Community Run Forums for Starship SF
http://sf.theboard.net/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl
Passenger Information >> Boarding Deck - Forward Section >> SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
http://sf.theboard.net/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1708377808

Message started by L.A. Connection on Feb 19th, 2024 at 4:23pm

Title: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by L.A. Connection on Feb 19th, 2024 at 4:23pm
Sf/49 is in the books!

What do you think about how it went??

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by Dinsdale on Feb 19th, 2024 at 9:31pm
A great lineup of films, no clinkers in the bunch, though could have done without another viewing of Top of the Food Chain😁
Good running order and amazing splicing by David on 1 Million Years BC.
Time to retire Dr. Hot Bot. The $30 price increase for SF50 was disappointing

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by albatross on Feb 20th, 2024 at 9:30am
A solid marathon lineup. Blast from the Past was missing the required sci fi (other than surviving 35 years underground), but it was worth it.
The theatre was great, the staff/volunteers were great, and the scheduling was great!

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 20th, 2024 at 10:44am
I got a problem with restoration. when you reproduce with yourself you do not produce your twin. you do reproduce the same baby every time you go through the loop but that baby is not the mother's twin. the odds are some thing like 2 raised to the 27000th power. it would not happen on the first time through the loop.
but it was a great movie. and so was upgrade. we should know about these movies soon after they are made. what is the cause of the delay?
what happened to the gort award?

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 20th, 2024 at 10:46am

albatross wrote on Feb 20th, 2024 at 9:30am:
A solid marathon lineup. Blast from the Past was missing the required sci fi (other than surviving 35 years underground), but it was worth it.
The theatre was great, the staff/volunteers were great, and the scheduling was great!

bftp had a solid recommendation from the messageboard participants a few years ago

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 20th, 2024 at 11:03am
did blast from the past mark the end of brendon fasier's as well as alicia silverstone's carreers? why? (fraziers's comeback notwithstanding)

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by Caleb451 on Feb 20th, 2024 at 5:17pm
How was Ready Player One received?

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by L.A. Connection on Feb 21st, 2024 at 1:48am

Dinsdale wrote on Feb 19th, 2024 at 9:31pm:
A great lineup of films, no clinkers in the bunch
Good running order and amazing splicing by David on 1 Million Years BC.
The $30 price increase for SF50 was disappointing



Was the early bird price at last year's marathon $70?

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 21st, 2024 at 11:14am

Caleb451 wrote on Feb 20th, 2024 at 5:17pm:
How was Ready Player One received?

it was well received. however predestination and upgrade stole the show and i highly recommend both. you should see them if you have not already.
btw your seat was occupied by a male of roughly your age and size. strangely he retained the  seat throughout the marathon just as you do/have done. i did inform him that it was the seat of caleb.

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 21st, 2024 at 11:17am

kirok1 wrote on Feb 20th, 2024 at 10:44am:
I got a problem with restoration. when you reproduce with yourself you do not produce your twin. you do reproduce the same baby every time you go through the loop but that baby is not the mother's twin. the odds are some thing like 2 raised to the 27000th power. it would not happen on the first time through the loop.
but it was a great movie. and so was upgrade. we should know about these movies soon after they are made. what is the cause of the delay?
what happened to the gort award?

sorry. that's predestination. not restoration. ::)

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by Caleb451 on Feb 21st, 2024 at 5:24pm

kirok1 wrote on Feb 21st, 2024 at 11:14am:
btw your seat was occupied by a male of roughly your age and size. strangely he retained the  seat throughout the marathon just as you do/have done. i did inform him that it was the seat of caleb.


Thanks! Good looking out!

Title: : SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by L.A. Connection on Feb 24th, 2024 at 2:15pm
First of all, a big THANK YOU to the event's organizers including Garen, Ian, Harry, Dan, Suzanne and so many more. The staff of the Somerville for their yeoman work. And, of course, my co-passengers. On to the movies!

THE MATRIX  (1999) Time does funny things sometimes such as here, making a once ground-breaking spectacle appear almost 'ordinary' now. STILL, the VFX remain very good, it revived Keanu's career and Fishburne is solid. Projected on a good 35mm film print. Reboot: Neo takes the Blue Pill!

ONE MILLION YEARS B.C. (1966) - In tribute to Raquel Welch, this corny caveman flick was never all that despite Harryhausen's stop motion (too bad about the Iguana), Mario Nascimbene's score and Martine Beswick's feral performance as Welch's antagonist. The real 'star' here for this 35mm showing was projectionist David Kornfeld who spliced together two European prints for this one of a kind showing (including a German one) which includes a scene not in U.S. theatrical prints. Bravo!

LAPSIS (2021) - Low key dark comedy about the gig economy where AI tech is ever present. It went over well.

Lost In Space (1965) - The unaired pilot 'No Place To Hide'. Interesting variant to the series without Dr. Smith or The Robot. Would have made for a decent adventure program (it was patterned after the Swiss Family Robinson). Of course, Dr. Smith and Robot eventually became arguably the two most important pop culture aspects of the show. 

READY PLAYER ONE (2018) The 70mm film print was immaculate. The audience enjoyed Spielberg's lite AI adventure which had lots of easter eggs for the sci-fi crowd to uncover.

