[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

1124.0. "SF 18 Movie Marathon" by MILPND::CANSLER () Wed Dec 16 1992 15:12

    SF/18, the 18th annual 24 hour science fiction film marathon,
    will be held from noon Sunday, Februray 14 until noon Monday,
    February 15, 1992.  
    
    The marathon will take place at the Coolidge Corner Theatre,
    290 Harvard Ave, Brookline, MA.  Phone: 734-2500.
    
    Tickets are $21.500 until 1/7, $23.00 until 2/4, and $25.00 
    there after .  To order tickets by mail, write to: 
       SF/18: Zeotrope Entertainment
       578 High Street
       Dedham, MA  02026
    
    or you can call C & C Magic Company at 1-800-MAGIC-04 or 508-897-9493
    or you can contact me here in Maynard.
    
    See you there
    
    Bob Cansler
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
1124.1MILPND::CANSLERMon Jan 04 1993 07:444
    
    I have a few tickets left at the 21.50 price if any one wants them.
    
    bc
1124.2what's showing?OBSESS::GRIFFITHno matter where you go, there you areWed Jan 27 1993 12:372

1124.3Movie listingMILPND::CANSLERTue Feb 09 1993 13:5325
    
    
    
    
    I have 9 tickets left for the marathon, it is sold out so if any
    one in the notes file wants one let me know if not I will be taking
    them to the coolidge friday.
    
    Movie listing..........................................
    
Aelita Queen of Mars
Invaders from Mars
Buckeroo Banzi
Breakfast of Aliens
Galaxiana
Cat women of the moon (we could not get the 3-d )
Star Crystal
Star Crash
Blade Runner  (directors cut)
The fortress or Mad Max beyond Thunder dome ( one of these 
Space Patrol
Cartoons and trailers

W.D. Richter speaker ( director of Buckeroo Banzi)
1124.4MantMILPND::CANSLERWed Feb 10 1993 15:334
    special sleeper we have  Mant -  you've seen the trailers well
    we have got our hands on the only copy of the 25 minute movie.
    
    bc
1124.5PEAKS::OAKEYSave the Bill of Rights-Defend the IIWed Feb 10 1993 22:567
Re: <<< Note 1124.3 by MILPND::CANSLER >>>

>>W.D. Richter speaker ( director of Buckeroo Banzi)

Find out what the watermelon was for...  :-)

                            Roak
1124.6MILPND::CANSLERFri Feb 12 1993 08:524
    
    will do ?????//////
    
    
1124.7MILPND::CANSLERTue Feb 16 1993 09:519
    
    Watermelon was being tested for pressure they wanted to drop
    watermelons from airplanes to help feed third world countries.
    
    real reason was to piss off the owner of the film company, for
    other problems he was causing, not in orginal script, none of
    the lines that were spoken in that lab were scripted.
    
    bc
1124.8Marathon review from the netVERGA::KLAESLife, the Universe, and EverythingFri Feb 19 1993 15:43131
Article: 208
From: [email protected] (Barry Perlman)
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews
Subject: SF-18 review
Date: 19 Feb 93 15:27:20 GMT
Sender: [email protected] (USENET News System)
Organization: Open Software Foundation
 
	SF-18
 
	The eighteenth annual 24-hour science fiction movie marathon.  From
noon Sunday to noon Monday, the Coolidge Corner Theater (Brookline,
Massachusetts) was packed solid with sci-fi fans and assorted weirdos for an
audience participation event the likes of which are not to be found
elsewhere.
 
	The first event of the day (after a Duck Dodgers cartoon) was the
1950 television premiere of Space Patrol, complete with the ads.  The main
sponsor was Rice Chex and Wheat Chex breakfast cereal, and the audience
spontaneously split into two camps, chanting "Rice Chex"/"Wheat Chex" in
strict alternation.  This continued for the remainder of the marathon,
during intermissions and whenever anyone on screen ate any breakfast.
 
	Space Patrol was followed by the 1953 original "Invaders From Mars",
after which came a great treat.  A 1924 Soviet silent called "Aelita:Queen
of the Martians" aka "Aelita:Revolt of the Robots" with live musical
accompaniment by two very competent musicians who scored separate themes for
each major character and location.  The artistic style was 1924 avant-garde
cubist and fabulous to watch.  The plot was a Socialist twist on a story by
Tolstoy.  After the proletarian revolution of the robot-people on Mars, this
big beefy blacksmith is shown hammering some molten iron on an anvil.  It
takes the shape of a sickle.  When he is done he places the hammer on the
anvil along with the sickle to make the Communist logo.  The audience went
ape!  It was still back in 1924, before Stalin's reign of terror, before
cynicism, when the film-makers still believed.  It was great.
 
