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topic: Science Fiction Comedy





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message 90: by Phillip (new)

299646 it was on the radio here in the early 80's and i remember the place where i worked had it blaring over the speakers and i caught a lot of it...i remember really enjoying it.


message 89: by Tom (new)

821945 I recently downloaded the original HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY radio series in two large parts from itunes, and have gotten a lot of very good laughs out of them both so far. A few dry patches, to be sure, and the story just kind of lurches along. But nothing can dim the brilliance of the best parts. The sequence at Milliways is a joy, just a pure bloody joy, and Anthony Sharp's glorious performance as the supercilious waiter is only one of the great pleasures in store.


message 88: by Mawgojzeta (new)

2045970 Hi. Bringing this back, because I am new here, so it is new to me.

What about Black Sheep ? I could not believe how much I enjoyed this film about genetic engineering gone wrong. It was a hoot! It clearly was not meant to be comedic (sp??) horror; but not sure it people would call it sci-fi comedy.


message 87: by Jim (new)

695116 The clip of the discussion with the bomb in "Dark Star" was posted in another group I belong to. It's a great scene.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjGRySVyT...



message 86: by Phillip (new)

299646 rob - yeah, with dirk in the nun's costume...hysterical.

well, once pacino hits the 1980's, he's much too full of himself. i know he adequately represents a personae that exists in america - and for that reason i kind of have to give it up to him - he's representin'! i just don't want to be reminded of that personae.

i do like things he did in the 70's, so it really is silly of me to have avoided those films all these years...but you know how it is - you have time for what you have time for.


message 85: by deleted member (new)

Haha. That was a great scene, wasn't it?

Man, you reeeeaaallly don't like Al Pacino, do you?


message 84: by Phillip (new)

299646 ok, i'm going to rent dog day afternoon this week. i'll get back to you on it. if that goes well, we'll see about serpico. but i kind of already think i'm going to prefer the serpico that the kid directs in rushmore...

;)


message 83: by Daniel (new)

130184 "Serpico" is one of Pacino's iconic performances along with "The Godfather" films, "Scarface" and -- of course -- "Dog Day Afternoon."


message 82: by Tom (new)

821945 SERPICO isn't nearly as good as the sublime DOG DAY AFTERNOON, I'd say. Of course, if you're not a Pacino fan neither one is probably your cup of tea.


message 81: by Phillip (new)

299646 never saw it. i know, i know. it's supposed to be a fine film. but i really don't like pacino, and i've avoided those films. i might loosen up my attitude and check them out.


message 80: by Daniel (new)

130184 And what about "Serpico?"


message 79: by Phillip (last edited Jan 17, 2009 02:18PM) (new)

299646 damn, that tomato hit me right in the eye...good shot, rob!

&0

i tend to agree with you on the 70's being a kind of golden era for a lot of actors (and films in general - people were really taking chances then). i'll check it out - so many people really admire that film.


message 78: by deleted member (last edited Jan 17, 2009 11:47AM) (new)

Well. If you want to see a good Pacino film, go for it. I would never hesitate to watch a Pacino film made in the 70's. After that it's hit and miss, but the 70's were a great time for many American actors...Pacino being one of them.

*Lobs tomato*


message 77: by Phillip (new)

299646 i'm embarrassed to say i've never seen it.
ok, you all can start throwing tomatoes at me now.

so, should i rent that one, rob?


message 76: by deleted member (new)

*Ahem!*


Dog Day Afternoon.



*Ahem!*


message 75: by Phillip (last edited Jan 14, 2009 11:26PM) (new)

299646 yeah, we all have to deal with them (our expectations).

donnie brasco is actually some of the only pacino i like. the first two godfather films are great...but i'm not such a fan of his work. i wanted to murder him after that pretentious piece of s*^t "finding richard" (a kind of exploratory documentary on richard the iii that was clearly a vanity vehicle for al).

i realize we've gone way off topic here - this is a sci-fi discussion and we're talking pacino. so, i'll drop it.


message 74: by Jim (new)

695116 Phillip, getting hemmed in & letting my expectations get the better of me has caused me disappointment in the past. "Indiana Jones & the Temple of Doom" was one example. After "The Raiders of the Lost Ark" & the hype, the let-down when I saw the movie was extreme.

Not quite same, but it can be close when you're expecting gangster Al Pacino to kick butt & find his Brasco character. I think it says a lot for Pacino that he could play both so well. It's just those pesky expectations that kick you around.


message 73: by Phillip (new)

299646 daniel, i agree with your most recent statement, but that's not what it sounded like you were saying in your original post that i replied to...

jim,
we're actually on the same page. i too learn a lot from sources outside the prescibed places. that's kind of what i'm talking about. don't let yourself get hemmed in by expectations created by "idioms" or "genres".


message 72: by Jim (new)

695116 Phillip wrote: "...but i think all this labelling creates those narrow-minded expectations. ..."

I think you have it the wrong way around. I think those with narrow-minded expectations create their own problems.