DREDD (2012) Brutally efficient reboot of the Judge Dredd character has more in common with ROBOCOP than the Stallone original. Not much in the way of exposition, but the balletic cinematography and graphic action carry the day.

MAD MAX (1979) - George Miller's original remains one of the great exploitation films. Mel Gibson's title character goes the Joseph Campbell hero route and perfectly sets up the burnt out shell of a man that is seen in the series follow-ups. The homo-erotic undertones are fascinating to ponder. The sequels are more elaborate, but, MAD MAX stands its ground and shows Miller's mastery of the medium from the get go.

PREDESTINATION (2015) Intriguing and said to be faithful to the Heinlein story. The screenplay is oddly structured with a very long prologue and a rushed ending which flattens out the momentum of the piece. Fantastic performance by Sarah Snook and a very solid one by Ethan Hawke.

TOP OF THE FOOD CHAIN (1999) - A special thank you to Director John Paisz for recording a special video intro just for this showing (tip of the cap to Gerald Perry). As Paisz notes, FOOD CHAIN is an offbeat combo of Twin Peaks, Petticoat Junction and Sci-Fi. In some ways its easy to see why this bizzaro hybrid never caught on, but this is a kinky, wicked piece of indie filmmaking which is out there just waiting to be discovered as a cult film. Seek it out!

UPGRADE (2018) - Not a bad set-up, that, unfortunately, settles in too quickly into a typical, if unusually nihilistic, action film. The lead character isn't very interesting but Leigh Wannell's script raises some intriguing notions of AI.

ATTACK OF THE CRAB MONSTERS (1957) It's little over an hour long, but Corman's creature feature gets in a few choice bits courtesy of Charles B. Griffith's (LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS) screenplay

DEEP BLUE SEA (1999) - More aquatic schlock, if at a much higher price tag. The story never takes itself too seriously and the cast plays it to the hilt. For some reason, I had heard that the 'CGI Sharks' were terrible for years - they are not. Sure, they aren't perfect, but they work well enough.

BLAST FROM THE PAST (1999) - 'Starring three Oscar winning actors” may not have been foreseen when Hugh Wilson cast Brendan Fraser, but the actor plays the man-child very well here. Alicia Silverstone was near the height of her fame and makes for a winning Eve to Fraser's Adam. And, if stuck in a bomb shelter for 3 1/2 decades, who better to play parents than Sissy Spacek and Christopher Walken? It's slight, bordering on sit-comish, but a fun way to end the festival.

The shorts were Chuck Jones' Duck Dodgers In The 24 1/2 Century (1953) and 'Hair Raising Hare' (1946) with an amusing Peter Lorre animated mad scientist and Gossamer's first appearance

Thanks to everyone involved!

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 24th, 2024 at 9:04pm
is there any truth to the rumor that jamie lee curtis was born with the same "condition" that was depicted in predestination?

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by Brendan on Feb 25th, 2024 at 8:38am
We could only stay until about 10pm due to work commitments on Monday, but we really enjoyed the movies we saw.  'The Matrix' still holds up although the amount of gunfire is more disturbing in our current world than it was when I first saw the movie. 'One Million Years BC' was an interesting film for that period, but it really didn't work for me. 'Lapsis' was a lot better than I expected, but the ending didn't feel resolved; it just seemed to "end".  I've seen 'Ready Player One' a couple of times, definitely more fun to watch with a crowd that was getting all the references and Easter eggs.

The 'Lost in Space' pilot was interesting; you could see Irving Allen's attempt to hook people with various vignettes. "Family of the Future", "Fighting the Elements", "Lost Civilizations".  I thought the placement was good; it did allow folks to take a dinner break. I'd recommend programming something short in that dinner slot to allow that opportunity.

Title: Re: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by kirok1 on Feb 25th, 2024 at 8:58pm
one million years bc was making a profound statement. the tribe of raquel welch had superior weapons technology (stone tipped spears) yet they were better at conflict resolution. they did not fight over possessions as much as the other tribe did. the struggle for food was less arduous and it led to a tribe leadership that was not the strongest but instead the wisest. and this is attributable to better weapons.

Title: Lapsed: SF/49 in Review: Comments, Suggestions
Post by L.A. Connection on Feb 26th, 2024 at 8:16am

Brendan wrote on Feb 25th, 2024 at 8:38am:
. 'Lapsis' was a lot better than I expected, but the ending didn't feel resolved; it just seemed to "end"....
The 'Lost in Space' pilot was interesting; you could see Irving Allen's attempt to hook people with various vignettes. "Family of the Future", "Fighting the Elements", "Lost Civilizations".  I thought the placement was good; it did allow folks to take a dinner break. I'd recommend programming something short in that dinner slot to allow that opportunity.


Thank you on the scheduling. It's always a tough task to try and create something that will appeal to 300 different people! I try to help balance all the various 'constituencies". One thing I've learned over the decades of helping with the schedule - People are gonna eat when THEY wanna eat!

As to LAPSIS. I think the ending works fine. It shows that no matter how much you rage against the machine, that the machine finds a way........

Community Run Forums for Starship SF » Powered by YaBB 2.5 AE!
YaBB Forum Software © 2000-2010. All Rights Reserved.