Tag: star wars

  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Star Wars Explained’s Alex Damon & Mollie Damon

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with Star Wars Explained’s Alex Damon & Mollie Damon, about Star Wars trivia, training montages, Gungan party balls, galactic improv, Ch’ckle Hutts, cosplay, talking figures, pop quizzes, Anakin’s hats, lockdown lean-ins, LEGO losses, spooky season, seasonal Grogu, Marvel’s furry butt, and anticipation.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Alex Damon & Mollie Damon“:

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Bobby Moynihan

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with actor Bobby Moynihan, about pool daze, house living, voices, Disney daughter, pin pearly, small spaces, Flavacol, cotton candy concessions, Mr. Mayor, cancelling balloons, fish biscuit machines, polar bears, SNL, beards, Tommy Porkins, Muppets, takeaway props, Loafy, uncomfortable influencing, DuckTales, and Star Wars rabbit holes.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Bobby Moynihan“:

    SUBSCRIBE
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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume XIII

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have another of my periodic chats with writer, deranged millionaire, minor television celebrity, PC, literary trivialist, judge, and performer John Hodgman, about lingering, beloving, unasked questions, AfterThis, Blues Brothers fusion, Dan Aykroyd side missions, fan letters, Sisyphean twisters, judicial juggling, Daily memories, generational tastes, Star Wars promises, Galaxy’s Edging, Mandalorian madness, and starliner friends.

    And be sure you GO to JohnHodgman.com for all sorts of audio and visual delights.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume XIII“:

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    (PREVIOUSLY: An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume I, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume II, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume III, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume IV, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume V, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume VI, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume VII, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume VIII, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume IX, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume X, An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume XI (Patreon Patron Exclusive), & An Evening With John Hodgman & Ken Plume XII (Patreon Patron Exclusive))

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Disney Dan Becker

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with vlogger Disney Dan Becker, about Royal Plumage, Lord Beckeredge, pie flights, Depressorman, pumpkin pie pop tarts, bacon, horror nights, lo-fi Fantasmic, Mansion burials, upsells, penny sacks, salt lamps, and Galaxy’s Edge wars.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Disney Dan Becker“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-disney_dan_becker.mp3]

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/13/16: The Wonder Twins

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    While Captain America: Civil War is bring up theaters (and burning out the awful memories of Batman vs. Superman, the fine folks at Hot Toys are still releasing figures from the last major outing of Earth’s mightiest heroes, Avengers 2: Age Of Ultron Making their debut in that film (and returning in Civil War), you can now get the Age Of Ultron 1/6-scale The Vision (Sideshow, $219.99) & Wanda Maximoff, aka Scarlet Witch (Sideshow, $229.99). We’ve come to expect miracles on these figures, and neither of these disappoint, as the likenesses and costuming are spot-on. And even though he didn’t make it out of Age Of Ultron alive, you’ll also want to make sure you complete your set of Maximoff twins with Pietro himself, Quicksilver (Sideshow, $209.99). Really, there’s something wonderfully precious about a figure wearing a perfect set of 1/6-scale running shoes. Truly, we live in an age of miracles.

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    A half-century ago, film legend Vincent Price and his wife Mary released what they termed A Treasury Of Great Recipes (Calla Editions, $50 SRP) which, in what may very well be the first celebrity cookbook, collected together recipes gathered from the couple’s globetrotting. From European cuisine to American hot dogs, the recipes run the gamut of tastes, all presented with introductory context of their travels. This new 50th anniversary edition features a retrospective preface from Vincent Price and a brand new foreword from Wolfgang Puck.

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    It’s brilliant that Abrams is genuinely committed to seeing that all 3 films will eventually get a book celebrating the iconic trading cards of our youth, as evidenced by the release of their second Star Wars volume, The Empire Strikes Back: The Original Topps Trading Card Series (Abrams Comicarts, $24.95 SRP), which reproduces all of the images, and also includes a clutch of brand new cards exclusive to the book.

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    I dearly miss the Batman: The Animated Series maquette series that the Warner Bros. Store released years and years ago. But thankfully, that fine tradition has been carried on by Diamond Select with their stellar Mad Love Harley Quinn Resin Statue (Diamond Select, $150), which fits into that classic scale and perfectly captures Bruce Timm’s artwork from that Paul Dini/Bruce Timm masterpiece. And do yourself a favor and also keep an eye on their Batman: TAS bust releases, including their Almost Got ‘im Harley Quinn and Laughing Fish Joker (Diamond Select, $60 each). More!

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    While it’s a bit of cognitive dissonance to see Jennifer Lawrence playing a middle-aged woman, she’s just such an ace performer that she carries Joy (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) on her shoulders, as the titular real-life creator of the Miracle Mop, Joy Mangano, who faces nearly-insurmountable obstacles before establishing her personal and professional legacy. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes and a gallery.

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    As a prelude to giving her the legendary variety show that would cement her place in comedy history, CBS gave Carol Burnett a prime time special in 1966. Now you can watch the Carol +2: The Original Queens Of Comedy (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$12.95 SRP) special, in which Carol reached out and secured an equal legendary guest star in Lucille Ball. Also included on the disc is the 1972 television movie version of Once Upon A Mattress, in which Carol reprised her original Broadway role, and a Burnett-introduced sketch from the 1963 special Carol & Company featuring the 1st appearance of her “charwoman” character.

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    The thing that I love most about Thinkgeek is that so many of the products that they develop in-house fall into the category of “Well, that’s pretty nifty and I think I want one”. Case in point? Their Star Wars Death Star Waffle Maker (Thinkgeek, $39.99). It’s exactly what it says it is – a waffle maker that makes Death Star waffles. Because who doesn’t love waffles? Thinkgeek knows you do. And they love you.

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    Roger Corman’s low-budget cult classic ghost story The Terror (Film Detective, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP) benefits from stars Boris Karloff and Jack Nicholson, plus five uncredited directors, including Francis Coppola and Nicholson himself. It also benefits from a brand new high definition restoration.

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    It’s been 30 years since Maverick took the highway to the danger zone, so that means it’s the perfect time to release a brand new 30th anniversary edition of Top Gun (Paramount, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$22.98 SRP), the film that launched Tom Cruise into the stratosphere. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, multi-angle storyboards with optional commentary, music videos, TV spots, and interviews.

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    Spanning two decades of travels and containing a trio of specials, Bob Hope: Entertaining The Troops (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$12.95 SRP) find the legendary comic traveling the globe and bringing his show packed with comedy and special guests to servicemen.

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    It’s been quite a few years since Michael Moore’s last documentary, but his latest, Where To Invade Next (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) is one of his most positive, as it takes a tongue-in-cheek but sincere look around the world for how other countries have tackled some of America’s greatest problem and could help re-inspire the American dream.

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    The co-creator of Supergirl, Brainiac, and The Legion Of Super-Heroes, Al Plastino was a golden age artist who worked on characters including Superman, Nancy, Joe Palooka, and Batman, and is now the subject of the illustrated biography Al Plastino: Last Superman Standing (Twomorrows, $17.95 SRP). Packed with art, author Eddy Zeno’s tome is a fine celebration of a great artist.

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    Cut off from the world, the stranded residents of Haven (E1, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP) face challenges across time and space as a cataclysm looms in the show’s final season. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, interviews, and more.

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    It’s a fair trick for a comedian to be able to bring his well-established stage persona to a sitcom and be able to build a viable show around it, but Jim Gaffigan manages to pull it off with the affable first season of The Jim Gaffigan Show (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP).

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    One of the greatest Blaxploitation films of all time gets a truly wonderful high definition restoration with the release of Dolemite (Vinegar Syndrome, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), which has been mastered in 2k from a newly-discovered 35mm print. Bonus features include an audio commentary, a making-of documentary, featurettes, and more.

