FOR ME.
And as far as Imaginative Cinema goes, he was responsible for the look of ABBOTT AND
COSTELLO GO TO MARS, THIS ISLAND EARTH, ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET
THE MUMMY, TARATULA, THE CREATURE WALKS AMONG US, THE MOLE
PEOPLE, THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN, THE DEADLY MANTIS, THE
MONOLITH MONSTERS, THE THING THAT COULDN’T DIE, MONSTER ON THE
CAMPUS, CURSE OF THE UNDEAD, THE LEECH WOMAN, THE NIGHT WALKER,
COLOSSUS; THE FORBIN PROJECT and SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE.
He was 97 years old.
Brock Peters, the versatile film and stage actor, singer and producer who first rose to
prominence in the 1960's and 70's with his powerful singing voice and poignant screen
portrayals of angry, belligerent black men, has died. He was 78.
Mr. Peters was born Brock Fisher in New York City in 1927 and made his stage debut at
15 in the 1943 Broadway production of PORGY AND BESS in a minor role, as Jim.
After attending the University of Chicago and City College of New York, he continued
training for the stage in New York. He also honed his resonant bass singing voice as a
member of the de Paur Infantry Chorus and toured clubs in the United States and
Canada with a cabaret act. In 1953 he made his first television appearance as a singer on
ARTHUR GODFREY'S TALENT SCOUTS.
His first screen appearances were in two lavish all-black musicals directed by Otto
Preminger, CARMEN JONES in 1954 and PORGY AND BESS in 1959. His film roles
include an award winning performance (All-American Press Association Award) in TO
KILL A MOCKINGBIRD,
THE L-SHAPED ROOM, THE PAWNBROKER, MAJOR DUNDEE, LOST IN THE
STARS, SLAUGHTER’S BIG RIP-OFF, THE MCMASTERS and TWO-MINUTE
WARNING. Peters
appeared in such genre films as SOYLENT GREEN, STAR TREK IV, ALLIGATOR II and
STAR TREK VI. His credits also include the television mini-series BATTLESTAR
GALLACTICA and ROOTS: THE NEXT GENERATION, as well as the voice of
Lucius Fox in BATMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES and he was the sinister voice of
Darth Vader in the NPR radio version of the STAR WARS trilogy.
THE LAST WARD . . .
By John Ward
Well, folks, it was bound to happen. After the last couple of years of columns,
through all the blather about STAR WARS, Star Trek, James Stewart, drive-in movies,
sports movies, Steve McQueen, monsters galore, the magic ellipsis, and more lists than
you can shake Gandalf‘s stick at, it has come down to this.
The 100 greatest movies ever made.
Wait, hold on – let me go back and fix that a little…
The 100 Greatest Movies Ever Made. Yeah, there ya go; a subject like that just
begs to be capitalized.
I‘ve been tossing the idea around for a while, jotting down a title here, a title
there, just so I wouldn‘t forget them. But I didn‘t really get serious about it until I
finished Roger Ebert‘s second volume of The Great Movies, and started thinking, You
know, I liked a lot of those. Just not as much as Roger.
So I started going through my video collection and wrote down about 25 titles that
I couldn‘t imagine ever losing. To that list, I added some titles from the all-time list of
Academy Award-winning Best Pictures. (Not surprisingly, I didn‘t add that many.)
Then I cobbled from Ebert‘s books, as well as the various AFI lists, and Entertainment
Weekly’s The 100 Greatest Movies Ever Made. And finally, I just sat back and
reminisced. It wasn‘t as hard as I thought.
Now here comes the best part for me, the column-writer: the list is so long, and
I‘ve got so much to say (big surprise), that I‘ve easily mapped out my next four columns!
Right through December!! Good-bye writer‘s block, helloooo, Mr. Deadline!! Seriously,
I decided to do 25 movies a month, starting this month with 100 through 76, and so on,
leading up to my all-time 25 favorite movies in December. Then January comes in with
my Top Ten of 2005, February follows with my Oscar predictions…yep, life is sweet.
Shoulda thought of this years ago. (Okay, months ago.)