	Then we had "The Adventures of Buckaroo Bonzai Across the Eigth
Dimension", a strange movie if there ever was one.  I can't even begin to
describe it.  Either you've seen it you haven't.  If you haven't, it's
available on video.  After repeated watching the plot becomes apparent.  I
can't explain.  Starring Peter Weller (Robocop), John Lithgow, Ellen Barkin,
Jeff Goldblum, and Christopher Lloyd (the Professor in "Back to the
Future").  Extremely funny.  After the movie, the director came and talked
with us, answering questions for about 45 minutes.
 
	Then we had a brand-new print of the newly-restored "20,000 Leagues
Under the Sea", a multi-Academy-Award winner.  James Mason plays Captian
Nemo and Kirk Douglas takes his shirt off a lot.  Peter Lorre has a big
role.
 
	"Breakfast of Aliens" followed, a pre-release screening of a movie I
do not recommend to anyone.  The premise is that an alien lands on the roof
of a building and falls through the roof into the cereal bowl ("Rice
Chex"/"Wheat Chex") of a total loser, who eats the alien (small alien) and
becomes a stand-up comic.  Good premise, lousy movie.  Plenty of loud booing
at the closing credits.
 
	At 11:30 pm we had the annual costume contest, this year for "Queen
of Outer Space."  The winner had these Madonna-like conical breast-weapons,
and won big cheers with a campaign promise to kill the makers of "Breakfast
of Aliens."
 
	Then "Beneath the Planet of the Apes", with the classic line "Glory
be to the bomb and the holy fallout."  James Franciscus and Charleton Heston
run around in loincloths.
 
	"Mant" followed.  Half-man, half ant, "Mant" is the movie-within-
the-movie of "Matinee."  "Matinee", starring John Goodman, is about a guy
who makes early 1960's B-movies, and "Mant" is the movie he's making.  The
producers of "Matinee" allowed us to see "Mant" as a movie on its own.
Shown nowhere else.  I thought it was great.
 
	Finally to the cheesecake, at 2am we saw "Galaxina", a not-very-
good spoof of "Alien" and "Dark Star", but starring Playboy's 1980 Playmate
of the Year Dorothy Stratten in skin-tight spandex.  (Tragically, she was
murdered by an insane ex-boyfriend after this movie was made.)
 
	A little more "Space Patrol", then on to "Cat Women of the Moon"
(1953) starring Sonny Tufts (descendant of Charles Tufts, the founder of
Tufts University).  Sonny Tufts was pure beefcake.  In 1944 he was promoted
by Paramount as the studio's "Reigning Pin-Up King", and was selected by a
poll of film distributors as the Hollywood actor with the greatest potential
for superstardom.  You probably never heard of him because he couldn't act,
and he ended up in a lot of B-movies aimed at teenage audiences.  "Cat
Women" is in _The Book of Golden Turkeys_ as the worst Sonny Tufts movie
ever made.  He doesn't even take his shirt off, so what good is he?  The
control room of the spaceship was borrowed from a submarine movie and the
city of the Cat Women was from an old movie about Marco Polo.  On the other
hand the Cat Women had huge breasts and wore skin-tight black body suits,
with plenty of profile shots.
 
	"Cat Women" was followed by a sort-of new-age "Alien" called "Star
Crystal" (1986).  When it was over the audience chanted in unison "That
Sucked!  That Sucked!"  It did.
 
	But all was forgiven when we got "Starcrash", a spaghetti space
opera with rockets, ray guns, Gucci space suits, and a robot with a heavy
Texan accent.  And cleavage.  It starred Caroline Munro, a real treat to
anyone attracted to women.  Supermodel-turned-actress, she can't do much in
the way of acting but it doesn't matter.  They dressed her up in a variety
of leather bikinis with high boots, spandex bodysuits, and other
Italian-design outfits, occasionally with a bright red triangle (point down)
strategically placed, just in case anyone didn't understand the costume's
message.  If you don't love this movie, you're not a heterosexual male.  The
spaceships weren't bad either.  Produced by B-movie king Roger Corman.
 
	The marathon concluded with a pre-release screening of "Fortress",
which should be out in a month or two.  Since it was a pre-release showing,
we saw the director's cut.  (The producer's cut is what will be showing up
in the theaters.)  It's about a privately operated super-high-tech prison in
the next century.  Intense.  Very well made and convincing.  A good movie, I
recommend it with the caveat that some parts take a strong stomach.  The
arch-villian is *really* bad.
 
	There were assorted cartoons and shorts, the traditional
paper-airplane contest, and plenty of prizes.  I won a beautiful framed
hologram of the Enterprise (firing phasers) from the MIT museum.
	
	After staying awake all day Monday, I finally went to sleep around
9, and had weird dreams until morning.
 
	Barry
 
=====================================================================
Barry Perlman                                     11 Cambridge Center
email: [email protected]                              Cambridge, MA 02142
Open Software Foundation                          Tel: 617-621-8828
Distributed Management Environment (DME)          Fax: 617-621-0584
 
  "Life itself punishes us for our mistakes." - M.S. Gorbachev.