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    The Criterion high definition mastering for David Lean’s powerfully moving adaptation of Noel Coward’s play about doomed romance, Brief Encounter (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) is as beautiful to behold as it is to experience again. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, documentaries, an interview with Coward scholar Barry Day, and a trailer.

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    Betty White, Wendie Malick, Jane Leaves, & Valerie Bertinelli return for the 6th and final season of TV Land’s surprise hit Hot In Cleveland (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP), featuring an impressive roster of guest stars including Craig Ferguson, Bob Newhart, Carol Burnett, Robert Wagner, and Huey Lewis.

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    Dakota Johnson doesn’t deserve the awfulness of 50 Shades Of Grey. If you’d like a much better vehicle for a charming actor, check out How To Be Single (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), which teams her up with Rebel Wilson, Alison Brie, and Leslie Mann in a comedy about lonely hearts in New York City. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and outtakes.

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    In order to prevent the destruction of the Earth, our heroes on the half shell journey into the farthest reaches of space in the 12 episodes found on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Beyond The Known Universe (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP). And best of all? Their guide is a robot voiced by The 10th Doctor himself, David Tennant. Oh, and we also get a full-fledged crossover with the old school animated turtles. Pretty nifty.

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    Mash up Sons of Anarchy and Deliverance and you pretty much have the show Outsiders (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$45.99 SRP), about an isolated clan in the mountains of Kentucky that live an insular, pagan lifestyle that becomes threatened by the outside world. Bonus materials include deleted scenes and featurettes.

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    If you’ve ever wondered about the ludicrously complex mechanisms that control how we remember, dive into the Nova special Memory Hackers (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP), in which neuroscientists attempt to determine the mechanisms that make it all work.

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    Olive Films continues to drop “thank goodness someone finally released them” catalogue titles in HD, with this month’s pair being Russell Crowe in The Sum Of Us (Olive, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP) and John Lithgow in the Robert Altman-produced Rich Kids (Olive Films, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP).

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    Your toddler picks for this week are a pair of new Nickelodeon releases – Bubble Guppies: Fun On The Farm (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) and preschool education friendly Let’s Learn STEM: Volume 2 (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), containing episodes from Team Umizoomi, Blaze And The Monster Machines, PAW Patrol, and Dora And Friends.

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    Those catalogue mavens at Mill Creek have mined the vaults for another batch of reasonably-priced releases, including complete series sets of the shows Dog House (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP), and 10 Items Or Less (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), the multi-film Hammer Films Collection (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$8.99 SRP) & The Randolph Scott Round-up (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), and Doomsday (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), which collects a trio of apocalyptic miniseries (Blackout, Meteor, Pandemic).

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    It’s no Pixar production, but there’s more plenty of charm in Norm Of The North (Lionsgate, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), an animated feature about a polar bear who heads to New York City in order to save his arctic home. Bonus materials include featurettes, and deleted scenes.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 4/1/16: Kylo Fool’s

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    Sure, the prequels showed that petulance runs deep in the Skywalker bloodline, but even Anakin never reached the levels of pure emo we saw in href=”http://affiliates.sideshowtoy.com/Tracker.aspx?aid=1303&href=http%3a%2f%2fwww.sideshowtoy.com%2fcollectibles%2fstar-wars-kylo-ren-hot-toys-902538%2f” target=”_blank”>Kylo Ren ($224.99), who has now been immortalized in 1/6th scale form by the fine folks at Hot Toys. Sadly, we don’t get an Adam Driver portrait, so the detail level comes from the way they’ve scaled down the textured fabric in the numerous layers of his deceptively simple looking outfit, as well as his weathered facemask. As with their recent release of Obi-Wan and Luke, he sports a swappable right forearm that contains an LED light feature for his unique cross-hilted lightsaber.

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    If you’re lucky, life is full of pleasant surprises. The arrival of the incredible modern television classic Freaks And Geeks (Shout Factory, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$119.00 SRP) in high definition? That, my friends, is the very epitome of a pleasant surprise. Not only do we get a fully remastered version of the original presentation, but we also get a 16×9 version, which I surprised to find out was the format (save for the pilot) that the show was actually shot in. And it looks great. All of the bonus materials from the stellar “Yearbook” DVD release have been carried over, with the addition of a brand new conversation with creator Paul Feig & producer Judd Apatow.

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    It’s a bit pointless to try and offer up a review of Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Walt Disney, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). Everyone’s seen it. Everyone has an opinion on it. So how does what is sure to be the first of many home video releases meet up with expectations? We’re going to have to wait until later in the year for a 3D release, but the bonus features this go round are marked by a singular great one, which is the extended making-of documentary which charts the creation of the film from the sale of Lucasfilm through the production. Admittedly, it feels like the first of what could be many documentaries, as there are plenty of aspects of production that are only touched upon, even in the clutch of additional featurettes the disc contains. And the deleted scenes only total less than 5 minutes, leaving tons of filmed material still unseen, including scenes with the mysterious Constable Zuvio, who got an action figure even though all trace of him was cut. So, yes, this is not the Peter Jackson-level special edition we were hoping for, but you know you’re impatient and are going to buy this first release regardless. So here it is. Now start saving your pennies for the special edition at the end of the year.

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    Oh, how I love nifty multi-task devices, and the UCO Trinity LED Lantern (Thinkgeek, $49.99) certainly falls into that sweet spot. Not only is it a perfect little handheld LED flashlight, but you can extend the housing and transform it from a unidirectional light into an omnidirectional lantern. Ah, but that’s not the end of its powers, because the last bit of wow actually has to do with power, as it manages to triple as a USB power charger. How’s that for a great emergency device?

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    I continue to marvel at the notion that, after this set, there are 25 episodes left until the entire run is available on home video. Thanks to the miracle workers at Shout Factory, Mystery Science Theater 3000: Volume XXXV (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$59.97 SRP) brings us four episodes closer to that seemingly impossible goal. Whizzes at clearing up rights red tape, this set continues the Joel/Mike episode split, with 12 To The Moon, Teenage Cave Man, Being From Another Planet (aka Time Walker), and Deathstalker And The Warriors From Hell, plus a quartet of featurettes.

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    I had very little expectations one way or the other from it, but wound up enjoying Disney’s latest animated feature immensely, which made digging into The Art Of Zootopia (Chronicle Books, $40 SRP) even more of a delight. As we’ve come to expect with these lovely hardcover tomes, it’s packed with design and development artwork and insight into the creation of the film.

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    The end of a cinematic series means fans can finally snap up a comprehensive collection containing all of the flicks and usually a load of extra bonus materials, and The Hunger Games: Complete 4-Film Co0llection (Lionsgate, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$64.97 SRP) brings together the entire quadrilogy, including all previously-available bonus features plus an exclusive bonus disc packed with additional documentaries, deleted scenes, and more.

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    There’s much to love and much to hate about Quentin Tarantino’s 8th film, The Hateful Eight (Anchor Bay, Rated, R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). For every beautifully evocative piece of dialogue, performance, or visual flourish, there’s a feeling that it’s the Olive Garden of spaghetti westerns. And much like every other Tarantino film before it, I like it for what it is, wish it lived up to its own potential, and will probably not get around to watching it again. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes.

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    Written as a gift to his young son Tenzin on the boy’s 5th birthday, Avatar: The Last Airbender – Legacy (Insight Editions, $24.95 SRP) is a combination memoir and scrapbook of Aang’s tale, written in the first person and collecting numerous pieces of ephemera from his many adventures. Where else are you going to get mementos like a Fire Nation Royal Palace postcard and a guide to waterbending?

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    It’s not a film you’ll probably ever find yourself watching again, but Daddy’s Home (Paramount, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is a comedy that coasts on the amiable likability of Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg as a dad and step-dad facing off against each other for the affection of their kids. Bonus materials include deleted/extended scenes and featurettes.

