In this one, Sam and Mark discuss John Carpenter’s The Thing and their favourite movies containing stop-motion animation, as well as a few other movies such as 13 Assassins and The Perfect Host
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In this one, Sam and Mark discuss John Carpenter’s The Thing and their favourite movies containing stop-motion animation, as well as a few other movies such as 13 Assassins and The Perfect Host
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The Light Fantastic
This is a direct sequel to Terry Pratchett’s first Discworld book, continuing the adventures of Rincewind the semi-failed magician, Twoflower the tourist, and the walking luggage.
There’s many funny moments and scenes in this book, but it benefits a lot by the presence of a few other characters, particularly Death, and Cohen the Barbarian (a geriatric warrior who is more canny than caveman).
Recommended as a fine diversion from reality
Two scenes in particular stood out for me, and defined the spirit of the show: Roslin, who we’ve seen as very human and compassionate being forced to make a snap-decision about leaving a lot of ships behind vs staying and risking all of civilian humanity to the cylons, and she makes it without histrionics or any show of weakness. And near the end, when Tigh is trying to make amends with Starbuck, and Starbuck flat refuses to compromise.
We know we’re not in glossy, emotionally-vacuous territory here.
Episode 2, “Water” opened really well, again in disorientation and confusion, this time with the character of Sharon being absolutely soaked and obviously not knowing where she was and how she got there. It did settle into something more ordinary after that though. I too didn’t feel the Chief acted properly or realistically. Hell, they are fighting for survival, he’s in a absolutely key position, he cannot hide stuff like that, even though it’s his girlfriend. That peeved me some. I really like the Baltar/6 interactions though, and the building relationship of Adama and Roslin.
An okay episode with some really great final few scenes.
13 Assassins
A quite enthralling hark back to 60s Samurai movies with a modern twist, solid all the way through. The bad guy is completely bad, and the good guys are tough, powerful fighters that need to take down 200 men in an epic battle to finish their quest – kill the bad guy. It’s well directed by Beat Takeshi, and is somewhat reminiscent of some the the 70s Kurosawa movies in both mood and colour palette – reminded me of Kagemusha, for example.
There are some quite dark scenes in this though, and it’s thoroughly adult, so be warned.
8.5/10
Fright Night 2
Okay Fright Night was recently made with David Tennant channelling Russell Brand as a vampire hunter, but this is a review of the sequel to the rather charming original.
This sequel suffers from a number of problems. The main antagonist is a woman, a sister to the original’s suave Chris Sarandon vampire, but she really can’t act and doesn’t have the charisma to pull this off. Secondly, we’ve lost Charlie Brewster’s original girlfriend (who was played by the woman who became Marcy in Married With Children), who was cute, likeable and believable. The new girlfriend is again not a great actress (but gets better as the film goes along), and not that likeable. Coupled with an internal logic that just doesn’t work (one vampire gets staked and just falls dead, while others immediately melt or somesuch), and not great dialogue, poor motivation and not a very good story, it’s not a patch on the original.
However, it has some merits. The practical special effects are fun, and one of the Queen Vampire’s underlings is quite good. He looks like a young James Woods with enormous and long hair. There’s also the odd shot that’s pretty memorable, such as a striking-looking black vampire skating towards the camera.
Maybe worth seeing the once for a fan of 80s horror.
The Day the Earth Stood Still
Made in the 50s and remade recently starring Keanu Reeves (and everything I’ve heard about it makes is sound like a worthless remake), this is a solid, if a little plodding, scifi story. An alien comes to earth to warn humans against their violent ways, warning them they face destruction if they can’t change.
There’s been a lot made of this being a Jesus allegory (the alien, Klaatu, calls himself ‘Mr Carpenter’ – get it?) which is somewhat true, but honestly, it is just as entertaining if viewed more superficially as a simple adventure story. Also, if you want a wackier version of the same basic premise, you’ll find it in Plan 9 from Outer Space. And of course Jesus didn’t fly off in a spaceship after the Resurrection (as far as we know).
The most fun in this movie apart from looking for Jesus motifs, is the robot Gort, an intergalactic policeman who can reduce planets to a cinder (and does some fun things against the US military). He’s quite a presence.
The actual photography, camerawork and editing are quite effective. The individual scenes are reasonably sophisticated (a lot more sophisticated than, say, Invaders from Mars, or War of the Worlds from the same period), and the black and white imagery is quite striking.
Overall, thoroughly recommended, suitable for all ages.
8/10
In this episode, Mark and Sam talk about Dead Island, Army of Two, the movies they’re most looking forward to in the coming year, The Phantom of the Opera, and Joel Schumacher.
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Sam and Mark talk about star wars and George Lucas, The Blues Brothers, and their favourite music moments from the movies.
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In this show, Sam and Mark discuss the movie (and comic book) Scott Pilgrim Versus The World, and compare their favourite nerds, as well as a number of current xbox 360 games.
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In this episode, Mark and Sam talk about Paul starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, Sam tells about the videogame Alice, and the guys compare their favourite top 5 movie aliens
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In this episode, Sam and Mark and Max give a commentary on the classic Doctor Who Episode called Dalek with the ninth Doctor, Christopher Eccleston. This marked the first time Daleks appear in the modern versions of Doctor Who.
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In this episode, Mark and Sam take a look at the first Harry Potter movie, choose their top 5 video game protagonists, and discuss what else they watched, played and read this week.
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In this show, Max and Sam discuss what they liked and disliked about the latest Harry Potter movie, and then decided which franchise was best: Harry Potter or Star Wars
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In this episiode, Mark and Sam take a look at Spaceballs by Mel Brooks, choose their top 5 2D animated movies, and skim over The Ghost of Frankenstein, From Hell and The Punisher.
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In this episode, Sam and Mark and joined by another member of the family, Max, to give a commentary on the classic Star Trek episode ‘Amok Time’, most recently seen in the Transformers 3: Dark of the Moon movie. We discuss the history of Star Trek, the nature of Vulcans and how awesome Kirk and Spock are.
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In episode 004, Mark and Sam talk about the cheap and cheerful space-horror-fest Jason X, pick the movies they’d most like to see remade, and discuss surviving the zombie apocalypse
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Good news, we’ve now just got added to podcast alley! Here’s the link:
My Podcast Alley feed! {pca-73144e34bb608a4cdccbb77a2d7904ac}
In this show, the guys review the movie X-Men First Class, pick out their favourite movie bad guys, and discuss manga comics, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and assorted movies including Moon and Bride of Frankenstein.
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In this episode, Sam and Mark review the arty martial arts movie House of Flying Daggers, pick the top 5 graphic novels, and discuss games such as Fear, Just Cause 2, and some old TV shows, including Married With Children and Red Dwarf
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In this show, Mark and Sam review the movie Tron – Legacy, pick out their top 5 memorable movie deaths, and discuss such diverse entertainment as Star Trek and alternate universes, Nightmare Revisited (the soundtrack of The Nightmare Before Christmas redone by bands), and Battle Royale.
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Welcome to this new podcast. Each week we hope to bring you a short and sweet podcast that covers the following:
GET THE COMFY CHAIR – We’ll shoot the breeze about movies, TV we’ve watched, games we’ve played and stuff we’ve read or heard since the last podcast.
NUMBER 5 IS ALIVE – A top 5 list – ranging from best movie deaths to toughest guys and beyond, but it will be a top (or bottom) 5 about something film/entertainment related.
THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE – A review of a movie – may be old, may be new, may be obscure, may be famous, it depends on what we feel like watching.
Enjoy!
Mark and Sam, Team GBO