The Traumatic Cinematic Show, Ep. 53: 80s Month #4: Cloak & Dagger

"Now, Davie, you're a boy after my own heart, but I'm pretty sure you're too young to watch Flesh Gordon vs. The Intergalactic Cheerleaders."
“Now, Davie, you’re a boy after my own heart, but I’m pretty sure you’re too young to watch Flesh Gordon vs. The Intergalactic Cheerleaders.”

80?s month has come to an end and to finish it off proper the trio delves into a Dabney Coleman classic Cloak & Dagger. Find out what the inside of a Atari cartridge should look like, if there is life after staring in ET, and how people communicated before cell phones. Will Mr. DeMoss crack the code and expose the top secrete plans to the world? Will Mr. Wickliff find the hidden message this film was trying to portray? Will MuGumBo be able to stay awake through the full discussion? Find out these answers and many more right now by listening to the show!

Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com

Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew

Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our intro song) and his many project at the following links-
https://www.facebook.com/imageblownout http://www.youtube.com/user/imageblownout

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The Traumatic Cinematic Show, Ep. 52: 80s Month #3: Re-Animator

Re-animatorWho hasn’t wanted to dabble in the fine art of bringing the dead back to life? Well in this weeks episode the trio delves deep into the warped mind of H.P. Lovecraft and the film Re-Animator which is loosely based on one of his stories. Will the crew succeed in bring back a recently deceased listener? Will DeMoss explain why H.P. Lovecraft was a lonely soul tormented by freakish nightmars? Will Mike share the secrete of the glowing serum in the syringes so those at home can bring back ex loved ones? The only way to find out it to listen right now!!

Remember we have a voice mail now so you can troll the show with ease from your cell phone! 765-396-8666

Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com

Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew

And we have a spiffy newly cleaned site http://traumaticcinematic.com

Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our intro song) and his many project at the following links-
https://www.facebook.com/imageblownout http://www.youtube.com/user/imageblownout

An Announcement: Down with the Sickness

Sorry, guys: those twelve days of silence were brought to you by the worst case of food poisoning I’ve ever had and my recovery from it. Normal service should resume shortly, I just wanted to drop you all a line appreciating your patience.

I’m currently writing next week’s reviews…which largely means re-tooling the plans for last week’s that I didn’t get to, occupied as I was by Magog larvae. We’ll just pretend that didn’t happen and start next week up fresh and ready. In the meantime, here’s this thing I found that has nothing to do with anything. I just found it an exceptionally well-edited piece of music video work that deserves more study and/or attention. I’m sure, in some wacky parallel dimension where I teach editing classes instead of taking them, some better-paid version of me is already using it as the basis for a six-week course. The most succinct description I can give it? “Tron: Legacy in four minutes and twenty-seven seconds.”

 

The Traumatic Cinematic Show, Ep. 51: 80s Month #2: Buckaroo Banzai

Every sci-fi fan crazy 'bout a sharp-dressed crew of Super Scientist rockstars.
Every sci-fi fan crazy ’bout a sharp-dressed crew of Super Scientist rockstars.

To keep in line with the all 80’s Traumatic Cinematic month the crew watched and discusses a mid 80’s classic The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension. Find out the varied opinions on this cult flick and learn why some of the guys think the whole production was a inside joke.

Remember we have a voice mail now so you can troll the show with ease from your cell phone! 765-396-8666

Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com

Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew

And we have a spiffy newly cleaned site http://traumaticcinematic.com

Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our intro song) and his many project at the following links-
https://www.facebook.com/imageblownout http://www.youtube.com/user/imageblownout

Download episode here (right click, save target/link as)

This Island Earth (1955)

The exposed brain makes him more powerful. It's not a weakness in any way whatsoever.
The exposed brain makes him more powerful. It’s not a weakness in any way whatsoever.

