As is likely the case with many people who saw Star Wars during hyper-impressionable childhood, I was immediately cursed with an insatiable appetite for cinematic sci-fi. Of course, those years before the arrival of the videocassette recorder and cable TV were a cruel, thin time to jones for space borne flights of fancy, as I was only taken by my dad to see the odd feature like Close Encounters Of The Third Kind, Flash Gordon, E.T. The Extra Terrestrial, and The Black Hole while I could only pine to see such utter dogshit as Outland, and Battle Beyond The Stars (hey, come on, at least the latter had some space battles going for it).
The arrival of cable television in Southfield in 1982 was a godsend for catching up on these movies, as I was still too young to be able to afford seeing most of them on my own (not to mention that the nearest movie theater at the time, the Americana, was out of easy bicycling range). Many of these features discussed below were seen on TV few times and then either forgotten about (or my taped copies were dubbed over with my sister's favorite soap operas). Thus, as part of my ongoing series of writing about movies (no, I really hadn't forgotten about this idea, I've just been very preoccupied with things like work, dentist appointments, and the Cleveland Indians), this post will examine a few old HBO/Cinemax genre standbys I've had the opportunity to take in again recently either via DVD or the magic of bit torrent.
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In the end, however, The Final Countdown is more of a mental exercise than the war-time action film I'd hoped to see as a kid, and even though I still feel a tad shortchanged by the ending all these years later, I still find it at the very least a thought-provoking diversion. The same can also be said for The Philadelphia Experiment, which takes time travel the other way around, as two sailors from 1942 find themselves trapped in modern day America ("modern day" being 1984) after an early experiment in radar-cloaking technology goes horribly awry.
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The Final Countdown, by contrast, entirely avoids laughs (and why shouldn't it? Aircraft carriers traveling through time is Very Serious Business) and manages to be fun despite all of the intellectual sparring going on between Martin Sheen, James Farentino and Kirk Douglas. Most of this talk, of course, centers on paradoxes and what a military ship from from the future is supposed to do when a grave threat to the United States is closing in fast. What can be done about the attack on the United States everyone knows is coming and how will the answer affect forty years of recorded history? Heady stuff.
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Seriously, the most charming aspect to Night Of The Comet is that it knows how silly it is, and it plays like one of those countless B-movies screened on the Satellite Of Love scored with one of the most hilariously canned-sounding 80's soundtracks ever: seriously, this music is so bad it makes even the lamer pop hits of that plastic era sound positively timeless in comparison. While this utterly forgettable twaddle bops away on the automated Top 40 station blaring in the background throughout, the film has a positively cheese-tastic time with the idea of a world depopulated overnight by the same comet that wiped out the dinosaurs 65,000,000 years ago (you see, said didn't hit the Earth but instead passed right on by, bathing the planet in its tail and instantly reduced every exposed living being to Kool Aid mix).
Of course, not every living being can be annihilated in Night Of The Comet or we'd be watching a Warhol movie for an hour and a half. Apparently, anyone stuck inside of a metal container or room would have been immune to the effects of the comet's radiation, despite the fact that the atmosphere remains tinted scarlet for days afterward (which makes this movie look even more like an early MTV video that it already did beforehand). Unfortunately, partial exposure to the radiation turns everyone else into a reject from Dawn Of The Dead, so by the time this movie enters its third act (which at times takes on a surprisingly dark tone), we are watching some increasingly out-of-kilter (and badly acted) blend of 80s teen romp, action movie, and zombie flick.
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Of course, watching Wavelength again after all such a span made me once again question my own memory on what constitutes "good" versus "bad" movies from that time. This was an a pretty low-budget "Area 51" type of story based on the idea that a trio of telepathic, photosynthetic aliens were being held captive by the U.S. Army in an underground military base nestled right smack in the middle of the Hollywood Hills. Luckily for the makeup department, these extraterrestrials resemble nothing more than hairless ten-year old boys of varying ethnicities rather than something from an H.R. Giger painting.
My guess is that the makers of Wavelength must have used most of their allotted dosh on about 1-minute of average-quality matte work during the penultimate scene and hiring Tangerine Dream to compose a typically atmospheric score. It's a shame they had to go so cheap on everything else (like coming up with two less-irritating central characters) since there are some pretty interesting ideas lurking about what is an otherwise a hopelessly cliched script. Hell, even hiring some better camera operators might have made this easier going (the boom mic keeps wandering into exterior shots to the point where it becomes comical).
