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Post by Cei-U! on Dec 13, 2016 8:43:11 GMT -5
Let the madness commence! Of course I know today’s pick is terrible. How could I not? It’s David freakin’ Hasslehoff in an eyepatch, for crying out loud! All the same, I have an inexplicable fondness for #12. Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD [/center] This 1998 made-for-TV movie (presumably a pilot for an ongoing series) makes a sincere effort to translate the Jim Steranko Strange Tales Fury to life and it succeeds on several levels. Acting is not one of them. The Hoff is not convincing as the aging super-spy and Lissa Rinni’s Val has all the depth of a Barbie doll, but both are positively Shakespearian compared to Sandra Hess’ Viper, who chews the scenery with a wild abandon that makes me howl with laughter every time. Still, any SHIELD movie that gives us Tim Dugan (minus the derby, handlebar mustache, and silly nickname), Gabe Jones, Alexander Pierce, Baron Strucker, Arnim Zola, HYDRA, and a surprisingly cool helicarrier given a TV budget can’t be all bad, right? (crickets) Okay, it can. I don’t care. NFAoS has fallen a place or two from its spot on my 2007 list but it remains one of my guiltiest pleasures, one I feel compelled to watch whenever it pops up on TV Cei-U! I summon Sam Jackson... please!!
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Post by brutalis on Dec 13, 2016 9:42:25 GMT -5
My pick is from 1998. The Storm Riders adapting a Chinese comic book series. It is total over the top and an overly involved story attempting to convey in one movie what the comic did over years. Filled with spectacular martial arts fighting and special effects looking exactly like a comic book movie should. And how do you go wrong with Sonny Chiba as the big bad Lord conqueror?!?
The plot is about two children, Whispering Wind and Striding Cloud, who are trained to become powerful warriors/weapons under the evil Lord Conqueror's (Chiba) tutelage. The two children are really children of former opponents's of Lord Conqueror who find the truth of their parentage and rebel.
This is a favorite i watch at least once a year. It is the Chinese version of an American Summer Action Movie and it is fabulous!!! Do yourself a favor and check it out if you haven't seen it...
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Post by MWGallaher on Dec 13, 2016 10:22:33 GMT -5
#12 Swamp Thing (1990, Syndicated TV series)OK, part of it is just the strange attraction I have for Carrell Myers, who played Tressa Kipp in the first two seasons, but Swamp Thing's always been a favorite comics character, and I was pleased that he inspired two movies and three seasons of a tv show. The series had a darker, more serious tone than the films, but was still light enough for network tv. The writers got a surprising amount of mileage out of the premise and limitations of budget, locale, and talent, with plenty of monsters of the week, and while it wasn't Alan Moore's Swamp Thing, it did borrow several elements from Moore's version, such as the Sunderland Corporation. Mark Lindsey Chapman's handsome Anton Arcane was a serious departure from the comics, and was practically the real star of the series, which did get a little tiresome. And while Dick Durock's Swamp Thing costume wasn't exactly a masterpiece, I found myself with a fondness for that rubber suit, which was itself an improvement over Durock's costume in the films. While I can't picture myself binge-watching, I don't think I've ever turned it off on the occasions that I happened upon it being broadcast, and it had a regular date with my VCR back in the 90's!
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 13, 2016 11:14:09 GMT -5
Starting at #12, I give you 2011's Le chat du rabbin
Adapting books 1, 2 and 5 of Joann Sfar's brilliant series, it is a charming movie. There was no way any film could be as good as the comic, but it manages to be charming in its own right and its title sequence is a lovely piece of animation. Partly surrealistic, deeply humanist, this movie made me smile almost continuously. The artwork of the series could not have been translated straight to the screen, but the aesthetics of Sfar's pages is at least referred to.
The title character is the nameless cat of an Algerian rabbi, sometimes in the early years of the 20 century. After eating a parrot (a misdeed he denies, mouthful of feathers notwithstanding!) the cat gains the ability to talk. Since he next wants a Bar mitzvah, the cat and his master get in a long argument on whether cats can become Jewish, a discussion that ends up involving several other rabbis and touches on the mysterious ways of the Eternal.
