T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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558.1 | | MANANA::RAVAN | Tryin' to make it real | Thu Jan 07 1988 09:05 | 10 |
| I take it you are not referring to the natural weapons with which
real babies usually bombard, spray, and otherwise attack their
parents... :-)
There was "The Brood," I think, and "It's Alive!", both of which
were about mutant babies of some kind. I'm sure there have been
more, though few that were memorable. (Unless you're thinking of
baby aliens!)
-b
|
558.2 | Trilogy of Terror | SQM::MCCAFFERTY | | Mon Jan 11 1988 15:08 | 7 |
| I seem to remember a television movie "Trilogy of Terror(?)" in
which one of the stories dealt with a child's dolls coming to life
,torturing & terrorizing the childs mother. I remember little else
about the other two stories but this one I beleive was the best
of the three and provided a decent scare. Anyone else recall this?
John
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558.3 | munch, munch, ... | ERASER::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Mon Jan 11 1988 15:53 | 16 |
| Re .2 (John):
_Trilogy of Terror_ starred Kasren Black. There were three stories,
even as implied by the title. The final one, "The Devil Doll,"
apparently had the maximum impact on most audiences. It's about
a little black doll that looks like a cross between a carved wooden
equivalent of a voodoo doll and a phirana (_lotsa_ teeth!!!). This
little critter goes after Karen B. with the obvious intent of chomping
her. Sorta like a killer shrew, or some such.
I've VAXmail corresponded with folk who thought it was terrifying.
Others have found it mildly amusing.
Okay for a Saturday afternoon; it's findable on videocasette.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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558.4 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Jan 12 1988 09:33 | 8 |
| The idea of a doll attacking adults has been used fairly often.
In addition to the "Trilogy of Terror," I can recall an episode
of Twilight Zone and another on Night Gallery. The TZ version,
as I recall, was about a father who kept trying to discard a doll
his daughter spoke to and confided in. The NG version was about a
parting gift from a native to a British officer who had served in India.
- tom]
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558.5 | Jane Fonda's not fonda them either | BEVRLY::KASPER | This note contains exactly ---> | Tue Jan 12 1988 11:23 | 6 |
| I remember seeing Trilogy of Terror a long time ago. The doll was the
most memorable part -- I thought it was pretty revolting. It didn't
give me nightmares, but I didn't enjoy it either.
And while we're listing nasty dolls, let's not forget Barbarella!!!
|
558.6 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Has anybody lost a shoggoth? | Tue Jan 12 1988 15:20 | 12 |
| Re .5:
> ... -- I thought it was pretty revolting. It didn't
>give me nightmares, but I didn't enjoy it either.
One of the more prolific Noters in the MOVIES file told me that
she saw this on the tube while in college with a bunch of her
classmates (all girls). The story gave all of them the willies
(U.S. idiom), and she had nightmares for some time. So you can't
tell.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
558.7 | The black doll | TUNER::FLIS | | Fri Jan 15 1988 10:14 | 18 |
| I recall one story (TV) but can not recall the title.
It is about a small white girl with a doll of a black girl. The mother
refused to allow her daughter to play with a 'black' doll and always
took it away from her. Some how the girl always got the doll back
even though the mother placed it in impossible places.
At times she would see the girl out in the yard playing with the
doll and hear *two* voices talking as she approached, only to find
just the girl and the doll.
The show ended in this way, where the mother approached her, again,
playing under a tree with the doll. Only to find a small black
girl playing with a white doll...
T'was well done.
jim
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558.8 | The Midwich Cuckoos | BMT::MENDES | Free Lunches For Sale | Mon Jan 25 1988 15:21 | 5 |
| There's the old (black&white) classic, "The Midwich Cuckoos". Of
course, they don't remain babies very long, and the excitement occurs
when they are young (pre-teen). From the book by John Wyndham.
- Richard
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558.9 | Across the pond... | SLTERO::KENAH | Quivering in sympathetic vibration... | Tue Jan 26 1988 13:09 | 3 |
| In the US, I think the film was called "Village of the Damned."
andrew
|
558.10 | Topic's Alive III | NYEM1::RDAVIS | Ray Davis | Wed Jan 27 1988 21:23 | 18 |
| OK, we're on a roll...
There's Joseph Losey's great "These Are The Damned" (original Brit
title "The Damned" - not sure whether "Village..." was renamed for
this or visa-versa). Not only did we get dangerous kids, but cross
referenced for dangerous adolescents (Oliver Reed!).
And there's "It Lives Again" (AKA "It's Alive II" I wish AKA "It's
STILL Alive") by the great Larry Cohen, who's made sort of a specialty
of parents vs. children movies.
David Cronenberg has already been named for "The Brood", I think.
About the dolls... The "Night Gallery" episode about the "Out In,
Out In, Out In Injia" doll is the most embarrassing thing I've ever
had nightmares from, other than the "Night Gallery" episode about
the shadows on the wall. "Night Gallery" was crap next to T.Z.
but they sure knew how to manipulate kid's imaginations by then.
|
558.11 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Lyra RA 18h 28m 37s D 31d 49m | Thu Jan 28 1988 01:20 | 15 |
| re:.8 & .9
As far as I can tell from my reference books, the film was never
titled THE MIDWICH CUCKOOS, after the novel, only VILLAGE OF THE
DAMNED. Curiously enough, it was remade only three years later
under the title CHILDREN OF THE DAMNED, by the same studio (MGM),
but with a completely different cast and crew.
re.10
Unlikely that the film was titled VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED after
(THESE ARE THE DAMNED), since it was made a year earlier (1960
for VILLAGE..., 1961 for THESE...).
--- jerry
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558.12 | Sorry if I'm repeating .. | BIRGP1::ALLEN | | Thu Jan 28 1988 05:37 | 7 |
| Not sure whether this has already been mentioned and I've missed
it, but there were some rather unpleasant children and dolls in
BARBARELLA (that Jane Fonda SF send-up from the late '60's/early
'70's -- can't remember when exactly).
Michelle
|