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Jim discusses one of his favorite Sci-Fi films growing up - "This Island Earth," Starrinf Rex Reason, Faith Domergue. Jeff Morrow, Lance Fuller, Russell Johnson, Douglas Spencer and directed by Joseph M. Newman and Jack Arnold. Aliens from the planet Metaluna grab a group of Earth scientists to help them solve a problem with generating power using nuclear energy. Find out more about this legendary movie on MONSTER ATTACK!, The Podcast Dedicated To Old Monster Movies.
Jim discusses one of his favorite Sci-Fi films growing up – “This Island Earth,” Starrinf Rex Reason, Faith Domergue. Jeff Morrow, Lance Fuller, Russell Johnson, Douglas Spencer and directed by Joseph M. Newman and Jack Arnold. Aliens from the planet Metaluna grab a group of Earth scientists to help them solve a problem with generating […] The post This Island Earth | Episode 458 appeared first on The ESO Network.
On the latest ChinStroker VS Punter Podcast we smash out a wide variety of pop culture topics, including: Episode Timings: 00:00 - Intro and Indiana Jones and the Great Circle 17:35 - World 1-1: The Pioneers 23:05 - HFY - Sci-Fi chat 27:33 - AI chat 44:38 - Music By John Williams 50:30 - Doc of Chucky 01:02:37 - Wuthering Heights 01:03:17 - Return of Godzilla (1984) 01:03:15 - This Island Earth 01:06:09 - Evil Dead (2013) 01:06:50 - Star Trek First Contact Subscribe (and review us) at Apple Podcasts Check out Mike's other show The Rewatch Project Check out Mike's new video series covering 80's action TV shows Rolling Thunder Feedback appreciated at chinstrokervspunter@gmail.com and hang with us on facebook Video version of the podcast available on the Chin Stroker VS Punter YouTube Channel
Should Michale Graves be covering Glenn Danzig songs? We weigh in. FRUMESS is POWERED by www.riotstickers.com/frumess JOIN THE PATREON FOR LESS THAN A $2 CUP OF COFFEE!! https://www.patreon.com/Frumess
Scott is joined by Tony to complete their first season of Story Time with a hidden gem of a story, This Island Earth. If you like what we do please leave a review and check out our patreon www.patreon.com/20cgmedia
Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954), Revenge of the Creature (1955), The Creature Walks Among Us (1956). And now, we come to the end of our Universal Monster episodes, having made our way through all the Dracula, Frankenstein, Invisible Man, Mummy, and the Wolf Man films, we now take a dive into the Black Lagoon! Coming out a little less than a decade after the last Universal Monster film (no, I'm not counting A&C Meet Frankenstein), it gave birth to a whole new generation of monster fans that might not have been around for the first cycle. And it did make quite the splash amongst fans, enough to permanently give its spot in the Universal Monster class. And there is a reason for that. Join us while we take a deep dive into these films, maybe pushing you into the deep end of some of them, discussing some things you maybe didn't know about them, and hopefully, if we're doing our jobs, make you revisit them and think about them a little differently, or at least a little more. That's the beauty of films, that no matter how many times you may have seen it, you never know what the next viewing experience will bring you. Films mentioned in this episode: Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954), The Creature Walks Among Us (1956), Curse of the Werewolf (1961), The Deadly Mantis (1957), Demon of Paradise (1987), Dracula (1931), Frankenstein (1931), Friday the 13th Part 3 (1982), The Giant Claw (1957), House of Dracula (1945), House of Frankenstein (1944), Humanoids from the Deep (1980), The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957), It Came from Outer Space (1953), Jaws 3-D (1983), King Kong (1933), Mad Monster Party? (1967), The Mole People (1956), The Mummy (1932), Octaman (1971), Revenge of the Creature (1955), The Shape of Water (2017), She-Wolf of London (1946), Son of Frankenstein (1939), Tarantula (1955), The Thing from Another World (1951), This Island Earth (1955), The Wolf Man (1941)
Welcome to an altogether new show here at Cinema Degneration we are calling "Without Warning." The theme for this show is unlike any other in our lineup. Hosted by Cinema Degeneration CEO Cameron Scott and his co-host, author, voiceover artist, and host of 'The Diabolical Index' Korey Dawson. The theme is simple: Scott calls Dawson out of the blue with no warning as to what the topic of conversation will be...without warning if you will. Scott will continuously test the overall skill and level of pop culture and movie expertise of Mr. Dawson with totally random topics including movies, literature, pop culture, music, art, comics and more. Dawson has absolutely no prior knowledge to these show topics and is going into the discussions totally blind. These shows are a hoot to record, and we hope as much fun for the audience to listen back to. The 6th episode show topic is on "UNIVERSAL MONSTERS". Essentially you are all in for a deep dive discussion on a multitude of films that were based on some of the classic and iconic black and white era of Hollywood Killers. Topics range from a lengthy debate on Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi and the 'Fearsome Five' cavalcade of maniacs with Dracula, Frankenstein, The Wolfman, The Invisible Man, and The Creature. Some of the other films covered range from Bride Of Frankenstein, The Black Cat, THEM!, The Raven, Frankenstein VS The WolfMan, plus more. Included in the festivities are various rants and segways into topics such as the Atomic Age of Horror, Vincent Price, This Island Earth, Hammer Horror, Monolith Monsters, and many more. Join us! "Listen to them! Children of the Night. What music they make!"