Complicating matters, a crate of sacred texts arrives from revolutionary Russia...a crate that also contains a Russian escapee from a Cossack pogrom! Since the young fellow (an artist) doesn't speak French nor Arabic, the cat has to act as a translator... He apparently understands Russian.
The young artist dreams of traveling to Ethiopia, where Russian documents claim live Dark-skinned Jews descended from King David and the Queen of Sheba. He wants to see the Ethiopian Jerusalem, where people live in peace and shielded from racism and violence. The rabbi joins him in his continent-crossing trek, along with the rabbi's dear friend, Sheik Muhammad Sfar. And in this period of tense religious relations, what a joy it is to see these two guys serenely converse and be united, rather than divided, by their faith in different prophets).
An episode involving a very strict imam brings a discordant note, I think, but is perhaps relevant to our times because of the contrast with Sheik Muhammad.
Along the way, the Russian artist falls in love with an Ethiopian girl; their quest for their fabulous Jerusalem fills the rest of the movie.
It's the kind of film that gives one faith in mankind. And that confirms our beliefs about cats!
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Post by Prince Hal on Dec 13, 2016 12:00:03 GMT -5
December 13 # 12 Hergé's Adventures of Tintin (1958-64)I don’t have an enormous love of the Tintin books; in fact, I never saw one till I was an adult and picked up a few at a library sale. However, the cartoons make my list of favorites, because, like all of the others on my list, I have an emotional connection to them. I discovered them one Saturday morning, early, when I would get up at 6:30 or 7 so that I could watch TV by myself in relative peace and quiet. Before the regular slate of network shows came on, the local stations ran lots of great stuff, like Sunrise Semester, Modern Farmer, Davey and Goliath, Courageous Cat and The Little Rascals. I’m pretty sure that Tintin ran on WABC-TV, Channel 7. (Ish and Rob, do you remember?) Anyway, I loved them because they were so much more “grown-up” than other cartoons. Oh, I knew they were still meant to be humorous, but the humor just leavened the adventure; it didn’t overwhelm it. The characters were all well drawn, in both senses of the word, and the international locales added yet another unusual extra to the stories. They reminded me more of movies than of cartoons not just in the way they looked, but because they didn’t talk down to you. Of course, Tintin was a perfect protagonist for kids: no adults, no school, and no indication that he was ever at a loss for words or courage. Plus, he had adventures by the dozen. I might have become a fan of Tintin comics, had I ever seen them, but alas, that was not to be. Still, I have fond memories of Red Rackham, Professor Calculus, Thompson and Thompson, Captain Haddock and, of course, Snowy to remind me of those quiet Saturday mornings when I had the television all to myself for a little while.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 13, 2016 12:05:25 GMT -5
The Addams Family (1991)
I'm a huge fan of Charles Addams' panels, particularly those about the mysterious and ooky family. I didn't hold out huge hope for the film, though the casting was largely spot-on. But I was very pleasantly surprised. Raul Julia and Angelica Huston are fabulous as Gomez and Morticia. There are plenty of easter eggs to spot from both the panels and the earlier television show. It really is just a terribly fun movie and shows the the skewed humans can be amongst the most human of us all.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 13, 2016 12:12:44 GMT -5
December 13 # 12 Hergé's Adventures of Tintin (1958-64) That series was on my shortlist. I find it far superior to the more recent 1991, despite its animation being clunkier. I'm glad someone mentioned it here!
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Post by coke & comics on Dec 13, 2016 13:07:32 GMT -5
On the first day of Christmas, Ben Edlund gave to me... 12. The Tick (1994-1997) Duh-dwee a duh duh dwee dou. Duh-dwee... Okay, I'll admit I don't know the words. In some sense, I don't like this series. Because Ben Edlund left the comics to make it and never returned, having found a happy home writing for television and film. And sure he's worked on plenty of things I like. Firefly, Titan AE... But I'd trade it all to read Tick #13. Because #12 was a cliffhanger. And because those first 12 issues of Tick are the best superhero parody comics I have read without contender. And also the funniest comics I have ever read. And yes, the show captures that humor. It's actually pretty sophisticated humor for a kid's show. Not sure I really appreciated Bipolar Bear as a child, but I thought it was funny that a superhero didn't want to get out of bed. Most of the series seems to be available on Youtube (at least until a DMCA notice comes in) www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_Y3COSsN1HbesasVroI1Ldc_nPRx8cnfI've been watching scatted episodes (didn't quite make it through the whole series last night as planned). Remember his sidekick, the little wooden boy. That episode ended with one of his summarizing monologues: Oh, and when Tick got a mustache. That episode had Jim Rage, Agent of SHAVE. And Taft! Darn right. Spoon! Next entry tomorrow. I'll leave you in the dark about it until then. No joke.