Often, the line is quite blurred between even fiction & fact. I've learned more history from fictionalized accounts than dry text books. I faced a similar problem shelving my philosophy, religious & mythology books. I settled it by putting them all on one shelf, somewhat separate from the fiction books & certainly not in with fact books such as computer programming, woodworking or tree/wood identification.

I try to take it for what it is & not pigeon hole it, because that way lies madness.


message 71: by Daniel (new)

130184 Phillip wrote: "'Then when you see him as a small time shlemiel in "Donnie Brasco," it tells you this is going to be something different.'

i may be confused, but there's nothing in the title of donnie brasco that tells me the movie is going to be "different". this is a good case in point. i liked donnie brasco quite a lot. but i know some folks went to see it (expecting scarface or the like) and hated it."


It's not the *title* that tells you it's going to be different, it's seeing Pacino in a gangster film as a low level guy who's never going to rise any higher that indicates it's different.

Yes, some people can use genre to constrict their appreciation of films, but I find if I know the rules of the genre and its history I can appreciate it more when the filmmaker does something extraordinary with classic elements or puts an entirely fresh spin on it.




message 70: by Phillip (last edited Jan 13, 2009 09:23AM) (new)

299646 of course, but those expectations that you bring can really keep you from enjoying something that exists on the margins of any said genre. this doesn't happen to me, but it seems to happen to a lot of viewers and listeners that don't have much imagination. genres seem to fence in their asethetics. there's nothing i or anyone else can do about that....but that's one reason i don't like categories. i suppose it's different with film - but with music there are a lot of things that don't fit easily into categories, and those things don't tend to get produced actually, i guess it's not so different with films. i know lots of filmmakers that can't get their projects to the screen because producers don't think they'll be able to market them...

but with regard to your most recent post, you wrote:

"Then when you see him as a small time shlemiel in "Donnie Brasco," it tells you this is going to be something different."

i may be confused, but there's nothing in the title of donnie brasco that tells me the movie is going to be "different". this is a good case in point. i liked donnie brasco quite a lot. but i know some folks went to see it (expecting scarface or the like) and hated it.

well, that, ultimately, is their problem. they have narrow views of what a "gangster" film is supposed to all about. but i think all this labelling creates those narrow-minded expectations.


message 69: by Daniel (new)

130184 I teach genre and I teach it not as an iron clad categorization process but as a useful tool. If you know a film is a "gangster movie" that tells you something about it. You bring in certain expectations, and the filmmaker is free to fulfill or play off of them. For example, from "The Godfather" films and "Scarface" we expect something when we hear it's a new gangster film with Al Pacino. Then when you see him as a small time shlemiel in "Donnie Brasco," it tells you this is going to be something different.


message 68: by Phillip (new)

299646 i don't know how it is in film, but in music, categories/genres exist so record execs know how to market their product. i don't really have much use for them.


message 67: by Daniel (new)

130184 Tom wrote: "Nobody said the categories were mutually exclusive Daniel. It's all pretty subjective anyway. There are assorted films with technology that doesn't exist and their possible consequences that I wo..."

Whereas I have absolutely no problem including them as SF. I've even been on panels on spy films at cons. I guess I have a more expansive definition of the genre. To me "Frankenstein," "The President's Analyst," "1984" and "Colossus: The Forbin Project" are all SF, even if they may classified in other ways as well.




message 66: by Tom (new)

821945 Nobody said the categories were mutually exclusive Daniel. It's all pretty subjective anyway. There are assorted films with technology that doesn't exist and their possible consequences that I wouldn't classify as science fiction, like the James Bond films and the Austin Powers franchise. Some of them veer a bit more closely to science fiction, like MOONRAKER and the AUSTIN POWERS THE SPY WHO SHAGGED ME, but on the whole I wouldn't consider the films science fiction as such, but spy films with some slight science fiction elements.


message 65: by Kandice (new)

1396160 Angie wrote: "I too love Men in Black, the first one! I liked the teaming up of Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones. "

I didn't like the second one as well as the first, but the post office... that was genius!


message 64: by Angie (new)

86285 I too love Men in Black, the first one! I liked the teaming up of Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones.


message 63: by Alex DeLarge (new)

1240502 I've been reading some Terry Southern novels lately that I excavated from a local used book store. I also discovered a 1st printing of Fail Safe, the novel that was the thematic basis for STRANGELOVE and the film of the same name. Glad Kubrick went for satire and irony!


message 62: by Daniel (new)

130184 Something can be science fiction (which it is), comedy (which it is) and "pure Kubrick" (which it is).

The categories aren't mutually exclusive.


message 61: by Phillip (new)

299646 I'm with you Tom. Looks like it's two against the Boston contingent. Whatever. It's pure Kubrick (and you can catch the vintage Terry Southern writing in there as well). Peter Sellars is playing way over the bar in this film.


message 60: by Daniel (new)

130184 It's very funny. For me the perfect example of irony is, "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here. This is the War Room!"


message 59: by Tom (new)

821945 Yeah, it posits a device that does not yet exist and shows the consequences, but it isn't SF enough for me. More like a particularly black Swiftian satire with some faintly SF elements. Looks like I disagree with the entire population of attendees at the Boston SF Marathon. Love the movie, of course.


message 58: by Phillip (last edited Jan 10, 2009 02:17PM) (new)

299646 regardless of how the film is classified, it's first rate kubrick (who usually defied classification because he stretches the boundaries of whatever genre he's working in) and hilarious.


message 57: by Daniel (new)

130184 Your mileage differs. "Dr. Strangelove" posits a device that does not yet exist and shows the consequences of it. That's SF to me.