Mystery Science Theater 3000, oder kurz MST3K, ist die Film gewordene Serie. Mike Nelson, lebt zusammen mit Tom Servo, Crow T . Robot und Gypsy auf der Weltraumstation "Satallite of Love", die gemächlich um die Erde kreißt. Mike und seine Freunde werden allerdings vom bösen Dr.Clayton gezwungen, sich schlechte Filme anzusehen und damit erprobt, ob man mit dem richtigen Film die Menschheit in den Wahnsinn treiben kann. Sein Testobjekt ist der Film "Metaluna iV antwortet nicht" (engl. This Island Earth). Während Mike und seine Freunde versuchen sich aus dem Griff des Doctors zu befreien, können sie sich Kommentare zum Film nicht sparen. Zu unserem Vergnügen. aHatofMedia wünscht wie immer viel Spaß Timetable 0:00:00 Begrüßung und Vorgeplänkel 0:01:52 Die Geschichte von MST3K 0:21:37 Mystery Science Theater 3000 - Der Film 0:42:04 (kein spezifisches) Fazit 1:04:20 Verabschiedung
In this chapter we look at the second outing for the Gill-man - Revenge of the Creature, the last Universal Mummy movie, and revisit two stone cold classics - Tarantula and This Island Earth
12:53 - The Dragon Reborn by Robert Jordan *Potential Spoiler16:25 - Year One by Nora Roberts22:00 - Sanditon: Austen's Last Novel, Completed by Another Lady by Jane Austen 25:03 - Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones26:43 - The Last Monument by Michael C. Grumley 29:01 - This Island Earth by Raymond F. Jones29:33 - The Lady From The Black Lagoon: Hollywood Monsters And The Lost Legacy Of Milicent Patrick by Mallory O'Meara34:19 - A Handful Of Dust by Evelyn Waugh 36:28 - The Wild Inside: A Novel Of Suspense by Christine 39:32 - Esrahaddon by Michael J. Sullivan + The Dragon Reborn by Robert Jordan40:06 - The Great Hunt by Robert Jordan40:16 - Nolyn by Michael J. Sullivan + Farilane by Michael J. Sullivan 41:06 - Lord of The Rings Series by J. R. R. Tolkien + The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien 41:31 - Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire by J. K. Rowling 42:01 - Riyria Chronicles by Michael J. Sullivan44:06 - The Devil And The Dark Water by Stuart Turton + The Root Witch by Debra Castaneda + Home Before Dark by Riley Sager 45:28 - Lock Every Door by Riley Sager48:25 - Goblin: A Novel In Six Novellas by Josh Malerman49:23 - The Convenient Wife by Betty Neels 49:41 - Mexican Gothic by Silvia-Moreno Garcia54:42 - The Haunting Of Hill House Book by Shirley Jackson57:47 - Dark Matter by Blake Crouch 59:20 - Wayward Pines Trilogy by Blake Crouch59:41 - Wrath by Daniel Kraus & Sharon Moalem + The Living Dead by Daniel Kraus & George A. Romero + Southern Reach Trilogy by Jeff VanderMeer + Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel 1:02:12 - The Gunslinger by Stephen KingSupport the showBe sure to keep yourself Happily Booked! We are Amazon Affiliates, Any link you find available above will redirect you to Amazon. We earn from qualifying purchases with these links. Becky's Homestead Etsy Page: bobwhitehomestead.etsyInstagram/ TikTok - happilybookedpodcastFacebook - Happily Booked PodcastLikewise - BrookeBatesHappilyBookedGoodreads - Brooke Lynn Bates Storygraph - brookebatesratesbooks / magbeck2011 THE Sideways Sheriff - Permanent Sponsor Insta/ TikTok - Sideways_sheriffFacebook - Sideways SheriffYoutube - Sideways Sheriff
The gang is all back just in time to be disgusted by Biggs as we talk about Oreo Madness, Texas Ren Fest, Playpass, Asoka, Loki season 2, The Starless Sea, Modesty Blaze, Wicker Man, This Island Earth, Flee Mortals, No One Will Save You, Blue Eyed Samurai, Marvels, The Sphere, Jolt cola, Coyote Vs. Acme, Halo Dew, The Golden Joystick Awards, the Iger shuffle, and more! So, squeeze the cream, it's time for a GeekShock!
Sometimes two movies with very different vibes turn out to have a lot in common. Like a plot. And general goofiness. Kicking things off is a certified classic of science fiction, This Island Earth from 1955! Then, we're gonna gaze wistfully at an uncertain future in the stars while we ponder how much Star Wars we still had in us by 1984. Turns out a lot. It's The Last Starfighter!Email: info@channel-37.comTwitter: @WHXN37
Set your interocitor for excitement as Monster Mondays takes a trip to Metaluna and try to avoid the big-brained clawed mutants and set sail for This Island Earth! Find new episodes of the Film Seizure Podcast every Wednesday and a new Monster Mondays each Monday at www.filmseizure.com Like what we do? Buy us a coffee! www.ko-fi.com/filmseizure Follow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/filmseizure/ Follow us on Mastodon: https://universeodon.com/@filmseizure Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/FilmSeizure Follow us on Instagram: www.instagram.com/filmseizure/ You can now find us on YouTube as well! The Film Seizure Channel can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/c/FilmSeizure
Zach welcomes back podcaster Phil Vecchio (The Mandarian Orange Show, Alex P. Keaton Is My Friend) to deep dive intoContinue readingEp.103: This Island Earth (1955) or ‘It's Just a Podcast, You Should Really Just Relax'
We lace up with Ben Affleck's Air and also sweat it out with a retro review of Flashdance. Plus, we also talk Renfield, Full Swing, Star Trek: Picard and Rabid. Ryan's website: rlterryreelview.com Follow the show on Twitter: @thecinemaspeak Follow the show on Instagram: cinemaspeakpodcast Subscribe on Youtube: Cinema Speak Intro: 0:00 - 9:02 Review - Air: 9:02 - 44:09 Retro Review - Flashdance: 44:09 - 1:16:03 Micro-Reviews - Renfield, Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, This Island Earth, The Old Dark House, Star Trek: Picard, Rabid, Full Swing: 1:16:03 - 1:40:44 This week in new releases/Outro: 1:40:44 - 1:47:15
In this very special Old Soul episode we discuss the amazing worlds of Sci-Fi and Horror with Dr. Roger Solberg! Dr. Solberg is a Professor Emeritus of English at Pennsylvania Western University-Edinboro. Before retiring in June 2022 he taught at Edinboro since 1989. In addition to teaching Literature and Film courses, he is also a three-time Jeopardy! champion (aka he knows A LOT!). Dr. Solberg walks us through the earliest creations of Horror and Sci-Fi novels/novellas and the transition to adapting these works into early films. We overview some of his favorite features and how the genres have evolved throughout the years. We are so grateful to learn more from him on the highlights (and lowlights) of some of Hollywood's most creative, inventive films!Please Comment, Rate, and Share our episodes and tell us what you like and what you want to hear more of!—Be sure to check us out onOur website: https://the-old-soul-movie-podcast.simplecast.com/FacebookTwitter: @oldsoulpodInstagram: @oldsoulmoviepodcast MoviesFrankenstein (1910) – Thomas EdisonLife without Soul (1915)Frankenstein (1931)– Boris Karloff Nosferatu (1922)Dracula (1931) – Bela Lugosi The Phantom of the Opera (1925) – Lon ChaneyIsland of Lost Souls (1932) Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933)Doctor X (1932)London After Midnight (1927)The Mummy (1932) – Universal(Westworld Series (2016-) / Jurassic Park (1993))Bride of Frankenstein (1935)Young Frankenstein (1974)This Island Earth (1955)The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957)The Mole People (1956)The Deadly Mantis (1957)The Quatermass Xperiment (1955) / aka The Creeping UnknownQuatermass 2 (1957) / aka Enemy from SpaceThe Curse of Frankenstein (1957) - HammerHorror of Dracula (1958) - HammerThe Curse of the Werewolf (1961) - HammerThe Mummy (1959) - HammerThe Phantom of the Opera (1962) - Hammer The Brides of Dracula (1960) - HammerThe Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)Psycho (1960)Night of the Living Dead (1968)2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992) – Frances Ford Coppola Dracula (1979) - Frank LangellaMary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994) – Kenneth Branagh / Robert De Niro(Henry V (1989) - Kenneth Branagh / Hamlet (1996) – Kenneth Branagh)Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931) – Fredric MarchThe Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939)Island of Lost Souls (1932) – Charles Laughton [Note – Yes! Wally Westmore was involved with makeup!]The Island of Dr. Moreau (1977) – Burt LancasterHardware (1990) (The Manchurian Candidate/The Birdman of Alcatraz/The Train)The Time Machine (1960)(Back to the Future (1985))The War of the Worlds (1953)The Thing from Another World (1951)The Time Machine (2002)War of the Worlds (2005)2005 – H.G Wells' War of the Worlds / Pendragon Pictures The Great Martian War – YouTube 2005 – H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds or The Worlds in War or Invasion/ Asylum Pictures Carnival of Souls (1962)Spider Baby (1964)Bubba Ho-Tep (2002) BooksFrankenstein – Mary ShelleyDracula – Bram StokerStrange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde – Robert Louis StevensonThe Turn of the Screw – Henry JamesThe Time Machine – H. G. WellsThe Island of Doctor Moreau – H. G. WellsThe War of the Worlds – H. G. Wells
The Amazing Colossal Man towers over Chris and Charlotte, as they pepper him with facts about big birthdays, tall tales, huge attractions, hearty meals, and profound mathematics.SHOW NOTES.The Amazing Colossal Man: IMDb. MST3K Wiki. Trailer.The Incredible Shrinking Man.Our episodes on Village of the Giants and This Island Earth.Homer Eon Flint's The Nth Man was published the Spring 1928 issue of Amazing Stories Quarterly.Images from The Nth Man: one, two, three.The casinos in this film: Dunes (with the sultan). Riviera. Royal Nevada (with the crown). Silver Slipper (with the shoe). Tropicana. Sands. Pioneer Club (with Vegas Vic).The Far Eastern Republic.Anna and the King.Midnight Oil: Beds are Burning.And the One-Hit Wonderland about Beds are Burning.Annie and politics.House Peters Jr.Understanding Diner Lingo.Chris and Charlotte have a bit of history with Adam and Eve on a Raft…J.B.S. Haldane: On Being the Right Size.Kurzgesagt's videos on the The Size of Life: one, two, three.The square-cube law.Support It's Just A Show on Patreon and we will give you an amazing colossal thank you.