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Post by Prince Hal on Dec 13, 2016 13:28:29 GMT -5
December 13 # 12 Hergé's Adventures of Tintin (1958-64) That series was on my shortlist. I find it far superior to the more recent 1991, despite its animation being clunkier. I'm glad someone mentioned it here! Haven't seen it in a million years, and I'm sure it was clunky. Didn't see the recent movie or that early 90s version. To me, the old series looked refreshingly different from most of what was new at the time (H-B Yogi Bear, etc.) and the stories were so good that the quality of the animation didn't matter. Wait a few days if you want to see some really clunky animation.
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Post by codystarbuck on Dec 13, 2016 13:36:37 GMT -5
Let the madness commence! Of course I know today’s pick is terrible. How could I not? It’s David freakin’ Hasslehoff in an eyepatch, for crying out loud! All the same, I have an inexplicable fondness for #12. Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD This 1998 made-for-TV movie (presumably a pilot for an ongoing series) makes a sincere effort to translate the Jim Steranko Strange Tales Fury to life and it succeeds on several levels. Acting is not one of them. The Hoff is not convincing as the aging super-spy and Lissa Rinni’s Val has all the depth of a Barbie doll, but both are positively Shakespearian compared to Sandra Hess’ Viper, who chews the scenery with a wild abandon that makes me howl with laughter every time. Still, any SHIELD movie that gives us Tim Dugan (minus the derby, handlebar mustache, and silly nickname), Gabe Jones, Alexander Pierce, Baron Strucker, Arnim Zola, HYDRA, and a surprisingly cool helicarrier given a TV budget can’t be all bad, right? (crickets) Okay, it can. I don’t care. NFAoS has fallen a place or two from its spot on my 2007 list but it remains one of my guiltiest pleasures, one I feel compelled to watch whenever it pops up on TV Cei-U! I summon Sam Jackson... please!! Always enjoyed this, in a Roger Corman-cheesy kind of way. I did a review on IMDB, called Nick Slightly-Annoyed, Agent of CHEESE. The Helicarrier is awesome, though I had to wonder why it needed the watertight doors (probably ventured down to look at an old ship and replicated that on the set)? Air filling the space isn't a problem, compared to water.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on Dec 13, 2016 13:53:49 GMT -5
#12: Barbarella (1968) My first pick for the 2016 Classic Comics Christmas is Roger Vadim's psychedelic and supremely far out take on Jean-Claude Forest's Barbarella. Though I do like reading the Barbarella comics, the movie adaptation is definitely my preferred way to enjoy this material. For one thing, the movie has the extremely "va-va-voom!" Jane Fonder in it, as the eponymous scantily-clad astronaut herself, but the film also takes the – already pretty strange – comic and spikes it with a healthy dose of LSD. The result is a trashy, groovy, psychedelic masterpiece which, even though it takes some fairly big liberties with the source material, gives Forest's sexually liberated heroine and slightly absurd sci-fi setting a mind-altering, technicolor veneer, while charging it with the playful eroticism of the late '60s sexual revolution. Barbarella is by no means a great film. This is a movie that is poorly acted, clumsily directed and hamstrung by its minuscule budget. But in spite of that, the film is a lot of silly, kitschy fun, while somehow also managing to be downright creepy on occasion. From that Zero-G striptease during the opening credits, to the sight of Barbarella writhing with pleasure inside the Excessive Machine, this is a film that is equal parts sci-fi, parody, psychsploitation and soft porn – and that's just the way I like it!