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    No one would consider any of these titles classics, but the latest clutch of high-def catalogue debuts to make their way out into the world via Olive Films certainly contains flicks that many would consider guilty pleasures, including the A Christmas Story sequel My Summer Story (Olive Films, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), Peter Fonda in Jack Nicholson & Roger Corman’s The Trip (Olive Films, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), Judd Nelson in Making The Grade (Olive Films, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), Bette Midler in Jinxed (Olive Films, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), Chuck Norris in Breaker! Breaker! (Olive Films, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), Bruce Willis & Cate Blanchett in Bandits (Olive Films, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), Val Kilmer & Michael Madsen in Kill Me Again (Olive Films, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), and James Woods & Sean Young in The Boost (Olive Films, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP).

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    The best I can say about the wholly unnecessary Point Break (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$44.95 SRP) remake is that the surfing footage looks awfully pretty. Other than that, it pretty much just exists. Is it offensive? Nah. It’s a fine watch if you run across it. With pretty waves. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted scenes.

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    They make money, so there will continue to be quickie franchise sequels like Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Road Chip (Fox, Rated PG, DVD-$29.98 SRP), which finds the titular threesome taking the title pun’s road trip to Miami. Bonus materials include a featurette and a song playlist.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/22/16: I’m Awake!

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    Yes, I know. We’ve all learned to love again. And, of course, I mean Star Wars. For whatever issues I may have with the film, The Force Awakens re-lit my long-dormant fire for all things long, long ago in a galaxy far, far away. So let’s kick off this week with a nifty high-end collectible that does what Star Wars fandom does best – which is take event the smallest of minutiae in the films and turn it into an action figure. That’s just what Hot Toys and Sideshow have done with their 1/6-scale Spacetrooper ($219.99). Don’t remember what a Spacetrooper is? Well, it’s essentially you’re basic Stormtrooper, but with a breathing hose and air pack, a pair of which were fleetingly glimpsed standing on the outside surface of the Death Star as the Millennium Flacon was tractor beamed into the hangar after arriving in the space formerly occupied by Alderaan. Yeah, so, really “blink and you’ll miss it” type stuff, but that’s why we love it, and why it’s so great to have this figure. The detailing is exquisitely screen-accurate, and in addition to the gear specified previously, he also comes with a massive heavy-duty blaster gun.

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    So yes, the Force has finally woken up, and the December 18th release to theaters opened the floodgates on all of the spoiler-laden materials that had been embargoed. First and foremost, of course, came the official score album from Star Wars: The Awakens (Walt Disney Records, $14.92 SRP) from maestro John Williams, featuring 23 tracks that will transport you to a galaxy… well, you know the rest.

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    And because it’s a Star Wars film, we also get a lovely The Art Of Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Abrams, $ SRP), which is loaded with concept art, much of which explores early drafts of the story and many abandoned sequences and characters in charting the visual evolution of the various designs.

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    Of course, if you’re still baffled by the flurry of characters, locales, and hardware that made it into the movie, you’ll be able to fill in all of the gaping narrative holes and backstory skimmed over by the film with Star Wars: The Force Awakens – The Visual Dictionary (DK, $19.99 SRP), written by Lucasfilm Lore Gnome Pablo Hidalgo.

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    But if vehicles are your thing, they’ve got you covered with Star Wars: The Force Awakens – Incredible Cross Sections (DK, $19.99 SRP), which is exactly what you’d expect it to be. So, yeah, all of the major vehicles, laid bare and fully explored.

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    Years in the making and beyond worth the wait, modern Disney legend Andreas Deja dives deep into the art and influence of his artistic forefathers with The Nine Old Men: Lessons, Techniques, And Inspiration From Disney’s Great Animators (CRC Press, $44.95 SRP). As that equally impressive title suggests, it’s an impressive tome that artists and aficionados alike should own and devour.

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    Marceline the vampire takes center stage in the 8-part miniseries event Adventure Time: Stakes (Cartoon Network, Not Rated, DVD-$14.97 SRP), in which a batch of foes from her past come forward just as she decides she doesn’t want to be undead anymore. Bonus materials include animatics, song demos, and an art gallery.

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    If the first season was funny (and it most certainly was), the second season of Broad City (Comedy Central, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP) doubles down on the funny with twice as much fun. Did I mention it’s funny? ‘Cause it is. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, outtakes, “Body By Trey” videos, and a pop-up enhanced episode.

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    While, sure, the based-on-real-life tale of survival on the side of the highest mountain in the world is harrowing and all, the real treat watching Everest (Universal, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP) in 3D is for the breathtaking visuals that threaten to put you on the side of that mountain with the snowstorm-bedeviled expeditions. Bonus features include an audio commentary and a quartet of featurettes.

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    Rita Hayworth remains magnificent, but Criterion’s new high definition master of Gilda (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) finally brings a restoration as beautiful as the performance. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, interviews, a featurette, and a 1964 episode of Hollywood And The Stars spotlighting Hayworth.

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    Take a journey Inside Einstein’s Mind (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP), in which PBS’ NOVA celebrates the 100th anniversary of his General Relativity with a fascinating look at that landmark achievement.

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    It’s always enjoyable when Robert De Niro manages to land in that very tiny sweet spot of affable and good-natured that he so rarely gets cast in, and so rarely can hit. But when he does, he’s as charming and warm as he is in The Intern (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), in which he stars as a 70-year-old widower who decides to reenergize his life by taking a job as a senior intern at a fashion start-up founded by a driven visionary (Anne Hathaway). Bonus materials include a trio of featurettes.

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    I suppose theater audiences viewing a real-life election-cycle farce at home just weren’t in the mood for political satire, which is a shame, because Our Brand Is Crisis (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP) is actually a biting ensemble piece that deserves a second look now that it’s arrived on home video. Bonus materials include a featurette on Sandra Bullock’s character.

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    I don’t quite understand the cult that has built up around it, though it’s a funny film, so the Zoolander: Blue Steelbook (Paramount, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$16.99 SRP) is a special edition high-def debut for those superfans awaiting the upcoming sequel, with brand new bonus features including audio commentaries, featurettes, and more.

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    One of the delightful side effects of its recent comeback is that we’re getting official releases of classic episodes, so Reading Rainbow: Miss Nelson Is Back (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$6.99 SRP) features 4 vintage stories including the titular tale, all anchored by the delightful LeVar Burton.

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    For fans of the first season eager to experience the same kind of magic, the second season of True Detective (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.98 SRP) proved to be a decidedly un-magical affair, long on banality and short on inspiration. Sad, really. Still, there is that first season. Bonus materials include audio commentaries and featurettes.

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    For the past few years, the folks at Olive films have been making a whole clutch of much-requested catalogue titles from the vaults of various studios available in high definition. Added to their already impressive list of accomplishments is the Blu-Ray debut of the John Malkovich & Gary Sinise Of Mice And Men (Olive Films, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP) and the mondo-bizarre Serial (Olive, Films, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.95 SRP), starring Martin Mull, Tuesday Weld, Sally Kellerman, & the great Christopher Lee.

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    Mill Creek has brought forth another batch of catalogue titles from the Sony library at a remarkably affordable cost. The biggie is Party Of Five: The Complete Series (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$69.98 SRP), a 24-disc set containing all 142 episodes. They’re also dropping the short-lived Richard Dean Anderson series Legend (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), from Star Trek producer Michael Piller.

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    Because I don’t often get a chance to see them when they run, I love binge-watching a batch of PBS DVDs, as they continue to produce incredible documentaries and science programs that are oft-overlooked. My most recent dive took in the 3-D laser-scanning history program Time Scanners, specifically their episodes on the Colosseum, Jerusalem, and Machu Picchu (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP each). Then I took in current affairs with Frontline: Inside Assad’s Syria (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP), then the cookery doc Off The Menu: Asian America (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP), and finally Craft In America: A Journey To The Origins, Artists, And Techniques Of American Craft (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP).

