Mutants of 2051 AD is one of the great forgotten classics! MEGA-KUDOS for including it. The album of the soundtrack for Strange Brew explains what happens after the film breaks. Bob MacKenzie goes to a disco planet, and all the mutants go shopping. Completely wonderful! Thanks IO9!
Cheers to you, Charlie Jane! I don't think I've watched my copy of ROLLERBLADE in 20 years, easily. My friend Conrad Brooks worked for Don Jackson a number of times, and nobody made better 80's cheese than Don Jackson.
Amazon has it for 24.00, and it appears to be the same disc. There's an item on that page that makes me think it might be a Canadian import similar to the Canadian release of BATTLE ROYAL that Netflix rents. IMBd doesn't list any recent U.S. distributors.
With Don Dead, I'm not sure who has control of the rights as he made a series of these films long after New World Pictures went under, the original distributor.
@Allen_Richards: Is this the one where the woman (nun?) in the wheelchair says something like "When we were young we would skate for fun, now we skate or die!"
@Golem100: Yikes! It's been so long since i've seen it that I couldn't tel lyou. I'll ahve to do some serious unboxing to find my old vhs and give it a look.
Being that there's 4 films in the series, that line could potentially have come from any one of them.
I was reading the description of "Rollerblade" and trying really hard to shoehorn it into what I remember of "Rollerball", and it JUST WOULDN'T WORK, not even if I tried to remember that horrible remake. (let us not speak further of it. ever.)
"Rollerblade" looks *awesome*. I wonder if any of Garen's sources can dig up a copy for the SF Movie Marathon this year.
@regis: To the best of my knowledge, ROLLER BLADE has never been on DVD. You might be able to find the vhs on eBay. It was released by Good Times, who eventually became Anchor Bay. The more I think about it, it was one of those EP speed cheapie releases.
@DerwinPoe: Holy fuck, dude. I just watched ZARDOZ for the first time last friday and had to pick my brains off the wall behind me after that trippy bitch completely blew my mind. I've seen some weird movies, but never one so far out there by such a well-respected director.
@Chip Overclock: Good Lord, no! Night of the Comet is one of those films from the late 80s-early 90s that will always be on my list of favorites. Back when they made cheap sci-fi movies that didn't completely suck. Night of the Creeps, Blood of Heroes, Split Second, Deep Star Six. Classics. Definitely E-Ticket attractions.
@Chip Overclock: Umm, no. It had Mary Woronov in it, duh! And that guy who was in Eating Raoul, wasn't he in some other science fiction thing?
Hmm, it's on the tip of my tongue...
@thufir_hawat: That still doesn't answer the question of what other science fiction thing he was in... it's on the tip of my tongue too... Scavenger? Dowager? Uh... it'll come back to me.
@Charlie Jane Anders: Wasn't there a TV show called Voyeur? Something about a mission from the Federation of Space Perverts...probing may have been involved.
@Grey_Area: Holy Cats! I'd completely forgotten that Beltran was in EATING RAOUL with Mary Woronov and Paul Bartel. Another one of my favorite movies. Yeah, Mary Woronov, mmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
@Chip Overclock: I'm pretty sure I saw it on WB when I was 12 on a Saturday afternoon, and I was immediately hooked. I still have very fond memories of it, and I re-watch it every few years. I think a lot of people love it (well, obviously judging by these comments!)
No love for the 80's New Zealand sci-fi flick The Quiet Earth?
The main character's a balding scientist who wakes up one morning to discover that the project he was working on appears to have eradicated all other life on Earth, and does the only logical thing...
He breaks into the biggest mansion he can find, gorges himself on champagne and caviar, dresses up in woman's clothing and begins making Hitler-eque speeches to the army of famous historical figures cutouts he's set up in the garden.
He then goes on a destructive rampage, bursting into into a church, shooting the crucifix with a shotgun, and declaring that he is now God.