Its the spookiest time of year and with it we look at some classic of the genre of horror. Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) This Island Earth (1955) Nosferatu (1922) Business Inquiry: ironhawk56@gmail.com find me here: https://linktr.ee/TsunamiStudios
Ian is joined by Robbie Sherman as we explore the cinema of sci-fi pioneer Jack Arnold. But can This Island Earth, Creature from the Black Lagoon and The Mouse That Roared still capture our imaginations and give us the cinematic thrills we crave today?
Jim revisits one of his favorite sci-fi movies from the mid 1950's, "This Island Earth," starring Jeff Morrow, Rex Reason, Faith Domergue, Lance Fuller, Russell Johnson and Douglas Spencer. Several scientists are recruited by the mysterious "Exeter" to work on positive uses of nuclear energy. But, something is not quite right. Find out more about this cult classic on this episode of MONSTER ATTACK!, The Podcast Dedicated To Old Monster Movies.
Jim revisits one of his favorite sci-fi movies from the mid 1950’s, “This Island Earth,” starring Jeff Morrow, Rex Reason, Faith Domergue, Lance Fuller, Russell Johnson and Douglas Spencer. Several scientists are recruited by the mysterious “Exeter” to work on positive uses of nuclear energy. But, something is not quite right. Find out more about … This Island Earth (Revisited)| Episode 339 Read More » The post This Island Earth (Revisited)| Episode 339 appeared first on The ESO Network.
The Concert of Colors, metro Detroit's free annual diversity-themed music festival, is happening from July 16 - July 24. Ismael Ahmed, host of "This Island Earth" on WDET started the event almost 30 years ago and joins Stephen to discuss the event, its importance, and his love of world music. Then, Dr. Paul Kilgore joins the show to discuss the current status of COVID-19 including the BA.5 omicron subvariant, best health and safety practices, and how you can get N95 masks for free in your neighborhood.
A war between two alien races, a group of unknowing human scientists, and a notorious monster to boot. Join us as we explore the construction, last-minute changes, and the eventual downfall of 1955's This Island Earth on today's Sci-Fi 5. Follow Sci-Fi 5 for your daily dose of science-fiction history. Written by Tom Kozak Hosted by Kim Horcher Music by Devin Curry
A war between two alien races, a group of unknowing human scientists, and a notorious monster to boot. Join us as we explore the construction, last-minute changes, and the eventual downfall of 1955's This Island Earth on today's Sci-Fi 5. Follow Sci-Fi 5 for your daily dose of science-fiction history. Written by Tom Kozak Hosted by Kim Horcher Music by Devin Curry
A war between two alien races, a group of unknowing human scientists, and a notorious monster to boot. Join us as we explore the construction, last-minute changes, and the eventual downfall of 1955's This Island Earth on today's Sci-Fi 5. Follow Sci-Fi 5 for your daily dose of science-fiction history. Written by Tom Kozak Hosted by Kim Horcher Music by Devin Curry
Clear your interociter screens as Noel Thingvall joins us again to discuss the pulpy sci-fi thriller This Island Earth from 1955. Listen as we examine the changing politics in the adaptation of the story from its source novel, comment how on how the film's reputation was changed by Mystery Science Theater 3000, and detail the impressive filmography of Orangey the Cat. Warning: Contains explicit language, spoilers, and confusion over the pronunciation of Faith Domergue's name. Our theme song is "Nostalgia TV" by Edward Jonathan Blakeley through Lynne Publishing.
Monsters. Metaphors. Mishigas? The boys break down the metaphors that classic monsters are supposed to represent, and provide modernized/better examples of them. You'll never believe what JR thinks the aliens from ‘This Island Earth' mean!
We begin the episode by remembering the late Dean Stockwell, talk about a Canadian sci-fi series that may have been the forerunner to some favorite shows that came soon after, and then our penultimate MST3k:Unriffed episode has us looking at the subject of MST3k's only theatrical release, This Island Earth . Promo: The B-Movie Cast (https://bmoviecast.com/) Be sure to visit our TeePublic Store! https://www.teepublic.com/stores/tsp-oe-podcast-store Join our Discord server: https://discord.gg/KP7pxGurKT Follow Christopher on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tspoe_podcasts All original content of the Time Shifters Podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.(The music used is composed and performed by Mark Mosher (https://markmoshermusic.com) CC BY-NC 3.0)
The Sound Chaser Progressive Rock Podcast is flying high. On the show this time, we have plenty of progressive music from the good old days, some music from the good new days, an In Memoriam segment for a musician gone, a long suite from Transatlantic, and much more. It is all here on Sound Chaser. Playlist1. OHO - The Plague, from OkinawaIN MEMORIAM JIM PEMBROKE2. Wigwam - Freddie Are You Ready, from Nuclear Nightclub [note: in the announcement I mistakenly call this album Nuclear Nightmare]END IN MEMORIAM3. Nova - Vimana, from Vimana4. Nucleus - Theme 2: Feast Alfresco, from Under the Sun5. Isotope - Then There Were Four, from Isotope6. Electric Light Orchestra - Send It, from Balance of Power7. Jean-Michel Jarre - Diva, from Zoolook8. Mark Jenkins - New Jersey Shore: Red Bank, from This Island Earth9. Mark Jenkins - New Jersey Shore: Metuchen, from This Island Earth 10. Mark Jenkins - New Jersey Shore: Sandy Hook, from This Island Earth 11. Joni Mitchell - Big Yellow Taxi, from Miles of Aisles12. U.K. - Nothing to Lose, from Night After Night13. Roger Waters - Don't Leave Me Now, from The Wall Live in Berlin14. Roger Waters - Another Brick in the Wall (Part 3), from The Wall Live in Berlin 15. Roger Waters - Goodbye Cruel World, from The Wall Live in Berlin THE SYMPHONIC ZONE16. The Moody Blues - Gypsy, from To Our Children's Children's Children17. The Moody Blues - Eternity Road, from To Our Children's Children's Children 18. The Moody Blues - Candle of Life, from To Our Children's Children's Children 19. The Moody Blues - Sun Is Still Shining, from To Our Children's Children's Children 20. Novalis - Astralis, from Brandung21. Willowglass - The Dream Harbour, from The Dream Harbour22. Transatlantic - Overture, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore23. Transatlantic - Heart Like a Whirlwind, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 24. Transatlantic - Higher Than the Morning, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 25. Transatlantic - The Darkness in the Light, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 26. Transatlantic - Swing High, Swing Low, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 27. Transatlantic - Bully, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 28. Transatlantic - Rainbow Sky, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 29. Transatlantic - Looking for the Light, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore 30. Transatlantic - The World We Used to Know, from The Absolute Universe: Forevermore LEAVING THE SYMPHONIC ZONE31. Kate Bush - Wuthering Heights [New Vocal Version], from This Woman's Work Volume II32. Suzanne Vega - In Liverpool, from 99.9 F° 33. Mostly Autumn - Back to Life, from Go Well Diamond Heart34. The Who - New Song, from Who's Next35. Hawkwind - Images, from Live 199036. Jethro Tull - Man of Principle, from Living in the (Slightly More Recent) Past37. Steven Wilson - People Who Eat Darkness, from To the Bone38. Magellan - Brother's Keeper, from Hundred Year Flood39. Gungfly - And She Drives Me..., from Lamentations40. Bi Kyo Ran - Prediction, from Parallax
On this special episode we were fortunate enough to have David Schecter break down several of the pieces we here in This Island Earth. We appreciate his expertise on these well loved pieces from the film. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gwendolyn-black/support