Not only do I use it in class, but it has played at the annual 24 hour marathon of SF films in the Boston area, and no one complained that it wasn't SF. (And people ARE quick to complain if they feel a film doesn't belong.)


message 56: by Tom (new)

821945 I wouldn't consider DR. STRANGELOVE science fiction, really. There isn't enough of the futuristic or alternate science content for it to really qualify like GATTACA or even CLOCKWORK ORANGE.


message 55: by Alex DeLarge (new)

1240502 Daniel mention Kubrick's DR. STRANGELOVE in another post: we can't forget that one!


message 54: by Kandice (new)

1396160 How about Men in Black? Hilarious!


message 53: by Phillip (new)

299646 interesting no no one has mentioned the fifth element. that's a pretty comical sci-fi film, imo.


message 52: by Marshy (new)

1307326 Yup - R1 release is out March 10th: http://www.amazon.com/Howard-Duck-Lea-Th...

Maybe we could make it Film of the Month?! ;)


message 51: by Marshy (new)

1307326 Ha ha ha ha good to see my mention of Howard the Duck is stirring things up nicely. I just have shocking memories of "that" sex scene with Lea Thompson! What were they thinking?? I'm pretty sure he uses a condom too!
I know there is a good German release of this (maybe it gains something in translation!!) but not sure what else - will look around - maybe it's time has finally come!


message 50: by Angie (new)

86285 Tom... I also have not seen Howard the Duck for a long time and this thread has also peaked my curiosity to see it again. Maybe we should watch it and then start a thread about it? (That is if we even make it through a second viewing).


message 49: by Becky (new)

1376766 I think there are quite a few Futurama movies. I own 3 of them: "Bender's Game", "Bender's Big Score" and "Beast with a Billion Backs". Fun stuff. :)


message 48: by Alex DeLarge (new)

1240502 I've never seen it but had the first issue from Marvel Comics...god knows why.
Tom, sounds like my reaction to THE PHANTOM MENACE; everyone around me enjoyed it (except my wife and our friends) and I wanted to strangle somebody...whose first name begins with a G and last ends with AS(S).


message 47: by Tom (new)

821945 I saw HOWARD THE DUCK when it first came out, on the first day in fact. Went with some friends, we were sitting there hating every minute, and were really suffering because the people behind us were loving every minute, laughing and having a great time. And then, at the end of the movie, the lights came up, and it became clear that the people sitting behind us were the only people in the entire theatre who had enjoyed the movie. I've never seen so many angry movie patrons before or since.

Is it that bad? Well, I'll have to see it again, which I'm actually kind of curious to do. I remember thinking that the Dark Overlords were kind of cool, but that Howard himself was way too cute.

Does Tim Robbins even include it on his resume any more?


message 46: by Angie (last edited Jan 05, 2009 12:54PM) (new)

86285 Kai I saw on BN.com there is a Futurama movie coming out in February but I am not even really sure what it is.

PS Howard the Duck is more like a horror movie. ;)


message 45: by Tom (new)

821945 Marshy, HOWARD THE DUCK. Wow. It is actually coming out on DVD this year. Wow. Just-- just--- Wow. I remain speechless at this movie.


message 44: by Kai (new)

1093047 Angie wrote: "I am a little late but I love Futurama! I thought at one point cartoon network was bringing it back but apparently not? "

last i heard of there were some dvds last year right or the year before?


message 43: by Tom (new)

821945 Marshy, I'm not sure I would include TIME BANDITS as science fiction. I think I'd call it more of a fantasy than anything else. Love the movie, of course. That wonderful scene where the bandits enlarge Kevin's room is one of my favorite things in movies.


message 42: by Marshy (new)

1307326 Dark Star is great, as is the opening credits and dolphin song "So long and thanks for all the fish" in Hitchhikers' even if the rest of the movie doesn't quite cut it - although it does have its moments.

Red Dwarf is great - except for the last 1 or 2 seasons after Rimmer leaves, then it goes pants. There are a couple of books by "Grant Naylor" - apseudonym of writers Rob Grant and Doug Naylor that are excellent value for Douglas Adams fans, and are far beyond being novelisations of the tv show. Well worth checking out.

Controversial - but what about Howard the Duck? I know it is widely despised and ridiculed, but there's plenty of folks out there with a soft spot for it too.

Surely, Time Bandits can go down here too.


message 41: by Angie (new)

86285 I am a little late but I love Futurama! I thought at one point cartoon network was bringing it back but apparently not?


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Books mentioned in this topic

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Bill, the Galactic Hero (other topics)

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Philip José Farmer (other topics)
Kurt Vonnegut (other topics)
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