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    One day, I hope we get to see whatever film Hugh Jackman thought he was in while chewing up the scenery in Pan (Warner Bros., Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$44.95 SRP), because I bet that one’s a corker. Instead, we get a mealy prequel explaining Peter’s origins, because someone thought that was something we needed to know. Turns out, we didn’t. Still, it’s got some pretty 3D work. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and a quartet of featurettes.

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    With the brand new sequel coming out, it should come as little surprise that Kung Fu Panda & Kung Fu Panda 2 (Dreamworks, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$14.98 SRP each) are getting “Ultimate Edition Of Awesomeness” re-releases, packed with audio commentaries, featurettes, animated shorts, and a preview of Kung Fu Panda 3.

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    The third season of DaVinci’s Demons (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$54.99 SRP) Leonardo’s world exploding as the Ottomon invasion finds its way to his town, as he finds his own inventions used against him, before we joins a Rome-launched Crusade against the Turks.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/22/15: Battlestark

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    The magic wonder-wand has touched Glen Larson’s original, non-grimdark tale of galactic refugees on the run from the Cylon empire, giving fans Battlestar Galactica: The Definitive Collection (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$149.98 SRP). Not only has every episode been remastered, but fans also get the option of watching it in either the original 1.33 or newly created 1.85 widescreen ratios. Both options look great, and the set lives up to its “Definitive” claim, as it also includes Galactica 1980 and Battlestar Galactica: The Movie. Bonus materials include a commentary o the pilot, deleted scenes, featurettes, and more.

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    Pulled from the sequence in Iron Man 2 where he has to save himself from being poisoned by his original design, the Tony Stark with Arc Reactor Creation Accessories (Sideshow, $199.99) gets bonus points for not being another of the 50 bazillion Iron Man suits featured in the films, and also for being a pretty good likeness of Robert Downey Jr. As for accessories – you know, outside of Tony’s ever-ready sunglasses – the biggies are the arc reactor, arc reactor core holder, and the pretty keen prototype for Captain America’s shield.

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    He may have been one of the stiffest, most awkward hosts ever to have risen to television prominence, but it was on the strength of his legendary (and soon-to-be-legendary) guests that he became an icon, and those incredible guests are why The Best Of The Ed Sullivan Show (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$59.95 SRP) is a marvelous time warp. The 6-dvd set contains dozens of appearances from across the show’s 23-year run, including Elvis, The Beatles, Bobby Darin, Carol Burnett, The Smothers Brothers, and many more. Bonus materials include exclusive interviews with guests and the only surviving on-camera interview with Ed and Sylvia Sullivan.

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    For those that missed the boat on the stellar prop replica put out by Master Replicas ages ago but wanted something more robust than the plastic alternatives currently available, Thinkgeek’s Star Trek Phaser Remote Replica (Thinkgeek, $149.99) is exactly what you desire. As a screen-accurate reproduction of both the Type I and Type II phaser as featured in Star Trek: TOS, it’s pretty darn spot-on. That it also functions as a universal remote control is just downright super science. And glorious. Yes. Glorious super science.

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    Amazing we got to his centennial before getting a near-definitive documentary on a legend, but better now than never comes Magician: The Astonishing Life & Work of Orson Welles (Cohen, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP), a wonderful snapshot of the man and his remarkable work.

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    In the fallow period between the end of the Smothers Brothers’ show and the paunch of Saturday Night Live, the only destination on your dial to catch the hippest music and comedy acts was NBC’s Friday night staple, The Midnight Special (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP). Now, you can relive a healthy clutch of episodes via this 3-disc set, featuring a line-up of acts including Van Morrison, Santana, Heart, Jim Croce, George Carlin, Richard Pryor, Steve Martin, Billy Crystal, and more.

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    The 75th anniversary of Alfred Hitchcock’s final UK film, Jamaica Inn (Cohen, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) features a brilliant new 4k restoration and a brilliant performance from Charles Laughton. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a video essay, and the 2014 re-release trailer.

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    I loved to draw when I was a kid, and I would often find myself doodling beloved cartoon and comic characters. It should come as no surprise, then, that I own many dog-eared and much-loved “How To Draw” books released over the years by the folks at Walter Foster. For years, they’ve had Learn To Draw Mickey Mouse And His Friends (Walter Foster, $9.95 SRP), which featured step-by-step instructions on how to draw the modern versions of Disney’s core characters – Mickey, Donald, Goofy, Pluto, Minnie, and Daisy. Ah, but now they’ve plussed it with a brand new hardcover collector’s edition, Learn To Draw Mickey Mouse & Friends Through The Decades (Walter Foster, $19.95 SRP), which shows you how to draw those selfsame characters at various points in their graphic evolution, from the earliest black & white designs from 20s all the way to the modern era, as well as including other rare artwork. Both titles are great.

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    As someone who has observed firsthand the kind of downward mental spiral the befalls Julianne Moore’s character after she’s diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s as the titular character in Still Alice (Sony, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), it’s remarkable how much subtlety and nuance Moore brings to her portrayal of a linguistics professor, mother, and wife who slowly feels herself slipping away. Bonus materials include featurettes and a trio of deleted scenes.

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    Take a collection of musicians including Elvis Costello, T Bone Burnett, Marcus Mumford, and more, add in a batch of recently discovered Bob Dylan lyrics, and as those artists to set them to music – that’s exactly the remarkable process Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes Continued (Eagle Vision, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP) documents.

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    While it’s not necessary to read Before Tomorrowland (Disney Press, $12.15 SRP) before you see Tomorrowland, doing so certainly helps to make sense of the backstory behind the creation of the distant interstellar colony featured in the film, and the secret society of geniuses that created it.

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    The wonderful work that Criterion has been doing with their restoration and high definition release of the Charlie Chaplin library continues with the release of one of Chaplin’s later works, Limelight (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP), where he stars as a fading vaudevillian (and also is the only film featuring both Chaplin and Buster Keaton). Bonus materials include interviews, a video essay, a documentary, an archival recording of Chaplin, two short films, an outtake, and a pair of trailers.

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    Diamond Select and Art Asylum continue their stellar work releasing Star Trek‘s various iconic ships of the line with their beautiful scale replica of the U.S.S. Excelsior (Diamond Select, $60 SRP). First glimpsed as a state-of-the-art rival to the Enterprise in Star Trek III: The Search For Spock, the ship as it’s represented in this model eventually came under the command of Captain Sulu in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and as such, the usual complement of sound effects here features 10 phrases spoken by George Takei’s Sulu, and a trio of ship SFX. There’s also a nifty light feature on the nacelles. The ships are really great, and a perfect addition to any shelf, desk, or table.

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    The story behind Star Trek‘s adaptation of Harlan Ellison’s script for the now-legendary episode The City On The Edge Of Forever, and Ellison” intense dissatisfaction with the changes the staff made to his vision, is well-known within the fan community. Thanks to IDW, those fans can now experience his version with the graphic novel adaptation of Harlan Ellison’s The City On The Edge Of Forever: The Original Teleplay (IDW, $24.99 SRP). While many of the elements are similar in a funhouse mirror kind of way, it’s a fascinating exercise and a unique tale well told, and given a brand new life.

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    It’s a shame that American Sniper (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$44.95 SRP) is as off-puttingly strident as it is, because it is a strong piece of filmmaking from director Clint Eastwood, anchored by Bradley Cooper’s performance as the titular solider who has trouble re-assimilating to civilian life after two tours in Iraq. Bonus materials include a pair of making-of featurettes.

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    Only the BBC could produce a show like Call The Midwife (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$44.98 SRP), about a midwife from a privileged background who joins an order of nursing nuns in poverty-stricken East London in the 1950s. Nearing the 1960s in the show’s fourth season, social change approaches as new nurses arrive on the scene.