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Post by codystarbuck on Dec 13, 2016 14:00:35 GMT -5
I have too many favorites, so this isn't necessarily a reflection of my ranking of them, as picking 12 and then ordering them. Today's entry is Barbarella. It's pure 60s camp, when that was a good thing, and is a ton of fun. What's even more surprising is that it is pretty faithful to Jean-Claude Forest's original stories. They were reprinted in English, by Grove Press, around the time of the movie and the tone is there, the plot is there, and the characterization is spot on. Dino De Laurentiss, like many Italian filmmakers, was a fan of comics. He optioned many for films, producing Barbarella, Baba Yaga (based on Guido Crepax's Valentina), Diabolik, Flash Gordon, Conan (inspired more by Marvel than Howard), and Red Sonja (same). Jane Fonda is great in this as the slightly naive intergalactic agent and sexpot. It's both liberated and ridiculously chauvinistic, at the same time. Mostly, it's just plain fun. It breezes along quite well, has a kicking jazzy/pop soundtrack, and everyone seems to be having fun. Marcel Marceau has a speaking role! There are tons of 60s international stars, like Ugo Tognazzi (La Cage Aux Folles) and John Phillip Law (who made his name in Italian cinema), and David Hemmings (Camelot and Airwolf, of all things). Hemmings is hilarious, in a scene where he has enlightened sex with Barbarella (involving taking a pill then pressing palms together, rather than the more "barbaric" method), as his hair curls up. See Barbarella vs Death by Orgasm! See the evil kids with the killer dolls! See the sexy Black Queen! See the weird soldiers explode! See the blind Angel, Pygar! See a whole lot of Jane Fonda, and I don't mean screentime! This is Jane, before the politics overshadowed her talent, when she showed off her flair for comedy, rather than focusing so much on drama. This is a film that doesn't take itself seriously, yet takes making an entertaining film seriously. It's also a great entry into what many call "Continental Cinema," films from Europe that were big on style, often playful and campy; but always fun and exciting. It's also a film that shows that if you respect the source material, it will translate to the screen. In the interest of fairness, it does kind of stall out, before getting to the climactic battle, and some of the acting is rather stiff (Anita Pallenberg and John Phillip Law, especially). You do need to have a tolerance for 60s decadence and irreverent attitude, and a lot of the plot revolves around contriving a situation that gets Barbarella into bed. However, like the original, it is a satire of such puritanical thinking and is filled with the more positive atmosphere of the Swinging Sixties.
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Post by codystarbuck on Dec 13, 2016 14:02:11 GMT -5
#12: Barbarella (1968) My first pick for the 2016 Classic Comics Christmas is Roger Vadim's psychedelic and supremely far out take on Jean-Claude Forest's Barbarella. Though I do like reading the Barbarella comics, the movie adaptation is definitely my preferred way to enjoy this material. For one thing, the movie has the extremely "va-va-voom!" Jane Fonder in it, as the eponymous scantily-clad astronaut herself. But the film also takes the – already pretty strange – comic and spikes it with a healthy dose of LSD. The result is a trashy, groovy, psychedelic masterpiece which, even though it takes some fairly big liberties with the source material, gives Forest's sexually liberated heroine and slightly absurd sci-fi setting a mind-altering, technicolor veneer, while charging it with the playful eroticism of the late '60s sexual revolution. Barbarella is by no means a great film. This is a movie that is poorly acted, clumsily directed and hamstrung by its minuscule budget. But in spite of that, the film is at turns silly, kitschy, funny, sexy, poetic and even downright creepy on occasion. From that Zero-G striptease during the opening credits, to the sight of Barbarella writhing with pleasure inside the Excessive Machine, this is a film that is equal parts sci-fi, parody, psychsplotation and soft porn – and that's just the way I like it! Great minds and all that!
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,197
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Post by Confessor on Dec 13, 2016 14:16:42 GMT -5
I'm sure I had absolutely no idea that The Addams Family started out as a single panel comic strip. I always thought that it started out as a TV series in the '60s. This is why I love these Classic Comics Christmas events....you learn so much from other people's posts. December 13 # 12 Hergé's Adventures of Tintin (1958-64) That series was on my shortlist. I find it far superior to the more recent 1991, despite its animation being clunkier. I'm glad someone mentioned it here! Yeah, this was on my shortlist too. Great to see you picking it, Hal. Today's entry is Barbarella. Heh! Snap! Great minds, and all that...
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,197
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Post by Confessor on Dec 13, 2016 14:17:43 GMT -5
Great minds, and all that... Great minds and all that! LOL...this is just getting ridiculous now.
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