100. THE GENERAL (1927) Buster Keaton‘s masterpiece, and one of a very
few silent movies on my list. Keaton plays Johnny Gray, a sad sack
character barred from serving for the Confederacy during the Civil War,
who winds up saving a valued Confederate train from the Union Army.
The film is an extended comic chase sequence in which Keaton and his
girlfriend do everything possible to win the race, driving the train to
safety, and the logistics of the chase are mind-boggling.
99. YOJIMBO (1961) Akira Kurosawa‘s samurai epic was the inspiration for
Leone‘s A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS. Toshiro Mifune plays a ronin
samurai who comes to a village plagued by warring gangs, and proceeds
to play the gangs against one another.
98. TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE (1948) John Huston directed
Humphrey Bogart, Tim Holt, and his own father Walter Huston as three
down-and-out prospectors looking to claim a legendary gold strike.
Bogart‘s descent into greedy madness as Fred C. Dobbs is one of his very
best performances. You never really warm to Bogart‘s slimy character,
but you can‘t help marveling over the acting.
97. BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN (1925) A piece of political propaganda if
ever there was one – the revolt of the sailors over poor conditions is
viewed as justifiable – but it makes the list for one of the greatest moments
ever put to film, the famed Odessa Steps sequence. Sergei Eisenstein‘s
camerawork was viewed as the hallmark of the Soviet montage, far ahead
of its time in the world of filmmaking.
96. WHEN HARRY MET SALLY… (1989) I‘d vote for this as one of the
greatest date movies ever made. Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan have
wonderful chemistry as the title couple, who meet off and on over the
years before developing first a friendship, then a love. Lots of funny
dialogue between the sexes, and one of the great comic moments of all-
time – Ryan‘s fake orgasm in the restaurant. Director Rob Reiner‘s
mother spoke the punchline at the end of this scene!
95. ALL ABOUT EVE (1950) One of the best of the ―backstage‖ movies
about theater life, centered on two powerhouse performances: Bette Davis
as Margo Channing, the grande dame of Broadway, and Anne Baxter as
Eve Harrington, the scheming newcomer out for Davis‘ fame and fortune.
The screenplay is one of the sharpest ever written, continually fascinating,
with a low-key but fitting finale.
94. METROPOLIS (1927) The vision of Fritz Lang‘s sci-fi epic is incredible:
a futuristic society made up of two classes, the thinkers and the workers,
who never seem to interact, until one thinker dares to enter the workers‘
underworld. The imagery is far ahead of its time. Lang went on to direct
the classic M, but this one is his masterpiece.
93. SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS (1937) Not my favorite
Disney cartoon – two more are higher on my list – but this one makes the
chart because, well, frankly, it was first. And let‘s face it, that‘s gotta
count for something. No one had ever seen anything like SNOW WHITE
before Walt and his nine old men brought her to life. The care that went
into every colorful frame is very evident, and while the songs are pretty
treacly, you can‘t beat that ol‘ witch for pure nastiness. My one quibble
was that her demise happened so quickly. Oh, well.
92. ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST (1969) The greatest of the Sergio
Leone westerns, and considering the trilogy that preceded it, that‘s saying
something. Leone holds your attention with long, slow sequences
completely sans dialogue, allowing the camera to deliver close-up after
close-up of sweaty, sunburned faces; the opening with the killers at the
train station is a perfect example. Henry Fonda played against type as one
of the all-time great villains. A gorgeous musical score, too.
91. NORTH BY NORTHWEST (1959) This is the first of four Alfred
Hitchcock films on my list, and the amazing thing is that he made them all
in about a 7-year period. I don‘t think anyone could match that for
sustained brilliance; from 1954 to 1960, Hitchcock was probably the best
director working on the planet. It‘s a sin that he never won an Oscar.
NBN is a flat-out blast, a popcorn movie of the highest order, acted to
perfection by a flawless cast and filmed at a breakneck pace. Seldom has
a chase film been so satisfying.