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    You can never have too many books exploring that legendary galaxy far, far away, so just try to refrain from devouring Ultimate Star Wars (DK, $40 SRP), a massive tome exploring the characters, creatures, locations, technology, and vehicles with photos, art, and information. Nerds! You know you want it!

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    Listen, I shouldn’t have to sell you on watching a film called Icetastrophe (Alchemy, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP), about a small town and a meteorite that threatens humanity. And it’s a low-budget cheese-fest. How does that not sell itself? Seriously!

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    It’s certainly not a classic, but there’s certainly laughs to be found in the first season of CPO Sharkey (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP), a largely forgotten 70s sitcom that starred Don Rickles as the Navy’s caustic answer to both Sgt. Bilko and Archie Bunker, with an often un-PC bent. The bonus features are limited to a single Tonight Show clip, but it’s a real gem, as it features Johnny Carson dropping in on the set of Sharkey to have words with Rickles.

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    Better late than never comes Breaking Bad: The Official Book (Sterling, $19.95 SRP), which is the perfect companion compendium to a modern television classic. With in-depth looks into every episode and character plus exclusive insights from the cast and crew (plus a brand new interview with creator Vince Gilligan), it’s definitely an addictive read.

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    Scott Glenn has always been an actor capable of holding my attention in anything he’s in, and he remains so as a serial killer hiding out in a small town as The Barber (Arc Entertainment, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$20.99 SRP). But when the son of a detective – who took his own life in frustration at his inability to solve the case – arrives in town, his carefully constructed cover is jeopardized.

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    Rescued from the mists of time, the classic newspaper strip adventures of the man of steel and the dark knight detective continue with Superman: The Silver Age Dailies 1963-1966 (IDW, $49.99 SRP) and Batman And Robin: The Silver Age Dailies And Sundays 1968-1969 (IDW, $49.99 SRP), which is the second of three volumes collecting the strip that was relaunched to coattail the success of the TV series. Oh, and while you’re at it, pick up the deluxe Superman: Sunday Pages 1946-1949 (IDW, $49.99 SRP), which are presented in all of their large format glory.

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    If, like me, you still mourn the passing of quality history-based content on The History Channel, the photo and info-dense World War II: The Definitive Visual History (DK, $40 SRP) is just the comprehensive coffee table paperweight for you. Presented by the Smithsonian, it covers the entire conflict, from the Blitzkrieg to the Atom Bomb.

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    It’s a bit frustrating that Nickelodeon still hasn’t given their beautiful new Ninja Turtles series proper high definition season sets like Cartoon Network has been doing for Adventure Time, because the show certainly deserves it. Until then, we’re getting standard definition single-disc releases like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Pulverizer Power (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP), which features a trio of previously-released episodes featuring the titular misbegotten young man, who eventually winds up becoming Mutagen Man. And, in a weird curveball, they’re also dropping a 3-episode single disc release from the 2003 series, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Search For Splinter (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP).

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    Fish out of water culture clash comedy is always fertile territory, and Greg Poehler’s Welcome To Sweden (E1, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) is a sharp, witty venture into that territory focusing on Poehler’s Bruce, a New Yorker who follows his Swedish girlfriend home. The show smartly builds its characters first and hangs the culture comedy on it. Give it a spin.

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    Well, I mean, the best you can say for the direct-to-video animated special Batman Unlimited: Animal Instincts (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP) is that it’s an unapologetically middling confection intended mostly to sell toys, and also has the good sense to cast Dana Snyder as the voice of The Penguin. So, it has that going for it. Bonus materials include DC Nation shorts, 2 bonus cartoons from the DC Comics Vault, and a Penguin featurette.

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    History buffs with fond memories of parking in front of the pre-Aliens and idiots heyday of The History Channel will lose themselves in Historic Tanks & Battles Of WWII (Eagle Vision, Not Rated, DVD-$17.98 SRP), a 3-disc collection of documentaries that are just what the title says.

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    A Russian family man tries to extricate itself from under the thumb of a corrupt mayor in the gripping import Leviathan (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), but his attempts to fight back with the help of an old friend has unintended consequences. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a featurette, Q&A, and deleted scenes.

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    When 3 soldiers – one Lebanese, one Israeli, and one American – are accidentally trapped together when a lockdown mechanism is triggered in a secret base, the trio are forced to either work together or die together in the dramedy Bordering On Bad Behavior (Inception, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP). And it stars Tom Sizemore. You can’t go wrong with Tom Sizemore. Right?

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    Kiddies can learn their math skills with Team Umizoomi: Meet Shark Car (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), featuring a quartet of episodes focusing on numbers, shapes, measurements, and more. And with that out of the way, they can tackle niceties with Max & Ruby: Sharing & Caring (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP). For just entertainment value, the kids can then dive into Bubble Guppies: The Puppy And The Ring (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), Team Umizoomi: Umi Space Heroes (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$12.98 SRP), Dora’s Explorer Girls: Our First Concert (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$12.99 SRP), and Dora The Explorer: Dora Saves Fairytale Land (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$12.98 SRP).

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    Strawberry Shortcake and her friends both human and furry star in various canine-themed tales in Strawberry Shortcake: Berry Best In Show (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), featuring a trio of four-legged tails.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 3/6/15: Ride That Tauntaun

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    Every once in awhile, those endearingly insane purveyors of must-have collectibles at Sideshow decide to go truly bonkers and produce a massive collectible that hits every single nostalgia button with brutal accuracy. As they had recently announced they’d be releasing Hoth versions of Luke and Han in their 1/6-scale Star Wars line, it wasn’t truly shocking that they announced a 1/6-scale Tauntaun ($349.99), but it was most welcome nonetheless. Why? Because it’s friggin’ delightful. Yes, it’s essentially a static diorama statue – pretty much a display accessory – but it looks perfect and is perfectly complementary. And it’s just fun. With a pair of swappable heads (mild and excited expressions), swappable horns (so you can make it either Han or Luke’s specific mount), and equipment accessories, it’s kitted out to be screen accurate. But because Han and Luke haven’t arrived yet, I’ve had to let a whole slew of other characters have a go. Because… you know… FUN.

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    There have been many books that purported to present the definitive history of the original Star Trek. Much like Roshomon, many presented a perspective on the show’s genesis. But we’ve finally got a complete overview that incorporates all of those memories plus original memos, documents, and interviews and places them in a comprehensive context with the publication of the third and final volume of These Are The Voyages (Jacobs Brown, $39.95 SRP). Each of the three volumes has focused on a season of TOS, and this final volume sheds light on why Classic Trek‘s final season proved to be such a disappointing creative mess, full of behind-the-scenes conflict and compromise. Author Marc Cushman has done the if not impossible, then very nearly improbable feat of remaining neutral while presenting the facts, tales, anecdotes, and recollections behind one of the most enduring pop phenomenon of the 20th century – and beyond. Be sure to get all three volumes.

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    While not brilliant, Jon Stewart’s Rosewater (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP) is a solid drama that deserves a second look and long life on home video, divorced of the ridiculously high expectations and paradoxical indifference that greeted it in theaters, as Gael Garcia Bernal turns in a strong performance as Tehran-born but London-based journalist Maziar Bahari, who is detained by the Iranian government as a spy and turned over to the titular brutal interrogator. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes.

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    It seems ridiculous that there’s never been one until now, but if we had to wait for a documentary celebrating the life and madness of Richard Pryor, then it’s comforting to know that Omit The Logic (Magnolia, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$13.49 SRP) was worth the wait, featuring an unvarnished look at a destructive genius. Bonus materials include additional interviews.