Man, if I ever inexplicably survive the end of the world, that's the first thing I'm going to do! (well, obviously second after busting into the local gun store)
@Charlie Jane Anders: Okay, so now you've got to write about any SFnal stuff (including LOTR-related) in New Zealand. Mrs. Overclock (etc.) and I are planning pre/post-WorldCon activities when it's in Melbourne in 2010. We already did a pretty good Australia tour the last time it was there. New Zealand is definitely on our radar screens.
@Garrison Dean: R.O.A.C.H.: He was from Hard Knuckle... I had to replace him with the cool image from Nite Of The Comet. But the original image is over at post-apoaclypse, and I link to it further down.
I think the worst case scenario in both the Postman and Waterworld is Kevin Costners survival rate. How does that guy do it. On the one hand, he has his own ranch and he's a bit of a mans man...so he's handy to have around at the end of the world. On the other....if he survives, society will rebuild and Costner will be able to pen and direct another film like The Postman. Maybe after being saved by Costner, we could cover him in concrete and just worship him as a statue!! Hmm, just saying.
@CoffinDodger (If the typos crap. Blame my keyboard) WTF? The Postman was AWESOME!!! (compared to Waterworld, and only compared to Waterworld)
Do you really want something as permanent as a statue of Costner around your post-apocalyptic wasteland? Maybe you could just sculpt him out of butter?
@wanion: Either way, we would have to dispose of him after he saves us all. If we cover him in concrete, we not only get a statue of Costner..but the most lifelike one ever. Then we can write on it.
@Evil Tortie's Mom: R.O.A.C.H.: I think if you put the time and effort into winning a contest by making the "best" butter Costner, then words like "winner" and "loser" no longer have meaning.
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(A Brit in his bedclothes and a girl he met once at a party, Hitchhiker's Guide!)
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(Coffin Dodger's retort in 3... 2... 1...)
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[dvd.shop.ebay.com]
Amazon has it for 24.00, and it appears to be the same disc. There's an item on that page that makes me think it might be a Canadian import similar to the Canadian release of BATTLE ROYAL that Netflix rents. IMBd doesn't list any recent U.S. distributors.
With Don Dead, I'm not sure who has control of the rights as he made a series of these films long after New World Pictures went under, the original distributor.
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Being that there's 4 films in the series, that line could potentially have come from any one of them.
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"Rollerblade" looks *awesome*. I wonder if any of Garen's sources can dig up a copy for the SF Movie Marathon this year.
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I think I've seen all of these. HBO in the 80's was a fun thing to have.
I actually saw "Strange Brew" in the theaters (matinee price).
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You are not alone! One of my favourite 80's flicks.
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Hmm, it's on the tip of my tongue...
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Forager (a shout out to the fourth world)?
Or perhaps you are thinking about Manticore.
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The main character's a balding scientist who wakes up one morning to discover that the project he was working on appears to have eradicated all other life on Earth, and does the only logical thing...
He breaks into the biggest mansion he can find, gorges himself on champagne and caviar, dresses up in woman's clothing and begins making Hitler-eque speeches to the army of famous historical figures cutouts he's set up in the garden.
He then goes on a destructive rampage, bursting into into a church, shooting the crucifix with a shotgun, and declaring that he is now God.
Man, if I ever inexplicably survive the end of the world, that's the first thing I'm going to do! (well, obviously second after busting into the local gun store)
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"Only one man can kill this many russians. Bring his guitar to me!"
Also, while I'm quoting, Yor Hunter from the Future features the immortal chestnut: "DAMN YOU, TALKING BOX!"
I quote this line CONSTANTLY.
09/08/09
I love that movie. I know it's horrible, but it's one of my most cherished DVD's.
The Red Elvises played the local state fair the year after it was released, and I got them to sign the cover.
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Do you really want something as permanent as a statue of Costner around your post-apocalyptic wasteland? Maybe you could just sculpt him out of butter?
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But, point taken.