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We’re blowing right past Halloween and Halloween II, for the real crown jewel - Halloween III: Season of the Witch. This movie doesn’t have Michael Myers, but never fear, it has Stonehenge, robots, microchips, witches, and snakes. We talk factory mismanagement, bizarre character names, and how we don’t watch horror movies for the romance. Rate and review or we’ll turn you into a goo-filled robot. Stats/info: 1982, directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, starring Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkin, Dan O'Herlihy (Intro music from https://www.free-stock-music.com)
Todos ustedes, niños con suerte, pónganse sus máscaras de Silver Shamrock y reúnanse para escuchar este episodio de Cinema Totopo. Llegó la hora de hablar Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982), la cinta dirigida por Tommy Lee Wallace.
In this episode we discuss the 1982 classic, Halloween III: Season Of The Witch. This film was written and directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, and stars Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkin and Dan O'Herlihy. Also, be sure to get your requests in for "Listener's Choice Months" by November 15th! One entry per person please. You can submit your requests in the "Contact Us" section of wearehorrifiedpodcast.com or email your request to horrifiedpodcast@gmail.com! If you enjoy the show, give us a subscribe/rating/review and of course, tell your friends! Visit us at wearehorrifiedpodcast.com
Sean Bean (or someone doing a terrible impression) drops in on Pete & Fran for a baking lesson. After this disaster they watch 1984's 'The Last StarFighter' before speaking to Abraham Lincoln about the use of hot air balloons. SHOW NOTES Seann Bean (born 17 April 1959), is an English actor. Bean made his professional debut in a theatre production of Romeo and Juliet in 1983. He first found mainstream success for his portrayal of Richard Sharpe in the ITV series Sharpe. Further roles followed, including Patriot Games (1992), GoldenEye (1995), Ronin (1998), The Lord of the Rings trilogy (2001–2003), Equilibrium (2002), National Treasure (2004), Odysseus in Troy (2004), The Island (2005), Jupiter Ascending (2015) and The Martian (2015). The Last Starfighter is a 1984 American space opera film directed by Nick Castle. The film tells the story of Alex Rogan (Lance Guest), an average teenager recruited by an alien defense force to fight in an interstellar war. It also features Robert Preston, Dan O'Herlihy, Catherine Mary Stewart, Norman Snow, and Kay E. Kuter. Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865) was an American statesman and lawyer who served as the 16th president of the United States from March 1861 until his assassination in April 1865
This episode was recorded in 2016 and may include references to content that no longer applies. The audio quality is also not up to our current standards.In this episode of the horror review/discussion show 'Screams After Midnight,' we discuss oddball sequel Halloween 3.The film is Directed by Tommy Lee Wallace and stars Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkin & Dan O'Herlihy.patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mildfuzztv twitter: https://twitter.com/Mild_Fuzz facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mildfuzznetwork THE CRYPT: https://mildfuzztv.weebly.com/the-crypt.html
Wanna guess what we talk about in this episode Yeah me neither I think they talk about Halloween 3 though Im gonna get fired soonFollow us on TwitterGen GENHARTALLCAPSJub yaboijusby
The future of law enforcement has arrived to Invasion of the Remake. Straight from Old Detroit the iconic Peter Weller version of the Robocop (1987) spawned a franchise of movie sequels, toys, comics, cartoons, a television series, and a t.v. mini-series. Paul Verhoeven directs the sci-fi, action classic costarring Nancy Allen, Dan O'Herlihy, Ronny Cox, Kurtwood Smith, Miguel Ferrer and Ray Wise. Robocop is an '80's icon, but a more modern take on Robocop (2014) starring Joel Kinnaman, Gary Oldman, Michael Keaton, Abbie Cornish, Jackie Earle Haley, Jay Baruchel, and Samuel Jackson failed to connect with audiences despite a strong script and stellar cast. Join us as we discuss what went right and what went wrong as these two cybernetic warriors go head to head in this week's episode. Thank you for your cooperation. Support independent podcasts like ours by telling your friends and family how to find us at places like Apple Podcasts, iTunes, Google Play Music, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Tune In Radio, Audioboom, BluBrry, Libsyn, YouTube, Spreaker and all the best podcast providers. Spread the love! Like, share and subscribe! You can also help out the show with a positive review and a 5-star rating over on iTunes. We want to hear from you and your opinions will help shape the future of the show. Your ratings and reviews also help others find the show. Their "earballs" will thank you. Follow us on Twitter: @InvasionRemake Like and share us on Facebook & Instagram: Invasion of the Remake Email us your questions, suggestions, corrections, challenges and comments: invasionoftheremake@gmail.com
its our favourite time of year once again! We've reached that nasty 69 number! We have had more requests to cover Tommy Lee Wallace's Halloween 3 than any other film since we began Horror 101 so there was absolutely no doubt in our minds that we wouldn't be covering Season of the Witch for this part of our threequel year. We'll discuss how it affected the Halloween series and why the producers took a chance on moving in another direction. Where was Michael Myers? Could Halloween III have been the start to a whole line of Halloween themed horror movies? With excellent music by John Carpenter and Alan Howarth no other podcast makes it sound like you're watching the movie with us like this show. Its the Horror 101 Halloween Special! We hope you enjoy it! Show highlights: 01:00 Prelude to Terror 04:00 Haven't talked about Halloween 3 since Episode 1 06:30 No Michael Myers? WTF!? 09:10 It was the same family that made 1 and 2... 10:00 They're going to kill us... 14:00 Doctor Challis... 15:00 It is a slow burn... 16:30 Misfire...(The torment of Nood) 21:00 Traditional Halloween and Cochran... 24:00 Test Room A... 27:45 Dan O'Herlihy as the Druid 30:25 Unsatisfied with villain's demise... 32:00 "Ellie, you alright?" 33:55 "Stop it...stop it........STOP IT!!!" 35:05 Scoring the film... 38:15 Discussing the next Halloween film. coming next year. 39:50 Conclusion and Happy Halloween!