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    While it would be foolish to deny that the only reason we’re getting the tome is to provide cross-promotion of the new live action Cinderella feature, A Wish Your Heart Makes (Disney Editions, $40.00 SRP) is still a welcome addition to the shelves of anyone who loves traditional Disney animation, as nearly half its length is devoted to the development and creation of that classic. And yes, the other half is devoted to the new feature, directed by Kenneth Branagh. Oh, and as a wonderful complementary piece, they’ve also re-released the beautiful children’s book adaptation of the animated Cinderella (Disney Press, $16.99 SRP), adapted by Cynthia Rylant with art by the legendary Mary Blair.

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    We march ever closer to the next glorious high-def season release with the arrival of the latest stopgap fix of episodes, Adventure Time: Frost & Fire (Cartoon Network, Not Rated, DVD-$19.82 SRP), sporting another 16 episodes, from “Frost & Fire” to “Thanks For The Cranapples, Giuseppe”.

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    While it has to take comfort in its 5 Academy Award nominations, Foxcatcher (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) doesn’t need an Oscar to remain a dark and powerfully acted tale of misguided passion as it tells the true story of an eccentric multimillionaire (Steve Carrell) and a pair of champion wrestlers (Channing Tatum & Mark Ruffalo). Bonus materials include a featurette and deleted scenes.

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    After a forever gap that seems to have afflicted many a classic catalogue TV show that began getting a DVD release in the early years of the format, Warner Bros. gets the ball rolling again on another forgotten series with ChiPs: The Complete Third Season (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP). The 5 disc set contains all 23 episodes.

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    I don’t know if I’d agree with its claim to be the best British rock concert of all time, but the line-up featured in 1990’s charity performance Live At Knebworth (Eagle Vision, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$17.98 SRP) is certainly incredible, including Paul McCartney, Elton John, Tears For Fears, Genesis, Robert Plant, Pink Floyd, Eric Clapton, Dire Straits, and more.

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    The Warner Archive continues to be the afterlife savior of criminally ignored shows by releasing the complete 3rd season of Longmire (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$40.99 SRP). The set also include a featurette on the character and plot developments of season 2 so you can get up to speed.

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    Kinder entertainment for this week brings a pair of tiny tyke titles from Nickelodeon – Paw Patrol: Marshall And Chase On The Case (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) and the 2-disc Bubble Guppies: Fin-Tastic Collection (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$22.98 SRP), which packages together the previously available Bubble Guppies and On The Job.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/16/14: Manos A Go-Go

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    It’s become cliché to call a Spike Jonze film “quirky”, but there’s a reason clichés become cliché, and his latest, Her (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) is certainly a quirky, endearing little film in the Spike Jonze style. Joaquin Phoenix stars as a lonely professional letter writer in the near future rebounding from a difficult breakup, who finds his soulmate in the form of a fast-learning artificial intelligence named “Samantha” (Scarlett Johansson). Bonus materials include a trio of featurettes.

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    They can make brilliant human figures until the cows come home as their particular brand of magic becomes commonplace, but it’s not until you see something as epic as their ED-209 (Sideshow, $409.99) – the disastrously deadly peacekeeping robot featured in the original Robocop – that you can truly appreciate what Hot Toys can accomplish. As it’s in scale with the 1/6-scale figures (and the forthcoming Robocop), it’s a truly massive piece, and incredibly intricate in its detailing. Fully articulated, you could use this “toy” as a stop motion miniature, it’s just so good. And to plus its greatness even more, it even has a remote-operated sound feature which, at the touch of a button, plays a collection of ED-209 lines and sounds from the film. How cool is that?

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    Magnets and gyroscopes – two nerd tastes that taste great together, and that’s exactly the dynamic duo that’s combined in ball form with the Nanodots GYRO DUO: Magnetically Gyroscopic Balls ($24.99)… And they’re just what it says on the tin – A pair of magnets paired with gyroscopes that are just plain fun to play around with. Can’t ask for more than that.

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    It can be a dicey proposition fraught with peril, going back and revisiting past successes, but the triumphant trio of Mike, Bill, & Kevin manage it in true style with Rifftrax Live: Manos – The Hands Of Fate (Rifftrax, Not Rated, DVD-$12.95), which features an entirely new set of riffs on a Mystery Science Theater 3000 classic. As an added bonus, the disc also includes outtakes with commentary from the guys. Get it for the love of Torgo. He needs your love.

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    The most fascinating part of Star Wars Storyboards The Original Trilogy (Abrams, $40 SRP) are the storyboards from the original film, as they present not-yet-solidified characters in vaguely familiar yet by no means finalized designs, in a universe with limitless potential. By the time we get to the boards for Empire and especially Jedi, the universe is pretty well solidified and the boards seem more like a comic book for what we eventually saw onscreen.

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    Yeah, it should come as no surprise that Kenny Powers as a suburban dad would not last for long, so the fourth and final season of Eastbound & Down (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) finds Danny McBride’s crass creation back in the swing of it after meeting up with an ex-teammate. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, outtakes, and deleted scenes.

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    Watching the documentary series Unsolved Mysteries Of The Second World War (Eagle Rock, Not Rated, DVD-$16.98 SRP) brought back fond memories of the kind of program that would fill the schedule of the pre-junk TV History Channel, when it would be endless hours of documentaries about World War II. This 3-disc set explores some of the lingering questions behind the war, from how much Churchill may have known about the impending Pearl Harbor attacks to why Hitler halted his troops before Dunkirk.

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    Making a pledge to remain firmly entrenched in the swinging single life winds a trio of friends (Zac Efron, Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan) into plenty of mildly amusing situations when the chief proponent of the vow, Jason (Efron), meets a girl (Imogen Poots) who he can’t get out of his mind in That Awkward Moment (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$25.99 SRP). Bonus materials include featurettes and a gag reel.

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    Fedor Bondarchuk’s Stalingrad (Sony, Rated R, 3D Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), which ties a love story into the historical German siege, suffers much the same problems as the film Pearl Harbor – a beautifully shot film about a fascinating slice of World War II history that is hobbled by a pointless shoehorning of romance and bland characters. It’s a shame they don’t let the history stand by itself, because it really is a good looking flick, particularly in 3D.

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    The mystery series based on Craig Johnson’s best-selling Longmire (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) books comes back for a second season of complications for Sheriff Walt Longmire as deep suspicions about the death of his wife and his wife’s killer come to the foe. Bonus materials include extended episodes and a featurette.

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    Hey hey! It’s time for this week’s soundtrack round up! So what cinematic audio delights do we have available this go round? There’s John Ottman’s score for X-Men: Days Of Future Past (Sony, $9.99 SRP), Bear McCreary’s Da Vinci’s Demon’s: Season 2 (Sparks & Shadows, $9.99), Patrick Cassidy’s Calvary (Varese Sarabande, $17.87 SRP), and Rachel Portman’s Belle (Varese Sarabande, $17.87 SRP).

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/9/14: Marshmallow Monsters

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    Certainly, there was a fair amount of trepidation that despite the success of the Kickstarter campaign, the big screen Veronica Mars (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP) would fail to live up to breezy noir fun of the original, dearly departed series. Well, kudos to show creator Rob Thomas for pulling off a film that, set 10 years later and reuniting the residents of Neptune California for a 10th high school reunion overshadowed by murder and intrigue, feels every bit as wonderful as the series it picks up the baton from. Here’s hoping for many more films to come. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and more.

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    Since they were originally shot on film, it was only a matter of time and money before CBS decided to give classic sitcom fans a triple-header of high-def delight with the fully remastered Blu-Ray debuts of I Love Lucy: Season One, The Andy Griffith Show: Season One and The Honeymooners: The Classic 39 (CBS, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$129.99 SRP each). As if the stellar sound and video presentation weren’t enough, they’ve also gone the extra mile by loading these down with bonus features galore. I Love Lucy contains the original pilot, audio commentaries, 13 season one repeat episodes with alternate elements, on-set color home movies, bloopers, the I Love Lucy: The Very First Show special, and select episodes of Lucy’s radio show My Favorite Husband. The Andy Griffith Show sports the Danny Thomas Show episode that served as the backdoor pilot, home movies, original sponsor spots, the Person To Person interview with Griffith, and the Return To Mayberry TV movie. Finally, The Honeymooners features promos, an original Buick dealer presentation, the 60 Minutes profile of Gleason plus outtakes, a sketch from American Scene Magazine, both the 35th and 50th anniversary specials, and the Person To Person segment featuring Gleason. An incredible line-up, isn’t it? Now, if only Sgt. Bilko would get this kind of love from CBS, the world would be a happy place.

