SkepticScott
TAM Volunteer Guy
I saw "Metropolis" with the newly-recovered footage yesterday!
I find the York and Lancaster version to be far superior, but if Mu-Mu's are you thing, you should be able to pick the newer version up dirt cheap.
Has anyone seen any of the even earlier versions? I'd be interested in seeing those.
I was going to make a smart-arse remark about it being about time they stopped cleaning up the original and did a remake. Then I did a quick check...I saw "Metropolis" with the newly-recovered footage yesterday!
.Oh yes. One of the greats. Don Johnson many years before Miami Vice.
Once again, it is a classic but hardly forgotten..it is almost always listed as one of the quitenssial 50's sci fi films.
ETA: Does everyone remember The Green Slime, which seemed to be more blue than green?
I'm more of a classic horror and fantasy buff than sci-fi, but one of my favorite "forgoton"old sci-fi flicks is The Twonky (1953), a comedic sf film from the director/writer of Five (the first post-apocalyptic survival movie) among other gems.
The Twonky is weird and obscure and delightful. It's about a TV set that is actually a robot from the future! It's a servant robot that goes to extreme and amusing lengths to please its "master", a typical suburban male, by lighting his cigarettes with a laser beam, turning money into more money so he can pay people off, and zapping the vice squad (don't ask) with a memory ray. The man tries to destroy the Twonky, but to no avail; it keeps coming back to "help" him some more, and ends in a very Twilight Zonesque way. Very amusing, different, and little known low budget sf "classic".
BTW, this site is a treasure trove of classic sci-fi movie reviews, described in amusing detail, with pics, through the sf releases of the 50s and 60s. The Twonky is listed and reviewed under the 1953 heading.
Yep.Cool! Does that include the haircut promo stuff, too?
There was nothing like it before it came out. Visually, it was (and still is) stunning. And while it does have the dystopian future story line as a very loose skeleton, the way it is fleshed out makes it unique.So I just watched the supposed sci fi classic; THX1138. It was made before I was born, but I'd always heard it was a classic. I have to say, I was not impressed. I thought it started out good, but then fell apart pretty quickly. I just don't get what the big deal was about it. It's not like it was even an original plot line or anything. It's just another variation on the 1984 dystopian future scenario.
There was nothing like it before it came out. Visually, it was (and still is) stunning. And while it does have the dystopian future story line as a very loose skeleton, the way it is fleshed out makes it unique.
The backstory of the film's production and eventual release adds to the mystique.
Some movies don't even have to be released to get a cult following and legendary mystique. Witness The Day The Clown Cried, which is either absolute crap or the finest movie ever made, depending on the opinion of the few people who claim to have seen the only VHS copy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_day_the_clown_cried
Beanbag
Yeah, but those are more well known.
How many here have actually seen Dark Star?
Dark Star said:Pinback: All right, bomb. Prepare to receive new orders.
Bomb#20: You are false data.
Pinback: Hmmm?
Bomb #20: Therefore I shall ignore you.
Pinback: Hello... bomb?
Bomb #20: False data can act only as a distraction. Therefore, I shall refuse to perceive.
Pinback: Hey, bomb?
Bomb #20: The only thing that exists is myself.
Pinback: Snap out of it, bomb.
So I just watched the supposed sci fi classic; THX1138. It was made before I was born, but I'd always heard it was a classic. I have to say, I was not impressed. I thought it started out good, but then fell apart pretty quickly. I just don't get what the big deal was about it. It's not like it was even an original plot line or anything. It's just another variation on the 1984 dystopian future scenario.
I suppose my first challenge to you is the fact I believe the film has far more to do with "Brave New Worlds" than 1984
And to answer the OP: The Black Hole seems to be a well forgotten one.