Comer and Radulich put Halloween 3 - Season of the Witch, On Trial! Halloween III: Season of the Witch is a 1982 American science fiction horror film and the third installment in the Halloween film series. It is the first film to be written and directed by Tommy Lee Wallace. John Carpenter and Debra Hill, the creators of Halloween, returned as producers. Starring Tom Atkins as Dr. Dan Challis, Stacey Nelkin as Ellie Grimbridge, and Dan O'Herlihy as Conal Cochran, the story focuses on an investigation by Challis and Grimbridge into the activities of Cochran, the mysterious owner of the Silver Shamrock Novelties company, in the week approaching Halloween night. Halloween III is the only entry in the series that does not feature the series antagonist Michael Myers, nor does it include story elements from either Halloween (1978) or Halloween II (1981). In fact, it treats the first film and, apparently, its sequel as fictional films, as one of the characters watches a trailer for the original during the film; additionally, the film's tagline is a reference to the tagline from the original as well. It also departs from the slasher genre which the first two installments were part of, instead featuring a "witchcraft" theme with science fiction aspects and parallels to old Celtic fairy tales. Carpenter and Hill believed that the Halloween series had the potential to branch into an anthology series of horror films that centered around the night of Halloween, with each film containing its own characters, setting, and storyline. Director Wallace stated that there were many ideas for Halloween-themed films, some of which could have potentially created any number of their own sequels, and that Season of the Witch was meant to be the first of the anthology series.
The Last Starfighter was the first film to utilize all computer graphics by way of Crays Servers. Some scenes look pretty good but most look downright terrible. The film itself isn't entirely bad but we remembered liking it more as kids.
The Six Shooter was a weekly oldtime radio program in the United States. It was created by Frank Burt, who also wrote many of the episodes, and lasted only one season of 39 episodes on NBC (Sept. 20, 1953 through June 24, 1954). James Stewart starred as Britt Ponset, a drifting cowboy in the final years of thewild west. Episodes ranged from straight western drama to whimsical comedy. A trademark of the show was Stewart's use of whispered narration during tense scenes that created a heightened sense of drama and relief when the situation was resolved. Some of the more prominent actors to perform on the program included Parley Baer, Virginia Gregg, Harry Bartell, Howard McNear, Jeanette Nolan, Dan O'Herlihy, Alan Reed, Marvin Miller and William Conrad (often credited as "Julius Krelboyne" because he was also the star of CBS' Gunsmoke at the time). Some did multiple episodes playing different characters.
Enjoy this hour long episode from Suspense called - House By The River. Based on the book by A.B. Herbert. Starring John Mcintire and Dan O'Herlihy
It was an arms race at the 1964 box office between Fail Safe and the similarly themed Dr. Strangelove. Stanley Kubrick pressured Columbia Pictures, the studio that owned both films, to release his film first. As a result, Fail Safe, while critically lauded, suffered under the indifference of a paying audience who thought they had already seen the definitive Cold War movie with Strangelove. Little did they know how very different the two films were. The sweaty, sobering, scary Fail Safe stars Henry Fonda, Walter Matthau, Dan O'Herlihy, Frank Overton and Larry Hagman. Dan and Vicky gush over the film, their third Sidney Lumet feature. They discuss the film's relevance in it's own time and how it plays just as relevant in a Trump USA. As always, they catch us up on their recently watched. Movies include John Wick 2, Hell and High Water, Florence Foster Jenkins, Krampus, 1980's semi-slasher Windows and the 1969 Russ Meyer classic Beyond the Valley of the Dolls. There's lots of comedy too from the likes of Neal Brennan, Bill Burr, Jim Gaffigan and Jen Kirkman. With some great sixties music and a classic film on hand, Hot Date 46 is the BOMB. Please leave us some feedback.
