Watched a trio
of science fiction flicks this weekend, two with the little ones and one by
myself last night (the wife flew out to Cleveland on business earlier in the
day). One full-fledged classic, one
cheesy classic, and one downright bad.
The downright
bad one I watched by myself because it was made it 2010, and thus had
gratuitous violence, gore and horrifying deaths. And though the same could be said – heavy
emphasis on that word, ‘could’ – about the other two, but since the first was
made in 1954 and the second in 1968, my children would not be scarred for life
watching them. (Although The Blob, a 1958 entry into the world of
cinematic sci fi, most certainly scarred me for life, though I watched it
without parental supervision when I was about eight or nine.)
Anyhoo … the
first flick was the psychedelic joint Japanese-American toy model, rubber suit
monster movie The Green Slime. I recall watching it only once as a lad – but
what an impression it made on me! All
the mesmerizing essentials: a daring and dangerous mission, a space station,
alien goo that can’t be killed but multiplies into man-sized giant-eyeballed
sparkler-tentacled killing machines. Oh,
and the space station, resembling Pee Wee Herman’s bicycle’s rear tire, falls
aflame into earth’s atmosphere, eventually exploding in a furious bang.
Well, the second
time around it wasn’t nearly as good.
Even the little one’s thought it was a bit on the lame side, though they
watched the entire thing in varying stages of riveted-ness. We even had some good laughs, too. For example, we all kinda simultaneously
realized the green slimers look remarkably like Brobee from Yo Gabba Gabba gone
bad:
Brobee ... good
Green Slimer ... bad
Whenever a green
slimer gets lasered and bleeds onto the floor, out of the green slimy blood
pops up these marble-sized miniature green slimers who in short order grow to
join the army of green slimeys. Patch –
age five – had the best line of the afternoon when she shuddered and labeled
them “booger babies.”
Next on the
miniature silver screen in the living room was the classic – the essential –
the phenomenal – Godzilla, King of the
Monsters. The Americanized version
of the black-and-white Japanese original, with Raymond Burr as reporter “Steve
Martin” to frame and narrate the terrible reign of Godzilla, a.k.a., the
metaphor for the two nuclear bombs that ravaged Japan less than a decade
earlier. The only Godzilla movie to ever
be nominated for a best picture (I think, if I recall correctly), this was done
right. Godzilla was bad, bad, bad, in
the best of ways, on both a metaphorical and a guy-in-a-suit-stomping-models
sense, but what always got me, even as a kid, was the tortured scientist
rocking an eye patch, whose “oxygen destroyer” chemical ultimately slays the
dragon. He agonizes over the horror of
his discovery – another nod to the atom bomb – as well as losing beautiful
Emiko to Ogata, and his sacrifice at the film’s conclusion has now entered the
heart of the next generation – Little One cried out, “Why did he have to
die!!!”
Later I had the
misfortune to watch Skyline. A few years ago my buddy and I considered
seeing it in the theaters … for about a minute, maybe two. Decided against it, and it now I realize how
good a decision it was. For I will never
have those ninety minutes back. Lost,
into the void of time …
Well … it wasn’t
that bad. Oh, yeah, bad it was, but more in a lame
kinda “why bother?” way. There was
potential, if only in the fact that there were elements of at least
half-a-dozen better SF movies stolen within it.
Douche-y LA types wake up hungover on the morning of an alien invasion:
falling, hypnotic blue lights turn the victims into obedient zombies – then
suck them straight up into the air to awaiting Independence Day spaceships – for their BRAINS!!!
The first 45
minutes are actually watchable, if only for a what-would-I-do-in-their-shoes
type thing and the whole what’s-a-going-on-here? thing. But once the reveals are all revealed (the
aliens, their penchant for brains, their gravity-defying spaceships, etc), it’s
all tiresome chases and explosions. And
nothing makes sense once it’s all over and you start thinking about it. No one reacts the way they would in real
life, people do stupid things, nuclear explosions don’t knock over high-rise
apartment buildings, etc, etc, etc.
(By the way,
those movies ripped off by Skyline include,
but are not limited to, War of the Worlds,
Independence Day, Resident Evil, Fire in the Sky, Battle: Los
Angeles, one of the Matrix sequels,
Cloverfield …)
Bottom line:
The Green Slime – eh, meh, C for nostalgia’s sake
Godzilla, King of the Monsters – A, still holds up from my youth
Skyline – C (it’s an average: B first half, D
last half)
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