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    Everyone knows the immaculate 1/6-scale figures that the fine folks at Hot Toys produce, but fewer know that they’ve also been known to produce the occasional vinyl collectible. Featuring the same kind of exquisite attention to detail, the sculpt for their Monsters University: Mike, Sully & Archie (Sideshow, $149.99) is a spot-on recreation of the iconic characters from the Pixar sequel, clothed in their University jackets and measuring a healthy 9″ high. Here’s hoping this is the first in a series of these deluxe vinyl Disney pieces.

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    While it’s physically impossible to climb inside it, it is fun to finally get to fly your very own piece of Time Lord technology with the Doctor Who R/C TARDIS (Thinkgeek, $47.99). Coming in at 3″ tall, it’s capable of vertical takeoff and landing, and can hover about for an average of 6 minutes on a charge, which is delivered via the remote control (and runs on 4AA batteries). So, go fly a TARDIS already!

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    Carl Barks was a master of humor and economical storytelling, with an almost magical ability to present more narrative and comedy within a simple 10-page tale than most creators with 10 times the space. Once again, the gee-whizzers at Fantagraphics have released a must-have collection of classic Barks stories in their ever-growing Barks library with Donald Duck: Trail Of The Unicorn (Fantagraphics, $29.99 SRP), which features the titular tale plus a handful more, plus essays that put it all in perspective. KEEP THEM COMING, GUYS.

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    While you’re biding your time waiting for the next full season Blu-Ray release, snag the quick fix Adventure Time: The Suitor (Cartoon Network, Not Rated, DVD-$19.82 SRP), collecting 16 episodes from the show’s 5th season, plus the “Little Did You Know” featurette.

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    It feels like an impossible wait until the 3rd and final Hobbit film, but fill the time with a lovely new tome that delves into the backstory and creation behind the monstrous worm under the mountain – Smaug: Unleashing The Dragon (HarperDesign, $19.99 SRP). Filled with art and designs and even an introduction by Benedict Cumberbatch, it’s an easy impulse buy.

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    Waiting for the new film and want to binge on some classic thunder lizard action? Look no further than the high-def debut of not one, not two, but 8 classic Godzilla films presented as 4 double feature releases in The Toho Godzilla Collection. Fully remastered, the films include Godzilla vs King Ghidorah/Godzilla And Mothra: The Battle For Earth, Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II/Godzilla vs. Space Godzilla, Godzilla vs. Destoroyah/Godzilla vs. Megaguirus, and Godzilla: Tokyo SOS/Godzilla: Final Wars (Sony, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP each). Bonus materials include featurettes and original trailers.

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    After the untimely death of E.C. Segar only a few years into the life of his immensely popular strip “Thimble Theater”, the strip and its breakout star, Popeye The Sailor, were guided by Segar assistant Bud Sagendorff for over 40 years. But in 1986, King Features Syndicate was faced with having to find a replacement for Sagendorff, and they turned to a seemingly unlikely candidate – Playboy and National Lampoon cartoonist Bobby London. But they couldn’t have found a better choice, as you’ll experience for yourself in Popeye: Classic Newspaper Comics Volume One – 1986-1989 (IDW, $39.99 SRP), which collects the first half of London’s all-too-brief tenure of reinvigorated tales of the spinach-fueled sailorman and his eclectic supporting cast.

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    There have been many books that purported to present the definitive history of the original Star Trek. Much like Roshomon, many presented a perspective on the show’s genesis. But we’ve finally got the overview that incorporates all of those memories plus original memos, documents, and interviews and places them in a comprehensive context – These Are The Voyages (Jacobs Brown, $29.95 SRP), of which the second volume of what will eventually be a trilogy, each focusing on a season of TOS, is now available. Author Marc Cushman has done the if not impossible, then very nearly improbably feat of remaining neutral while presenting the facts, tales, anecdotes, and recollections behind one of the most enduring pop phenomenon of the 20th century – and beyond.

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    Coming fast and furious is an understatement when it comes to just how quickly the new direct-to-video animated DC Comics films have been hitting, as the latest comic book adaptation – Son Of Batman (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP) – makes its debut. Based on the graphic novel Batman And Son, it finds the Dark Knight surprised by the revelation that he has a young son with Talia, the assassin daughter of his enemy Ra’s Al Ghul. With the League of Assassins and Deathstroke on the tail it’s not a bib surprise to find that Batman’s son Damian soon becomes the next Robin. Bonus materials include featurettes, a quartet of cartoons, and a sneak peek at the next animated feature Batman: Assault On Arkham.

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    Rescued from the mists of time, the classic newspaper strip adventures of the man of steel and the dark knight detective continue with Superman: The Silver Age Dailies 1961-1963 (IDW, $49.99 SRP) and Batman And Robin: The Silver Age Dailies And Sundays 1966-1967 (IDW, $49.99 SRP), which is the first of three volumes collecting the strip that was relaunched to coattail the success of the TV series. Oh, and while you’re at it, pick up the deluxe Superman: Sunday Pages 1943-1946 (IDW, $49.99 SRP), which are presented in all of their large format glory.

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    It’s odd to think they’ve been around for two decades, but that’s exactly the anniversary that’s being celebrated with the lavish and massive Art Of Dreamworks Animation (Abrams, $50 SRP). Of course, those first 10 years were filled with plenty of duds, from Prince Of Egypt to Shark Tale, but in recent years they’ve become a more surefooted powerhouse with the likes of their masterpiece How To Train Your Dragon. Explore it all with copious artwork and behind-the-scenes context with this tome.

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    In an age of ridiculous denial, Phillipe Squarzoni’s Climate Changed (Abrams Comicarts, $24.95 SRP) proves yet again the power of visual storytelling, as it presents the complicated science behind climate change in a streamlined, easily digestible fashion that hopefully even the simple-mined climate change deniers can understand. If not, well, there’s always puppets.

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    When you watch the virtually Shirley-less eighth and final season of Laverne & Shirley (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), you understand that it was only right and proper and merciful to end the series, as the magic of the show relied entirely on the dynamic between Cindy Williams and Penny Marshall, and once Williams left, well, best to end it all. Bonus materials include original episode promos and a gag reel.

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    Somehow, an entire decade has flown past, so do yourself a favor and celebrate the 10th anniversary of Napoleon Dynamite (Fox, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP) with a new high-def special edition packed with audio commentaries, outtakes, deleted scenes, featurettes, auditions, promos, and more.

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    It’s certainly a long way from even the limited 80’s quality of G1 cartoon, but completionists will still want to pick up Transformers Energon: The Complete Series (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$44.99 SRP), which collects all 51 episodes.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • A Bit Of A Chat with Ken Plume & Kirk Thatcher

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    I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.

    In this episode, I have a chat with writer/director Kirk Thatcher about creatures, Muppets, Star Trek punks, Star Wars, 8x10s.

    You can read my original interview with Kirk HERE.

    Hope you enjoy…

    Download “A Bit of a Chat with Ken Plume & Kirk Thatcher“:

    [audio:http://traffic.libsyn.com/bitofachat/bit_of_a_chat-kirk_thatcher.mp3]

    And here’s a preview of Kirk as one of the triumvirate of expert judges on Syfy’s Jim Henson’s Creature Shop Challenge reality competition…

    SUBSCRIBE
    Subscribe to this Podcast via iTunes

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    Drop Ken a line HERE.