90. A CHRISTMAS STORY (1983) This warm and often hilarious movie is a
Christmas tradition at our house, and deservedly so. Rarely has there been
a ―memory movie‖ that sounded so true, so honest, so real. The voice-
over narrator (Jean Shepherd, who actually wrote the book on which the
film was based) talks fondly of his childhood in late ‗40s Indiana, when all
he wanted for Christmas was a Red Ryder BB gun. Peter Billingsley plays
Ralphie, the narrator‘s alter ego, with a disarmingly wide-eyed openness.
Darren McGavin and Melinda Dillon are perfect as his parents. It‘s the
only time I‘ve ever heard a swear word provide the biggest laugh in a G-
rated film.
89. VERTIGO (1958) Alfred Hitchcock‘s masterpiece of paranoia, phobias,
and deep, dark obsessions. James Stewart is an ex-cop hired to tail a
woman suspected of cheating on her husband, but when he becomes
infatuated with her, the case turns sour. Then the woman…well, how can
I say more? It‘s usually a cardinal sin to reveal much of the plot of a
Hitchcock movie, and this is one that rewards the serious viewer.
88. DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944) One of the greatest film noirs ever made,
featuring one of the best ―bad couples‖ ever: Barbara Stanwyck as an ice-
blonde femme fatale, and Fred MacMurray as the insurance salesman she
ropes into a murder plot. The screenplay by Billy Wilder and Raymond
Chandler should have won an Oscar; the byplay between Stanwyck and
MacMurray is consistently sharp and biting. Once they set eyes on each
other, practically every other line becomes a double entendre. Edward G.
Robinson, well known for playing bad guys, is excellent as the claims
adjuster on their trail.
87. THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE (1962) Forget the remake; the
original is still one of the best conspiracy movies ever made. Director
John Frankenheimer‘s thriller instincts were never better (although he
appears again higher on my list). Frank Sinatra races to stop an
assassination plot built around an old Army buddy, Laurence Harvey,
brainwashed by the North Koreans to kill. Angela Lansbury plays
Harvey‘s mother – one of the greatest screen villainesses ever.
86. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND (1977) Steven
Spielberg makes the first of five appearances on this list with his first
science fiction movie, a tale of alien visitation that builds in intensity until
you are left stunned in your seat, gazing in wonder at a truly breathtaking
climax. Richard Dreyfuss is just right as the family guy coming slowly
unglued by what he has seen and experienced, and French film director
Francois Truffaut makes a rare acting appearance as a scientist
investigating the phenomena.
85. THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1925) This one might not have
made the list if not for the circumstances under which I saw it: in a
cavernous, old-time movie house, with accompaniment on a rainbow-lit
Wurlitzer organ. Perfect. Lon Chaney plays arguably his greatest role as
the tragic phantom, haunting the Paris Opera House. His unmasking scene
has become legendary; the ―Red Death‖ sequence (the only scene in the
film that uses color) is also notable.
84. HALLOWEEN (1978) I thought hard about this one. My favorite John
Carpenter movie has always been THE THING, and I doubt that will ever
change. But this is the movie that made more of an impact. Look at all
the movies that have followed – most of them junk, and very few even
come close to approaching HALLOWEEN in terms of quality. You know
the ones I‘m talking about; the ones that sacrifice scares for gore.
HALLOWEEN managed to stay frightening all the way through without
resorting to buckets of blood, and it deserves all kinds of props for that.
83. INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1956) You want to talk
paranoia? This is the one to beat. Probably the second greatest science
fiction film to come out of the ‗50s (the best is several months down the
road on the list), and it gets that reputation with very little in the way of
special effects. Unless you count lots and lots of big, rubbery seed pods.
Kevin McCarthy plays a doctor, returning to his California town after a
long absence, who slowly comes around to the realization that his
neighbors have been taken over by aliens. This film contains one of the
most heartbreaking kisses in screen history; you‘ll know it when you see
it. I‘ve never seen the original cut, which did not feature the tacked-on
ending designed to cheer nervous audiences. But what they released is
still great.