…is another sci-fi film eclipsed in fame by a fragment of it’s own iconography. “Everyone” “knows” the image to your right; you’ll have “seen” it in a thousand places. Possibly a thousand-thousand if you go to any decent number of sci-fi conventions. But can you name that man-in-suit monster without resort to Wikipedia? I couldn’t, until I watched the film again for the first time in far too long…and remembered why it’d been so long in the first place.  I’ll take it over Lady and the Tramp or fucking Oklahoma! any day, but as paragons of its era go, it’s no Day the Earth Stood Still. Or Beast from 20,000 Fathoms. Technical movie nerds remember it primarily as one of the last films to use three-strip Technicolor, but as far as technicolor SF goes, War of the Worlds will give you more bang for your buck (literally). So what is it about This Island Earth that I like so much? All the pretty, pretty colors? Am I that shallow?

Cameras that printed color on one strip of film were available as early as 1941, which is where Ken Burns found all that color battlefield footage from World War II. If you watched The War you probably noticed how grainy and soft-focus everything looked. It took almost fifteen years to refine that out of the process, but it happened. That’s why movies from before 1954 look the way they do – all the colors are brighter – they “pop” at you – and I’m willing to bet that was this movie’s primary selling point. It looks, in almost every detail, like a parade of pulp magazine covers. Continue reading This Island Earth (1955)

The Traumatic Cinematic Show, Ep. 50: 80s Month #1: Class of Nuke ‘Em High

class of nuke em highIt is a new year and we have changed a few little things around here at the Traumatic Cinematic studios. First off we are rocking a brand spanking new theme song and outro song created by our house band Moneygrip courtesy of Tom Jenner. You can feel the excitement from the trio as they are back from their holiday break energized and ready to conquer the world one movie at a time.

This weeks show the guys discuss a Troma classic Class of Nuke Em High and they leave no stone unturned. Radioactive weed seems to be the theme of this story so load up this episode, roll one up, and prepare to glow in the dark!

Check out Tom Jenner and his many project at the following links-

https://www.facebook.com/imageblownout

http://www.youtube.com/user/imageblownout

Remember we have a voice mail now so you can troll the show with ease from your cell phone! 765-396-8666

Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com

Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew

And we have a spiffy newly cleaned site http://traumaticcinematic.com

Download episode here (right click, save target/link as)

It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955)

I'm sure you've seen this before in a hundred thousand "History of Special Effects" documentaries.
I’m sure you’ve seen this before in a hundred thousand “History of Special Effects” documentaries. Well, too bad, because 90% of the movie is…something else.

Columbia Pictures should give us all hope that we can rise above our station in life. This little Poverty Row studio, which made a name for itself producing comedy shorts in the 30s (including The Three Stooges’ most famous works) had, by the mid-50s, replaced RKO as a member of the Big Studios Club. With everything from Superman cartoons to  Marlon Brando Oscar winners in their catalog, its seems only natural Columbia would try to field a giant monster movie for 1955.

You have to give them credit for going about it the right way – hiring two of Them!‘s writers and a man (now) more famous than either of ’em – the stop-motion animator behind The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Ray Harryhausen. If this film’s remembered for anything, it’s remembered for Harryhausen’s effects. This is the mid-point between his career-defining turn in Beast and the next year’s State of the Art showcase, Earth vs. The Flying Saucers. But Art doesn’t come cheap, so I shouldn’t be surprised all of Harryhausen’s contribution’s are crammed into the film’s last 15 minutes. I was. Unpleasantly so. But I shouldn’t have been.

It Came from Beneath the Sea fired its first warning shot right off, beginning with a Bad Movie Double Down: droning narration played over military stock footage. It’s 1955, after all, one year after the successful launch of the U.S. Navy’s first nuclear submarine, the U.S.S. Nautilus. This is meant to make the move Relevant to a distracted audience who may not give a crap about anything outside their pathetic little lives. It ends up pointing towards a theme that might’ve ameliorated the many failings of this film, had anyone cared to play that theme out. As Our Humble Narrator says,

“The mind of man had thought of everything – except that which was beyond his comprehension!” Continue reading It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955)