This episode we have special guest David Schecter discussing his music on the film This Island Earth and discussions of the music in horror and sci fi. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gwendolyn-black/support
Jack Arnold, who died at the age of 75 in 1992, was the 1950s master of the science fiction film. Among the films he directed were It Came From Outer Space, The Creature from the Black Lagoon, Revenge of the Creature, Tarantula, and The Incredible Shrinking Man. The Probabilities crew – Richard A. Lupoff, Lawrence Davidson and Richard Wolinsky – received a small stipend from a science fiction convention and flew to Los Angeles to interview Jack Arnold in his office at Universal Studios. The interview is undated but was recorded in around 1980, give or take a year. Arnold's memory was fuzzy on when films were released. IMDb lists It Came from Outer Space, along with two film noirs in 1953, Creature from the Black Lagoon in 1954 and Revenge of the Creature in 1955. The first western, The Man from Bitter Ridge along with Tarantula and his work on This Island Earth also came from 1955. The rest of the westerns, along with The Incredible Shrinking Man and the Peter Sellers classic The Mouse That Roared, came between 1956 and 1959. After that, he directed a couple more A pictures, as he called them, but his primary work moved to television, and from then until his retirement in 1984, he was constantly working on projects for the small screen, interspersed with the occasional film. At the end of the interview, he discusses a remake of Conan Doyle's The Lost World, complete with storyboards. That project never did get off the ground, though it's possible later versions used some of Arnold's pre-planning. And, not to forget, he helped turn Gilligan's Island into a cultural (for better or worse) icon. Remastered and re-edited by Richard Wolinsky in July 2021, this interview has not been heard in forty years, and has never been publicly available in its entirety. The post Jack Arnold (1916-1992), film director, 1980 appeared first on KPFA.
Today I will discuss one of my all-time favorite science fiction movies from the 1950s. This Island Earth released in 1955 starting with Rex Reason, Jeff Morrow, and Fath Demorque. This is no b-grade flick but an A-list science fiction story that is more a thinking man's movie than mindless fun. I recently did a mini-review as a contributor to another podcast. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/edward-franklin-german/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/edward-franklin-german/support
Starlog magazine issues 15 and 16 from 1978. Star Wars, Superman, Twilight Zone, Supermarionation, Invaders, and more!Read along with your personal issue from your collection or for free here:https://archive.org/details/starlog_magazine-013/mode/2up---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------We will be attending Superman Celebration. Join us:https://www.supermancelebration.net/---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------We will also be attending the greatest of them all- Dragon Con! https://www.dragoncon.org---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Special guests and subjects include: Billy Hogan gives us a behind the scenes look at the new Superman movie. Check out his Superman Fan podcast at: https://thesupermanfanpodcast.blogspot.com----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Author Jeff Thompson discusses Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone. You can purchase Dan's books at: http://ideasintobooks.net/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Paul Mount fills us in on Gerry Anderson's Space 1999 Report. Follow him on his Starburst TV Zone podcast at: https://www.starburstmagazine.com/podcasts/tv-zone-plus-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Yehuda Kleinman and Ron Salvatore discuss the merchandising of Star Wars. This is an incredible resource for collectors: http://theswca.com/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Edward German reminisces about the 1955 classic sci-fi film This Island Earth. Find out more on his 1950s Science Fiction podcast at: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/the-1950s-science-fiction-podcast-edward-u6zfsKjVIGS/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Mark O'Connell gives us the full story if the television classic The Invaders. Follow him on his Far Fetched podcast at: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/far-fetched/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Anthony Rooney recalls the details about the fantastic puppetry work of Gerry Anderson 's Supermarionation! -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Check out Command Flight Adventure in Clarksville, Tennessee! https://m.facebook.com/TSNCygnus/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Michael Havens and Philip Browne consider the implications in Star Wars. Find out more about the Imperial Commissary and the ICCC at: https://www.imperialcommissary.com/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------All this, plus Buck Rogers, Battlestar Galactica, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and more!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Don't forget to join our Facebook group:https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=469912916856743&ref=content_filter---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Love Starlog magazine?Join the Facebook group:https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=303578380105395&ref=content_filter---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Topics:Star WarsSuperman: The MovieTwilight ZoneSpace: 1999This Island EarthThe InvadersSupermarionationBuck Rogers in the 25th CenturyBattlestar GalacticaInvasion of the Body SnatchersTags:Star WarsSuperman: The MovieTwilight ZoneSpace: 1999This Island EarthThe InvadersSupermarionationBuck Rogers in the 25th CenturyBattlestar GalacticaInvasion of the Body Snatchers--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Music used with permission by Checkpoint Charley.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publication date-Stardate 2021.06.18Join our YouTube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgE_kNBWqnvTPAQODKZA1UgFind us on FaceBookat https://www.facebook.com/groups/starpodlog/ and https://www.facebook.com/nayr.kavura.3--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Find us on Twitter and InstaGram@StarPodLog--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Find us on Reddit atu/StarPodTrek--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Listen to us on iTunes, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts!If you cannot see the audio controls, listen/download the audio file hereDownload (right click, save as)
We've got Movie Sign! This week, Jonah sits down with actors/writers Trace Beaulieu and Kevin Murphy to watch Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie!Trace and Kevin talk about their fraught relationship with the studio, the early crowdfunding plan they considered, making MST3K more cinematic for the big screen, scenes and songs they wish they'd filmed, the joys of riffing, and finding your people on the fringes of comedy!LinksFind out where you can watch Mystery Science Theater 3000: The MovieCheck out The Mads Are Back with Frank Conniff and Trace BeaulieuFollow Trace on TwitterListen to Rifftrax with Mike Nelson, Bill Corbett, and Kevin MurphyFollow Kevin on Twitter and InstagramThank you to Allie Goertz for our theme song and Perry Shall for our artwork.
Listen, as Johnny Has the Keys blasts off to the mysterious Metaluna where we encounter diabolical alien masterminds and their mutant slaves! The post Ep. 03-07: This Island Earth (1955) first appeared on JOHNNY HAS THE KEYS.