It isn't until we finally meet the aliens themselves (about 45 minutes into the film) that Wavelength finally starts to get interesting (or at least the pace picks up enough so that you can overlook the terrible acting being phoned in by Keenan Wynn and Robert Carradine). The real high point of the film is a night time escape sequence through the streets of Los Angeles (stopping by a church and a men's restroom) and into the Mojave Desert with Tangerine Dream's score burbling busily along in the background as it is generally wont to do. The rest of this amateurish mess falls as flat as a pool table. Pity.
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As cringeworthy as the above sounds, Starman works on nearly every possible level. The idea is that the Voyager satellites reach a far off planet where their gold-plated greetings from the Earth arrives on an uncharted alien world, who apparently listen to it and decide to respond by sending an emissary over to say hello in person (oh, and nevermind that this would have to happen thousands of years in our future given the speed the Voyager craft are traveling and the incomprehensible distance to our nearest galactic neighbor star ... let alone a system that actually has planets). Of course, before this goodwill ambassador can so much as pick out a place to park, his spacecraft is shot down by a couple of fighter jets over the woods of Wisconsin. Luckily for him, our visitor seems to have no physical form, appearing to us a brilliant point of light that eventually visits Karen Allen's house while she sleeps and takes the form of her dead husband Jeff Bridges (generating his form from DNA sampled in strands of his hair kept in a photo album).
Allen, naturally a tad freaked out at seeing her departed beloved staggering about her house like a toddler (and speaking to her in halting, toneless sentence fragments) initially tries to get the hell away, but finds herself drawn to the vistor's innocent, gentle nature. With only a limited time on Earth before his host body expires, Bridges needs to return to his point of destination to await a ride home (a scene which, by the way, is strikingly similar to the end of Wavelength, which came out a year and change before), though their cross-country drive will be marked with humorous misunderstandings and unpleasant confrontations. Meanwhile, the Big Bad Military (led by the always menacing Richard Jaeckel) is closing in: they know they have an alien visitor running around in human form and they want to meet it, preferably after tying it down to a gurney and poking at it with needles.
I'll quickly address the "chick flick" angle: I'm certainly no connosseur of this kind of film, but for my money, Allen and Bridges sell the relationship that eventually blossoms between these characters, and you'll have little problem empathizing with Allen's behavior around Bridges as she grows from being horrified and frightened out of her wits to understanding and developing a strong emotional bond with the visitor as the movie progresses. Better yet, while Starman's dialog may occasionally dance around the edge of the treacly tar pit (particularly following a pivotal scene in a train car), the movie, to its credit, never collapses into mawkishness.
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As with Strange Invaders, Critters sports a sense of humor about itself, and is a lot more willing to break into outright comedy. While it looks and sounds like a lame waste of a video rental, Critters is a deceptively smart film that deserved the cult following it attained, with a couple of laugh-out-loud bits involving the creatures themselves (especially a subtitled exchange between two of them on the Brown family's front porch) and some amusing sci-fi references cropping up in the dialog throughout.
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If you're the kind of person who not only followed all of that but were also intrigued, then this is the movie for you. That said, a lot of people can be pretty put off by a movie that throws you into the plot with hardly any exposition at all: watching Buckaroo Banzai is a lot like picking up issue #5 of a superhero comic book and trying to play catch-up as you read along. Simply figuring out what the hell is going on from time to time can be a real challenge as the entire script plays out as if it was written by a clutch of genre geeks who stuffed every scene with in-jokes, red herrings and obscure references (the dialogue, sometimes incidental in nature and dealing with completely unrelated or "previous" storylines we are not privy to, is often a total riot). It may take a viewing or so to really grok the whole thing (this was the case with me as a teenager), but Buckaroo Banzai rewards attention and seems to unveil something previously-unseen every time you watch. A true "cult classic" in every sense and highly recommended.
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The Final Countdown rating: 4/5
The Philadelphia Experiment rating: 4/5
The Quiet Earth rating: 4/5
Night Of The Comet rating: 2/5
Wavelength rating: 2/5
Starman rating: 4/5
Strange Invaders rating: 3/5
Critters rating: 3/5
The Adventures Of Buckaroo Banzai: Across The Eighth Dimension rating: 5/5
2 comments:
You completely forgot Ice Pirates. Which I just openly assume anyone has seen.
There's a Night of the Comet fan site at www.nightofthecomet.info
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