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Showing posts from November, 2022

Film 45/52: The Sugarland Express (1974)

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We had narrowed down our 'S' selection to two different titles, and then after watching The Fablemans and the documentary Spielberg on HBO, we decided to push those aside and finally schedule a long overdue screening of Steven Spielberg's theatrical feature film debut, The Sugarland Express . Goldie Hawn stars alongside William Atherton (who would go on to portray memorable jerks in both  Ghostbusters and the first two  Die Hard  films) as a couple (Lou Jean and Clovis) on the run from law with a patrolman hostage, on their way to pick up their baby from a foster home so they can escape across the Mexican border to live happily ever after. Ben Johnson plays the kind-hearted lawman on their tail throughout the slow-speed caravan through Texas. While Spielberg doesn't orchestrate anywhere near as many car crashes as John Landis does in The Blues Brothers , it seems as if he's got more police cars involved in the chase than Landis assembled for his film.  The Sugarl

Film 44/52: Rosemary's Baby (1968)

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Rosemary's Baby was a key contender in our first half of this series, and this time it made the cut! Produced by genre legend William Castle (who pops up in a can't-miss-him cameo) and adapted for the screen from Ira Levin's novel by Roman Polanski, the film is a horror classic that we just never got around to watching. Vonna, because she intentionally shied away from it, assuming it was a film more in the vein of The Exorcist .  Me, because I always assumed it would be a somewhat boring tale about the long road to birthing the Devil's baby. After the talk of the film in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood , Vonna was finally interested in checking it out. Well, it turns out Vonna's original assessment was wrong, though she ended up seeing the film similarly as to how I had pictured it. It's a slow burn, but I found the settings and the construction of the film to be quite interesting; far more than I would have had I watched it as a kid on video. Vonna was fascinate

Film 43/52: The Quatermass Xperiment (1955)

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Once again we surprisingly found ourselves with a number of 'Q' options to choose from, and this time out I decided to finally check out the acclaimed Hammer film, The Quatermass Xperiment (renamed The Creeping Unknown in the US). The film features Brian Donlevy in the title role of Professor Quatermass, who arrives at the scene of a rocket crash in a field outside London to check on the crew of the mission to space he was responsible for. Now, I'm not sure what the first film was to feature a rocket ship stuck in the surface of a planet after a crash landing, but by 1955, I'm wondering if this is one of the last. The visual is one of very few things about the film that seems silly to a modern audience (they sure made rockets hardier in those days!), second only to the classic missing bodies that leave their empty clothes behind.  Two of the three astronauts have disappeared (clothes notwithstanding), and the third, Victor Carroon (Richard Wordsworth), who slowly begi

Film 42/52: Piranha (1978)

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Ah, Piranha . A Roger Corman production that I hadn't seen on video in many, many years. I've always enjoyed Joe Dante's films, and he has a way of making everything he touches fun; populating his films with friendly, familiar faces. We recently enjoyed the Video Archives podcast discussion on the film, so it seemed an ideal candidate for our 'P' entry in the series.  Despite the great cast, and Dante's flair for black humor, I have to say I was a little disappointed. I think I went in with expectations set too high — thinking it might be on par with some of my favorite Dante films: The Howling , Gremlins , Innerspace , etc. It has its moments, but it doesn't maintain the level that those films do. Still, it is a step-up from Hollywood Boulevard ! Bradford Dillman's character is a surprising change from the many roles I've come to associate with him ( Escape from the Planet of the Apes , Bug , and The Enforcer , and Sudden Impact ). It's nice to