Like an almost-forgotten Hollywood classic enjoying an unexpected revival of interest, drive-in movie theaters are in the spotlight again with the Covid pandemic-related resurgence of outdoor film showings. As if on cue, Hoosier History Live will explore the rise and fall of drive-in theaters, which boomed in popularity in the years after World War II. During the 1950s, more than 120 drive-ins flourished across Indiana, according to driveinmovie.com. The Westlake Drive-in on the west side of Indianapolis, one of the state's most popular venues for outdoor movies, typically was jammed with more than 1,200 cars per night, according to a retrospective story on WRTV-Channel 6. In contrast, only 75 vehicles were counted at the Westlake when it closed in 1982. It was replaced on its site at West 10th Street and High School Road by a healthcare facility. According to several accounts, about 20 drive-in movie theaters have been operating across Indiana during recent years. They include the Tibbs Drive-in on the southwest side of Indy, the only remaining one in Marion County - unless you count temporary venues for outdoor movies that have been popping up to accommodate public health concerns related to the Covid-19 pandemic. For our show, Nelson's guests will include a movie preservationist and collector who is among those converting from indoor to outdoor showings. Film historian Eric Grayson has shifted from indoor screenings of vintage movies at Garfield Park to "drive-in style" events for at least the next few months at the park on the south side Indianapolis. With Eric joining Nelson, we will explore the factors that sparked the heyday of drive-in theaters, which featured large outdoor screens, projection booths, concession stands and, in some cases, playgrounds, picnic tables and other enticements for movie-goers. We also will explore the genres of movies that were effective at drive- theaters - the bygone Twin-Aire Drive-in on the southeast side of Indy periodically promoted horror film marathons that appealed to cars crammed with teenagers - and the genres that did not work as well. We also will delve into the factors that spelled doom for so many drive-ins. They included rising real estate values in cities that made summer-only land usage impractical; drive-in theaters that have endured tend to be in small towns or rural areas. According to an article published by the Smithsonian Magazine, even in the heyday of drive-ins during the 1950s movie studios preferred to slot their top first-run releases into indoor cinemas because of scheduling flexibility that resulted in more ticket sales. An indoor theater, the article notes, "could show one film five or six times a day instead of only at night ... Drive-ins were left to show B movies." But not always. Many drive-ins specialized in family-oriented fare. Parents often preferred drive-ins because of the ease of bringing young children (and sometimes even their dogs) in their cars. At the other extreme, some outdoor theaters went the X-rated route during their waning years. At Garfield Park, showings of vintage movies from the collection of our guest Eric Grayson will include Seventh Voyage of Sinbad (1958) on Aug. 22, This Island Earth (1955) on Sept. 19 and others; more details are available online. Outdoor movie theaters in Indiana that have continued to endure include the Centerbrook Drive-in in Martinsville and the Skyline Drive-in in Shelbyville. Those that bit the dust include the Shadeland Drive-in in Indianapolis, which, according to an article on Historic Indianapolis, closed in 1985 after a run of nearly 30 years.
It’s Quiz time… In our 3rd and final episode for “This Island Earth”, Dave presents “The Probe”, where he tests our panel of gurus to see if they were paying attention. Join us every week for another live session filled with all things geek!!! Voyage of the Geek Classic movie reviews and discussion! Podcasts... Read More
In the 2nd episode for “This Island Earth”, Rik presents “The Lost Sofa”, where he peels back the curtain to discuss his insights into the writing for the film. Then we’ll take a look at various facts and trivia on “Just the Tip” with Tom Magill. Join us every fortnight for another live session... Read More
Our first of a three-part, in-depth look at the sci-fi classic, “This Island Earth”. In this episode, Dan will present his unique narrative perspective in the first of our new segments, “Wot the Plot”. Join us every fortnight for another live session filled with all things geek!!! Voyage of the Geek Classic movie reviews... Read More
Over 1 hour of movie reviews this are the films I will talk about in this episode. Modern Vampires (1998),Mother Krampus (2017) ,Mutant War (1988) ,My Little Sister (2017) ,Nails (2017) ,Night Feeder (1988) ,Paranormal Cases (2012) ,Paranormal Xperience (2011) ,PlayDate (2012) ,Red Christmas (2017) ,Riders of the Stars (1954),Robert and the Toymaker (2017) ,RollerCoaster (1977) ,Satan's Black Wedding (1976) ,Score A Film Music Documentary (2017),Search and Destroy (1988) ,Skew (2011) ,Slasher House (2012),Slasher House 2 (2016),Solid State (2012) ,The BabySitter (1980) ,The Children (2008) ,The Convent (2000) ,The Doll Master (2017),The Elf (2017) ,The Meteor Man (1993) ,The Poughkeepsie Tapes (2007),The Revenant (2009) ,The Summoning (2014),The Villainess (2017) ,The Zombie King (2013),This Island Earth (1955) ,Thunder Warrior Trilogy movie review, To Let (2006) ,Trailer Park Of Terror (2008) ,Up, Up, and Away (2000) ,VHS Massacre (2016) ,Volumes Of Blood 2: Horror Stories (2017) ,White: Melody of Death (2011) and Zombie Night (2013)
On this episode, Luke and Will explore one of their shared passions - a show that blew their young minds with the revelation that art could be appropriated; that the institution of a "movie" did not automatically deserve respect; and that opened up whole worlds of strange and offbeat cinema. We watch MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000: THE MOVIE (1996) and discuss the politics of "bad," the Cold War ideas of THIS ISLAND EARTH, and the changing way that concepts like MST3K are distributed. PLUS: fiery hot takes on the NOW Magazine Reader's Choice Awards!