Original Air Date: January 17th, 2012 On this very sweaty summer rerun, the guys try to cool off by reminiscing about one of the all-time fan favorites, the show's 41st episode, Halloween III: Season of the Witch! How hilarious is this alcoholic doctor? Isn't it pretty boss that this California warlock wants to kill all the kids in America? And YIKES! with that sex scene! PLUS: The birth of Muldoon's Public House. Halloween III: Season of the Witch stars Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkin, and Dan O'Herlihy; directed by Tommy Lee Wallace.
Halloween III may have been directed by Tommy Lee Wallace but has Carpenter's stamp literally everywhere. Shunned when it was released, we give it the proper accolades and review it deserves.
The NBC University Theater - dramatic anthology Offered novels, with programs for college credit. Broadcast History : July 30th, 1948 - February 14th, 1951 NBC. Mostly 60 minutes. Mostly aired on Sundays, with occasional weeknight airings. Announcer : Don Stanley Music : Albert Harris, Henry Russell Director : Andrew C. Love Writers : Claris A. Ross, Ernest Kinoy, George Lefferts, Jack C. Wilson Sound Effects : Bob Holmes, Rod Sutton.THIS EPISODE:February 12, 1950. NBC network. "The Light That Failed". Sustaining. A painter, interested only in money, loses his sight after his masterpiece has been defaced. The closing credits have been deleted. Alec Harford, Crauford Kent, Dan O'Herlihy, Earl Keen, Eileen Erskine, Eric Snowden, George Lefferts (writer), Henry Outland (Outland?--intermission commentator), John Ramsay Hill, Marlene Ames, Queenie Leonard, Rudyard Kipling (author), Tom Dylan, Tudor Owen. 56:28.
The General Electric Theater featured a mix of romance, comedy, adventure, tragedy, fantasy and variety music. Occupying the Sunday evening spot on CBS following the Toast of the Town/Ed Sullivan Show from 1 February 1953 to 27 May 1962, the General Electric Theater presented top Hollywood and Broadway stars in dramatic roles calculated to deliver company voice advertising to the largest possible audience.THIS EPISODE:September 24, 1953. CBS network. "The Enchanted Cottage". Sponsored by: General Electric. Not auditioned. A plain woman and a criplled man fall in love and see a magic transformation in each other. The story was previously used on, "The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre" on November 26, 1939. Joan Fontaine, William Johnstone, Tom Tully, Gloria Gordon, Lurene Tuttle, Dan O'Herlihy, Arthur Wing Pinero (author), Jaime del Valle (director, transcriber), Ken Carpenter (announcer, host), Walter Newman (adaptor), Hett Manheim (editorial supervisor), Wilbur Hatch (music). 29:43.
First show: Mar 3, 1980 Original shows: 103 Last show: Dec 10, 1980 Number of programs aired including new and repeats: 210 Hosts: Lorne Greene, Andy Griffith, Vincent Price, Cicely Tyson, Leonard Nimoy In December 1979 the Mutual Broadcasting System acquired the Sears Radio Theater renaming it, the MUTUAL Radio Theater. It retained the same format as before with the same theme for different nights of the week. Lorne Greene remained host for Monday's Western night, Andy Griffith handled Tuesday's Comedy, Vincent Price still was host for Mystery on Wednesdays, Cicely Tyson did Love on Thurs- day, while Leonard Nimoy was now the Friday night Adventure host. As before the series aired week nights, Monday through Friday. The Mutual Radio Theater debuted Mar 3, 1980 and was to run for 13 weeks on almost 300 stations. The shows were then to be repeated over the summer and fall. It proved to be fairly successful and another 8 weeks of original programs were added; this was followed by another 8 weeks of repeats. The series was broadcast in stereo, making it the only commercial radio network drama program in the nation to use this technology at the time. Great writers were employed for this series including Arch Oboler and Norman Corwin. Good choices were made when it came to cast members. Old familiar voices and names included Janet Waldo, John Dehner, Vic Perrin, Mary Jane Croft, Hans Conried, Marvin Miller, Parley Baer, Elliot Lewis, Jeff Corey, Virginia Gregg, Lesley Woods, Robert Rockwell and Lurene Tuttle. Then from movies and TV - Eve Arden, Keith Andes, Harriet Nelson, Aan Young, Tom Bosley and Marian Ross, Lloyd Bochner, Rick Jason, Frank Campanella, Toni Tennille, Arthur Hill, Dan O'Herlihy, Jesse White and Frank Nelson. A curious note: Many collectors and vendors list a total of 104 broadcasts. Apparently what was done by them was to count a repeat of "The Ship", first broadcast on March 7, 1980 as another show when it was aired again during the first 13 week cycle (May 23, 1980). Please note - - The previous edition of this log indicated some difficulty in establishing show titles for the weeks begining July 7, 1980 and July 14, 1980. The mystery has been solved with the able assistance of Mr. Bryan Wright. Thank you, Bryan! Mr. Rick Woodward and Mr. Shawn A. Wells offered additional audio copies which were gratefully accepted. Thank you, gentlemen!