82. GIANT (1956) I used to have a weakness for big, splashy prime time
soaps, and it probably all started with this film – a big, splashy adaptation
of the Edna Ferber novel, a commentary on race relations slyly disguised
as a multigenerational Texas potboiler. It‘s the last place you would
expect to see James Dean‘s final film role, an underappreciated, tragic
example of the corruption of power. Great work from Elizabeth Taylor,
Rock Hudson, Chill Wills, and a young Dennis Hopper.
81. THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE (1962) John Ford‘s last
great western, filmed on studio backlots with a minimum of fuss. All the
attention is on the performances: James Stewart plays an idealistic lawyer,
John Wayne plays the rancher who becomes his romantic rival and less-
than-enthusiastic guardian angel, and Lee Marvin plays the despicable
villain of the title. Wayne‘s role is secondary to Stewart‘s in the plot, but
it is Wayne‘s sacrifices that you remember after the movie is over.
80. THE UNTOUCHABLES (1987) The best film that Brian De Palma ever
made was also one of his least original, a remake of the classic TV series
that featured FBI agent Eliot Ness chasing depression-era mobsters. But
it‘s a masterpiece of style, cinematography, and filmcraft – especially the
homage to Eisenstein in the train station. Sean Connery‘s role as an
honest Chicago cop supporting Kevin Costner‘s Ness is wonderful – one
of those times when a ―career Oscar‖ was actually well-deserved.
79. STALAG 17 (1953) Billy Wilder makes the list again (and he‘ll return)
with a splendidly acted ensemble picture about life in a Nazi prison camp.
Imagine Hogan’s Heroes with a lot fewer laughs, but much better acting.
William Holden won an Oscar for his role as Selden, the camp fixer who
only looks out for himself, and pays the price when he‘s suspected of
being a Nazi stooge. Holden kind of backs into his hero role here; you‘re
never sure if you like the guy. But the famous ―When Johnny Comes
Marching Home‖ scene that unmasks the real spy is a great movie
moment. Outstanding support from Harvey Lembeck, Robert Strauss,
Neville Brand, and Peter Graves as fellow prisoners.
78. PLANET OF THE APES (1968) This was one of the iconic science
fiction movies of the ‗60s, with spectacular special effects make-up and
great performances from Kim Hunter, Roddy McDowall, Maurice Evans,
and even Charlton Heston, as the shipwrecked astronaut trying to survive
on a world where Darwin‘s theory of evolution has been knocked on its
keister. If you have managed to get to this point in your life without ever
having seen the film, and you know nothing about it, then go rent it. Now.
The ending will knock you on your keister, too.
77. NATIONAL LAMPOON’S ANIMAL HOUSE (1978) What can I say?
It‘s a funny movie. A consistently funny movie. And who‘s to say this
isn‘t what life was like on college campuses in the early ‗60s, before any
of us had heard of Vietnam? A starmaking role for John Belushi, one of
the most perfectly-cast ensemble comedies ever made, and a killer
soundtrack. What more could you ask for?
76. McLINTOCK! (1963) I haven‘t always agreed with John Wayne‘s
politics, but I have always loved his movies. This was the closest he ever
came to making a flat-out comedy, but that‘s not why I picked it for the
list. (Trust me, there have been about 500 other movies that were funnier.)
This is the one I point to as the quintessential ―Duke Movie,‖ filmed in the
early ‗60s at the height of his screen charisma and worldwide star power.
He surrounds himself with all the members of his stock company, guys
like Bruce Cabot, Chill Wills, Hank Worden, Patrick Wayne…heck; the
only one missing is Ben Johnson. I wonder what he was doing at the time.
Wayne and Maureen O‘Hara have great chemistry together as a cattle
rancher and his estranged, high-falutin‘ wife. Their climactic brawl is a
classic. Of all the films on my list, McLINTOCK! is the one film I am
most confident will never appear on anyone else‘s. Which is as good a
place as any to stop for now.
Next month: Movies 75 to 51, including more comedies, more westerns, more thrillers,
and maybe even a horror movie or two. See you then
ICS CALENDER OF EVENTS
August 19th Red Eye
August 19th Valient
August 26th Brothers Grimm
August 26th The Cave
August 27th ICS Meeting at 5:30 P.M. - the Annual ICS Pizza Night!
September 2nd The Sound of Thunder