The History and Legacy of “Mystery Science Theater 3000”, Chapter 10: Staring into the Abyss! We discuss what happens when a beloved cowtown puppet show puts its future in the hands of an indifferent corporation: it's the story of “Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie! Everything from the selection of “This Island Earth” to the soul-wrenching test screening process… it's all here.Plus? Detours into “Barb Wire” and much more. Continue the journey with your wonky yet affable host!Keep the show alive today, get early episodes and hours of exclusive content for only $5: https://www.patreon.com/coolnesschronicleshttps://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-coolness-chronicles/id1431611476https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-coolness-chronicles?refid=stprhttps://open.spotify.com/show/0sONU9Bdsq35PwO8mE3jVThttp://www.buzzsprout.com/200242Twitter: @coolnesspodryan, Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coolnesspodryan Theme Music by: Bildschirm (bildschirm.bandcamp.com) The clips featured in this podcast were for critical review and parody, which are protected under the Fair Use laws of the United States Copyright Act of 1976. All rights are reserved and acknowledged."Love Theme From Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie" Arranged and Performed by Dave Alvin.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/coolnesschronicles)
Nat, Cody, and Robert take in "the supreme excitement of our time" with 1955's THIS ISLAND EARTH. 2 1/2 years in the making in vivid Technicolor, THIS ISLAND EARTH was inspirational to a generation of kids, including future director Joe Dante. Also, we open the mailbag and discuss feedback to our bonus episode on Tim Burton's BATMAN. Time Tracks: THIS ISLAND EARTH Discussion: 0:00 to 41:15, Mail Discussion: 44:15 to 53:46, Next Film and Outro:53:46 to End
Travel back in time with us to 1955 and hear our thought on classic sci-fi flick This Island Earth. Who doesn't like some bug-eyed monsters? Episode edited by Linnea Intro remixed by Linnea Starcrashed logo designed by Ebba Music: Polyphonic Congas by Unicorn Heads
Erik Childress travels back with Sergio Mims to catch up on the releases from Disney this year and has them contemplating the value of their Movie Club where other previously unreleased Blu-rays exist. Then they bring you into the present to look at some newly released classics from Criterion involving music, dance and the Russians. In-between the discussion looks into a pair of cult titles from Shout Factory and the legacy of the sci-fi classic (depending on who you ask) known as This Island Earth. Disney (Mary Poppins Returns, Captain Marvel, Cinderella, Dumbo, Ralph Breaks the Internet. The Little Mermaid) Shout Factory (Silent Hill, Frankenstein Created Woman, This Island Earth Criterion (Hedwig and the Angry Inch, War and Peace, Swing Time)
A group of scientists have been gathered in a secret laboratory to research atomic energy...but to what end? Fans of Mystery Science Theater may recall the sci-fi film used for MST3K: The Movie, and Tom and Ryan prove that they sure know their MST quotes! Join us as we discuss good 50's special effects vs. bad 50's special effects, ear-piercing sounds, and the worst kinds of philosophical responses you can give. It's our review of This Island Earth! Time stamps: 0:05:05 - Background 0:21:24 - Film Summary 0:50:33 - The Good 0:59:56 - The Bad 1:09:58 - The Ugly 1:20:02 - Improvements
To celebrate their 5th podcasting anniversary, the Pavement Pounders continue with what they’ve been doing. Namely, working through Reel Future. This time, it’s This Island Earth, the 1952 novel by Raymond F. Jones, and its 1955 film adaptation. Show Notes Exclusive Pounder Rankings! (Yes, we forgot to record it): Colin/James/Seth: Book Movie
To celebrate their 5th podcasting anniversary, the Pavement Pounders continue with what they’ve been doing. Namely, working through Reel Future. This time, it’s This Island Earth, the 1952 novel by Raymond F. Jones, and its 1955 film adaptation. Show Notes Exclusive Pounder Rankings! (Yes, we forgot to record it): Colin/James/Seth: Book Movie
Collector and film critic Andrew K. Rawls sat down with American illustrative artwork dealer Fred Taraba for an in-depth interview on Rawls’ podcast News and Movies Radio. The pair talked about collecting original movie poster art and noted poster artist Reynold Brown who designed and illustrated movie posters for films such as “Creature From The Black Lagoon,” “Tarantula,” “This Island Earth” and “Attack of the 50 Foot Woman." The interview with Taraba can be found at News and Movies Radio and on YouTube.
This Island Earth rams its ovipositor down Beth and Adam's throats (but it's not an alien!) during an awkward dinner party exchange about interocitors, interfering studios, interplanetary strife, interloping cats, and international space research.
This Island Earth rams its ovipositor down Beth and Adam’s throats (but it’s not an alien!) during an awkward dinner party exchange about interocitors, interfering studios, interplanetary strife, interloping cats, and international space research.
This week the guy's watched MST3K: The Movie which features This Island Earth, a movie that makes no sense. They also talk about Tommy's upcoming trip to New York City and the things he will do to avoid scams, poor memory and ADD, and things Millennials get blamed for. They also talk about A Star is Born, the Holmes and Watson trailer, and Dustin shares his favorite Trump tweet. Next week the guys are watching Boggy Creek 2 and you can to right here. You can read Dustin's spoiler-free review of A Star is Born on Letterboxd. Follow Dustin on Twitter @SpurplePonyroll, Instagram @Plasticboy310, Follow Tommy on Twitter and Instagram @tommy_servo Email us at Anybodylisteningpodcast@gmail.com
Around our house: Gardening updates Winter Creek Nursery S&L Ranch Superior Grassfed Beef The Great American Egg, pork harvest and butcher class Autumn Equinox Dinner at Boundless Farmstead Green Savers Stephen Jenkinson Rewild Yourself Podcast with guest Stephen Jenkinson Daniel Vitalis Interview: My guest on the show this month is Eli Goodall, the musician behind the project This Island Earth. Eli draws inspiration from music, sounds, cultures and landscapes from around the world to create his unique style of experimental and artistic World Music. This Island Earth is releasing a new album later this month, its called Wounded Tropic. Eli states “this is an album abouth the natural world, our ghosts, our children, the fears we hold, and the future we hope to create." Listen and hear more about Eli’s creative process, what inspires him and some of the deep personal concepts that underly his music. www.thisislandearthisalive.com contact Eli if you are interested in attending album release show in mid Septembercontact@thisislandearthisalive.com Modern Folk logo by Stefan Perkinz greasywhisper.comTheme music by Lee Rosevere Support for Modern Folk comes from my wife Emily Wiggins. Emily is a Naturopathic Doctor in Bend OR.dremilywiggins.com
Kaweco Lilliput Darkstar Pocket Notebooks Koh I Noor 5640 Clutch Pencil (5.6mm lead!) SSC - CW Pencils Pencil Pusher Thanks Tom! This Island Earth - 1955 900 Dollaredoos! Mad Max - 1979 Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon - 1973 Hugh Laurie singing the Blues Muga Rosé Nitro Coffee Plumbago Issue 4 Email / Tweet / Write to us to join the 1857 Slack and become a Slacker! Thanks Cerian! W&G IGTV Sean Blanc #Bujo Scribble Mondobbo on Nero's Notes Lamy Pico Fisher Space Pen SCHON Design Pen Leave us an iTunes Review! Lichfield Pen Show WES Online Pen Addict Podcast Atlanta Pen Show Hamilton Pens Niche Pens David Round - William Hannah Palomino Blackwing Display Box Nock Co Cases Hacker's Paradise Golf Forum Want to send us some snail mail? (yes, that means envelopes + stamps, old school!) Stuart Lennon & TJ Cosgrove 1857 Podcast 25 Walworth Enterprise Centre Duke Close, West Way Andover. SP10 5AP England, United Kingdom Nero's Notes (this show's sponsor) Wood & Graphite 1857 Facebook Page 1857 Website { 1857 } The Podcast about making the past, the present, in the future. Are you a US Listener? If you want to try audiobooks and want to help out the show, you can sign up for a 30 day trail, get a free audiobook and we get a commission, just go to http://www.audibletrial.com/1857 I (TJ) suggest American Gods by Neil Gaiman, Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton or Reamde by Neal Stephenson.
Chris plays bass in the New Brunswick based Scream Hello. Scream Hello just released a new album This Island Earth (it’s really good). Chris chats about growing up in the New Jersey scene, touring, being what I believe to be the only punk rock archaeologist and geologist, podcast we love and much more.
Jim examines another all-time favorite as he selects Universal - International's 1955 Sci-Fi classic "This Island Earth," starring Jeff Morrow, Faith Domergue, Rex reason, Russell Johnson and Douglas Spencer. A strange man recruits several of the Earth's top scientists to work on a difficult project, but something seems askew. Find out his real purpose on this episode of "Monster Attack!"
Mark covers "This Island Earth" this week on Treks in Sci-Fi for a guest spot on 3/11/2018.
Welcome to the pilot episode of XENOPOD FROM THE YEAR 5000! This is a monthly Science Fiction podcast hosted by Sean Duregger and will feature a rotating door of guest hosts. THIS EPISODE! Brandon Medley joins me to discuss 1955's THIS ISLAND EARTH. We all are familiar with the Metaluna Mutant, and maybe we all saw it via MSTK3000: THE MOVIE. But Sean and Brandon discuss the film on it's own merits.
Welcome to the pilot episode of XENOPOD FROM THE YEAR 5000! This is a monthly Science Fiction podcast hosted by Sean Duregger and will feature a rotating door of guest hosts. THIS EPISODE! Brandon Medley joins me to discuss 1955's THIS ISLAND EARTH. We all are familiar with the Metaluna Mutant, and maybe we all saw it via MSTK3000: THE MOVIE. But Sean and Brandon discuss the film on it's own merits.
This week we continue our Decades in Horror month with 1950s sci-fi movies. In this episode, we discuss This Island Earth (1955), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), and The Blob (1958). We also discuss the differences between the 1950s and 1960s, Seara butchers some names, and we call out Steve McQueen. Enjoy! Be sure to follow us at: @horrorhavenpodcast on instagram @horror_haven on Twitter www.facebook.com/horrorhavenpodcast Music in this episode is "Giant Wyrm" by Kevin MacLeod.
This week, Eli Lee (of the Bend, OR based band This Island Earth) joins us to discuss S7 E2 of Game of Thrones. Also - mutant moths, castrated boners, and Dominic’s best guess at whats going on in Game of Thrones having not seen any episodes since season 2. Featured outro song this week: This Island Earth - “North America” Follow us on Instagram: Dominic Mercurio - @dominicmercurio Laura Weinbach - @foxtailsbrigade Eli Lee - @thisislandearthisalive
He's tall! He's bony! He's a hench! He's the talented Tim Ryder, writer and improvisational actor out of Chicago, and part of the new season of "Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Return." The podcast gang talks with Tim for their long-form interview. Greg, Kate and Ryan ponder drunken crayfish, and the scientists who make them that way. Then it's off for a raucous discussion of the Hong Kong tokusatsu flick, "The Super Inframan," a hallucinogenic rubber-monster mess that actually influenced the new season of MST3K. Greg recommends everyone see the body-switching anime romance, "Your Name." Meanwhile, in the Mini Soda Review, Frostie Orange Soda fails to wow the gang. But Kate and Greg overcome their boredom by sadistically gaslighting Ryan in A Very Adamant Stance. And in Reviewers in The MST, James and Ron tackle The MST3K Movie itself with "This Island Earth." All this and a band of scrappy kids braving a booby-trapped cave to find pirate treasure while being chased by bumbling gangsters, on this week's episode of the Revival League Podcast! (This podcast does not represent Alternaversal, Shout Factory or the Kickstarter campaign in any official capacity). EDITOR’S NOTE: In June 2019, this podcast merged with the Damn Dirty Geeks Podcast and became The Damn Dirty Drive-in. These are our classic back catalog episodes, dating back to March 2016. Please enjoy! The new Drive-In podcast opens for business with original sketches, movie discussions, interviews, weird food tastings and more at Episode 168.
In which the plot thickens; Jay and Miles fix Avatar; Ship is a good bro; you are in space right now; the Beginagains go full This Island Earth; Cyclops weaponizes For more information on this and other episodes, check out xplainthexmen.com!
On this episode of CreatureGeek - LIVE FROM DRAGONCON 2016 - Frank goes solo. But he has the best co-hosts in my absence. He welcomes Trace Beaulieu and Frank Conniff from Mystery Science Theater 3000, Cinematic Titanic and The Mads Are Back. They talk about movie riffing, Joe Don Baker, This Island Earth and a ton of other fun stuff! If you're digging this show, please head over to http://www.patreon.com/creaturegeek and support us with a few bucks. Also, thanks to our sponsor ScotteVest! Please use our affiliate link: http://www.scottevest.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=SFNT&Store_Code=sev&AFFIL=4B44D42m
Gill and Levi get sucked up into the sci-fi classic, This Island Earth! Also up for discussion: The ubiquity and necessity of three-piece suits in aviation and SCIENCE! Metalunan misogyny That’s how you get mutANTS!Thanks to Play on Loop for our music and to Hero Machine for our logo elements. Email Us! - FromTheBoneVault@gmail.com Review Us! Web! - Facebook! - Twitter! - YouTube!
Herman Stein contributed music to more than 200 films, including some of the 1950s’ best-known monster movies: Creature From The Black Lagoon, This Island Earth, It Came From Outer Space, The Mole People, Tarantula and The Incredible Shrinking Man. He also composed for television, most memorably the Family Theme for “Lost In Space.” He was […]
The Damn Dirty Geeks drop into Uncle Ira's Basement for another mini-podcast episode as Frank Dietz and Frank Woodward put their normal-sized heads together to discuss Universal's 1955 sci-fi classic THIS ISLAND EARTH, a fun iconic film with Metalunans, Mutants and interocitors. Starring Jeff Morrow, Faith Domergue, Rex Reason and a pre-GILLGANS ISLAND Russell Johnson, this Technicolor adventure with bulbous brained aliens exploded across movie screens with a unique plot twist for 1950s science fiction films as the inhabitants of Metaluna seek help from humans on Earth -- at least, that's how it starts! What follows is a pinwheeling ride across the galaxy to a battle ravaged planet as a somewhat kooky cautionary tale about the excesses and apocalyptic cost of war, not to mention giant brain-headed aliens wearing futuristic pant suits. Frank and Frank have a blast revisiting this classic yet somewhat campy sci-fi treasure, discussing the design crossover connection between THIS ISLAND EARTH and THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON, 1950s heroine actresses and the peril of wearing giant alien head masks. For the record, Frank Dietz has not forgiven himself for confusing James Arness with James Whitmore in THEM! but he hopes you listeners will pardon him.
This Island Earth | Forbidden Planet – Hello everyone! Welcome to another episode of Motion Picture Meltdown! This week Phil, Dehart and myself go all the way back to the 1950’s to go over a couple of the most classic science fiction films you can think of. We go through This Island Earth a movie … Continue reading "MPM: Ep. 170 – There’s Never Anything Good on the Interocitor"
No todo lo facturado en los años 50 era carne de autocine; las productoras importantes intentaron meterse en el negocio con algunas propuestas muy interesantes, aunque no siempre fueran rentables."Regreso a la tierra" (originalmente titulada This Island Earth) es uno de los ejemplos más claros de esto. Víctor nos habla hoy del los habitantes del planeta Metaluna y su búsqueda de uranio para salvar su mundo, de arios, mutantes y científicos de mandíbula cuadrada. Una colorista película que, pese a sus muchos defectos, es un perfecto exponente visual de su época.
Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie - (1996) Mike Nelson and his robot companions watch and give their comments about "This Island Earth".
Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie - (1996) Mike Nelson and his robot companions watch and give their comments about "This Island Earth".
“In the not too distant future…” How many times have you thought to yourself, “Man, this old B movie is terrible! I wish I had someone to watch it with me and make sarcastic and snide remarks during the viewing…”? Well now you can with Mystery Science Theater 3000: the Movie! Our pick this episode wasn't exactly a hit across the board with our hosts. With all of the different “riffing” groups that exist now, it's nice to see how it all got started. No matter if you're a fan of the original MST3K show, I still think this cult classic will be talked about for awhile, and is a nice entry for the TV show if you're a newbie to it all. Our Hosts Ricky Glore Eric M Hunter Nick Prince Mystery Science Theater 3000: the Movie (1996) Synopsis Mike Nelson and his robot companions watch and give their comments about “This Island Earth”. Director: Jim Mallon Writers: Joel Hodgson (television series Mystery Science Theater 3000), Michael J. Nelson Stars: Trace Beaulieu, Michael J. Nelson, Jim Mallon Please leave a comment below about your experiences, positive or negative, of MST3K and the episode.
Park your rocket Jellycadets, because this week we're heading of to find The Phantom Planet! Is this nothing more than fever dream of Space Legend, or does this flying rock of tiny bad actors really exist? The truth may be obvious, but let the adventure begin anyways! Enjoy! This Weeks Topic: Exposition! We Also Discuss: The Lifespan of "Good" Graphics, The Importance of Editing Creative Writing, Dealing Emotionally with Awards and Praise, and Expessions of Dull Acting. Other Talking Points Include: Transformers,Jurassic Park, Terminator 2, The Incredible Hulk (TV Series), Star Wars, This Island Earth, Richard Kiel, Space Cases, Firefly, Johnny Depp, The NEW Hercules Trailer with The Rock, and Godzilla (2014) References to Past Episodes Include: The Fury of the Wolfman, Robot Monster, Battle of the Worlds, and MMPR The Movie. See, but never unsee THIS movie right HERE!
It's “Tombstone” meets “Forbidden Planet.” It's “My Darling Clementine” meets “This Island Earth.” William Shatner plays Captain Kirk playing Ike Clanton against his will. All he wanted to do was talk. Instead, he has to survive being hunted by Wyatt Earp. Confused? Just wait until we put "Spectre of the Gun" in the Mission Log. Got something' to say? We're calling' you out! On Facebook: facebook.com/missionlogpod On Twitter: @missionlogpod On Skype: MissionLogPod On the phone: (323) 522-5641 Online:
It's “Tombstone” meets “Forbidden Planet.” It's “My Darling Clementine” meets “This Island Earth.” William Shatner plays Captain Kirk playing Ike Clanton against his will. All he wanted to do was talk. Instead, he has to survive being hunted by Wyatt Earp. Confused? Just wait until we put "Spectre of the Gun" in the Mission Log. Got something' to say? We're calling' you out! On Facebook: facebook.com/missionlogpod On Twitter: @missionlogpod On Skype: MissionLogPod On the phone: (323) 522-5641 Online:
It's “Tombstone” meets “Forbidden Planet.” It's “My Darling Clementine” meets “This Island Earth.” William Shatner plays Captain Kirk playing Ike Clanton against his will. All he wanted to do was talk. Instead, he has to survive being hunted by Wyatt Earp. Confused? Just wait until we put "Spectre of the Gun" in the Mission Log. Got something' to say? We're calling' you out! On Facebook: facebook.com/missionlogpod On Twitter: @missionlogpod On Skype: MissionLogPod On the phone: (323) 522-5641 Online:
New Year, New Show, New Magazine, Alex Cross, Brick, The Eagle, Merlin, Excalibur, King Arthur, The Last Legion, The Sword in the Stone, Hugo, The Artist, Voyage to the Moon, M, Metropolis, Nosferatu, Frankenstein, Dracula, Forbidden Planet, This Island Earth, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Day the Earth Caught Fire, The Last Man On Earth, Cloud Atlas, Dexter, Awake, Metal Hurlant, Frazetta, Moebius, Liberatore, Gadget Man, Newsweek
New year, new show, new magazine, Alex Cross, Brick, The Eagle, Merlin, Excalibur, King Arthur, The Last Legion, The Sword in the Stone, Hugo, The Artist, Voyage to the Moon, Metropolis, Nosteratu, Frankenstein, Dracula, Forbidden Planet, This Island Earth, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Day the Earth Caught Fire, Cloud Atlas, Dexter, Awake, Gadget Man, Metal Hurlant, Frazetta, Moebius, Liberatore, NewsWeek.Show Notes: https://roymathur.com/podcast/2013-01-06-roys-rocket-radio.txt
New year, new show, new magazine, Alex Cross, Brick, The Eagle, Merlin, Excalibur, King Arthur, The Last Legion, The Sword in the Stone, Hugo, The Artist, Voyage to the Moon, Metropolis, Nosteratu, Frankenstein, Dracula, Forbidden Planet, This Island Earth, The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Day the Earth Caught Fire, Cloud Atlas, Dexter, Awake, Gadget Man, Metal Hurlant, Frazetta, Moebius, Liberatore, NewsWeek.Show Notes: https://roymathur.com/podcast/2013-01-06-roys-rocket-radio.txt
This week I cover the classic 1955 SF film, "This Island Earth." Some geek news and Trek stories along with other fun topics too. Enjoy the podcast!
In this "green" episode of Dread Media, Desmond Reddick celebrates Earth Day by interviewing eco-horror author of Meat and Garbage Man, Joseph D'Lacey. He then reviews the sleazy dwarfsploitation flick, The Sinful Dwarf and the unfortunate Murder is Like Sex. What do these films have to do with Earth Day, you ask? I got nothin'. Listen to the following terror tunes: "This Island Earth" by The Misfits, "Welcome to the Garbage Dump" by Turbonegro, "Black Dwarf" by Candlemass, "Murder in High Heels" by KISS, and "Earth Died Screaming" by Tom Waits. Check out Joseph at the following sites: josephdlacey.com, bloodybooks.com and horrorreanimated.com. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.
In this "green" episode of Dread Media, Desmond Reddick celebrates Earth Day by interviewing eco-horror author of Meat and Garbage Man, Joseph D'Lacey. He then reviews the sleazy dwarfsploitation flick, The Sinful Dwarf and the unfortunate Murder is Like Sex. What do these films have to do with Earth Day, you ask? I got nothin'. Listen to the following terror tunes: "This Island Earth" by The Misfits, "Welcome to the Garbage Dump" by Turbonegro, "Black Dwarf" by Candlemass, "Murder in High Heels" by KISS, and "Earth Died Screaming" by Tom Waits. Check out Joseph at the following sites: josephdlacey.com, bloodybooks.com and horrorreanimated.com. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.
In this "green" episode of Dread Media, Desmond Reddick celebrates Earth Day by interviewing eco-horror author of Meat and Garbage Man, Joseph D'Lacey. He then reviews the sleazy dwarfsploitation flick, The Sinful Dwarf and the unfortunate Murder is Like Sex. What do these films have to do with Earth Day, you ask? I got nothin'. Listen to the following terror tunes: "This Island Earth" by The Misfits, "Welcome to the Garbage Dump" by Turbonegro, "Black Dwarf" by Candlemass, "Murder in High Heels" by KISS, and "Earth Died Screaming" by Tom Waits. Check out Joseph at the following sites: josephdlacey.com, bloodybooks.com and horrorreanimated.com. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.
In this "green" episode of Dread Media, Desmond Reddick celebrates Earth Day by interviewing eco-horror author of Meat and Garbage Man, Joseph D'Lacey. He then reviews the sleazy dwarfsploitation flick, The Sinful Dwarf and the unfortunate Murder is Like Sex. What do these films have to do with Earth Day, you ask? I got nothin'. Listen to the following terror tunes: "This Island Earth" by The Misfits, "Welcome to the Garbage Dump" by Turbonegro, "Black Dwarf" by Candlemass, "Murder in High Heels" by KISS, and "Earth Died Screaming" by Tom Waits. Check out Joseph at the following sites: josephdlacey.com, bloodybooks.com and horrorreanimated.com. Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213.