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    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

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  • FROM THE VAULT: Kirk Thatcher Interview

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    Conducted ~1/2000

    I first met Kirk Thatcher on the set of Muppets From Space in January of 1999, when he remarked that both of our names started with the letter “K”, so we must be brothers.

    Of course, he was right.

    While Thatcher’s name may not be instantly recognizable, his *face* may best be remembered by genre fans as the “punker on the bus” in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home – whose blaring & acidic music confounded Kirk and Spock, prompting the stoic Vulcan to silence the cacophony with a fabled Vulcan nerve pinch.

    However, Thatcher is much more than just “the punker on the bus” – he has the unique blessing of having been creatively involved with several of fantasy & science fiction’s most beloved franchises: Star Trek (as an Associate Producer), Star Wars (as a Creature Shop technician), and the Muppets (as a writer and director).

    He’s also stepping back in front of the camera as one of the trio of expert judges presiding over the new Jim Henson’s Creature Shop Challenge reality competition on the SyFy channel.

    And he’ll always be my brother.

    From the vaults, I present to you my chat with Kirk Thatcher…

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    KEN PLUME: Can you give me a little background on yourself?

    KIRK THATCHER: I started in the industry when I was about 19 at Lucasfilm, ILM, working in the creature shop on Return of the Jedi. I was a self-taught movie and monster maker. I made masks and creatures at home.

    PLUME: Are you from the California area?

    THATCHER: I’m from Los Angeles, so when I was growing up, I would talk to people like Rick Baker and John Chambers, who were very helpful in answering questions. I was just like most guys in the effects industry, just doing stuff in the kitchen sink and in the garage.

    When I was in high school I met the production designer for Star Wars, a guy named Joe Johnston, and he’d been very kind in showing me around ILM when they were still based in Los Angeles. So after I’d gone to UCLA for two semesters I called Joe up and said that college just wasn’t working for me, they wouldn’t even let me touch a Super 8 camera until I was a junior, and was there any chance that I could come work at ILM. He said, “You know, we’re gearing up for the next Star Wars movie, Return of the Jedi, and we’re starting up a creature shop, so send up your resume.” So I sent up my resume and had an interview with Tom Smith and got the job as a technical assistant, which is basically the lowest man on the totem pole at the company.

    PLUME: But a hired man regardless.

    THATCHER: Exactly. A working man. So I started working at ILM in the creature shop. I actually helped set up the creature shop, working for Phil Tippet. I actually painted the walls and helped set up the paint room to paint the creatures. I worked in the mold shop. Basically just A to Z from sculpting to molding to fabricating to painting them and shipping them out the door.

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    PLUME: So this is what, 1981?

    THATCHER: 1981, basically starting about March, and we worked on the movie until about Christmas, then sent everything to London. For most of the Spring and Summer of ’82 I was on location with the movie. I went to Yuma, Arizona and then Oregon. After that, I worked on a bunch of other things at ILM. I worked on Star Treks II and III, Poltergeist, E.T.. I was one of the guys that painted E.T.. I had a great time at ILM learning a bunch of stuff, then Chris Walas got this movie, Gremlins, and Chris and I had become friends, since he had worked at ILM also. He got Gremlins on his own, so I worked with Chris for about a year and helped set his place up and work on Gremlins. After that David Fincher (director of Se7en, The Game, and most recently Fight Club) and I wanted to break out and do our own thing, so we started a rock video company. We were the two youngest guys at ILM. He’s actually a year younger than I am. He’d been a camera assistant in the matte department. So we did some rock videos together. I was the production designer and he was the director. It was a lot of mind-bendingly difficult work for very little money and no time. We had a motto, “We can do it – But it won’t be fun”. We did some Rick Springfield videos and some Martha Davis and the Motels videos. This is about ’83-’84. We did about 10-12 videos together, and then I moved down to L.A., and he moved down from San Francisco soon after and helped form Propaganda Films.

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    After I moved down, I interviewed for Star Trek IV to basically be Leonard Nimoy’s right-hand guy, and got that job, and eventually became Associate Producer on the film. Working closely with Leonard Nimoy was great. I started out as assistant to the director and it eventually became Associate Producer. He wanted to call me “Associate Director,” but there was no title like that, and the DGA wouldn’t allow it and so they called me an Associate Producer. He was great. It was the best job I ever had. He let me do a lot of stuff. He let me write dialogue and design aliens, work with the prop and art departments. I was in heaven.

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    PLUME: So, basically, you were a jack-of-all-trades.

    THATCHER: Yeah, a jack-of-all-trades, which is why he’d hired me, because I’d done all that at ILM and on my own, and he wanted someone he could trust to see things through. He was definitely directing the picture, don’t get me wrong, but he trusted that I would make sure he was getting what he wanted so he didn’t have to focus on it, because on Star Trek III, he just felt overwhelmed by all the technical stuff, especially all the special effects stuff, because it’s such a technical process. He couldn’t tell if people were telling him the truth or just giving him a run-around, so he kind of wanted someone in his camp. We got along great, and we’re still very good friends.

    PLUME: How did your cameo in Star Trek IV come about?

    THATCHER: Well, we were writing the movie, and I was there from the very beginning, even in the script stages, and they wrote this little bit for this punk rocker. The original idea was that the punk flipped off Spock, then Spock gave him the Vulcan neck grip. I actually came up with the idea of, when he passed out, his face turning off the radio. I actually added a couple little comedy bits. He was supposed to give me the Vulcan “Live Long and Prosper” sign after I flicked him off, but we cut that out. Then I added the scene where Scotty talks to the computer when the guy tells him to use the mouse and he holds it up and tries to use it like a microphone. I’ve always been a Macintosh fan, so I said, “It has to be a Macintosh.” Leonard said, “That’s funny, let’s use it.” Back to the cameo, it was this little bit in the movie, and I walked into Leonard’s office and said, “I want to play the punk on the bus.” Leonard’s got a great sense of humor, he’s very funny, so he looks at me with this big smile and says, “Reaaally…” I said, “Yeah, I think I’d do a great job. I’ll shave my head, get a mohawk, whatever.” He said, “Let me think about it.” I said okay, and I was going crazy, because in 2 weeks he didn’t say anything, and I promised him I wouldn’t bother him. I said, “Look, I’m not going to bother you, I’m only going to ask you this one time,” so I really had to live with it and not bother him. I never brought it up, never hinted at it, nothing. So about 2 weeks later, I walk to his office like I did every day, and he said, “Oh, by the way, you can do it.” I said, “What. You mean.” “Yep, you can play the punk.” I was like, “Ohhh thank you, thank you.” So I went out, shaved the sides of my head, dyed my hair orange and got a mohawk, because they don’t really make a mohawk hairpiece that looks real, so I actually had a bright road cone orange mohawk for about 6 months.

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    PLUME: I’m sure they really respected you on the set after that.

    THATCHER: Oh it was great. It was a blast. The first time DeForest Kelley saw me with this outrageous hairstyle he looked me up and down very slowly and said, “Nice shoes”. He then broke into a huge grin and ambled away. He had a very dry sense of humor.

    PLUME: You were featured rather prominently on the French poster for the film.

    THATCHER: That’s what somebody told me.

    PLUME: So the French love you.

    THATCHER: They would. I have sort of a French attitude in the movie.

    PLUME: That shows you the cultural impact you’ve had worldwide.

    THATCHER: Exactly. Leonard said I got the biggest laugh in the entire movie in Russia, because Russia was fraught with punk rockers before the wall had fallen, so they got a big laugh out of that.

    PLUME: You’re an icon now.

    THATCHER: Yeah. I could win the Nobel Peace Prize and my grave would still say “Punk On Bus – Star Trek IV“.

    The funny thing was that I got to write and sing that song that was playing on the radio. “I Hate You”, written by Kirk Thatcher and performed by The Edge of Etiquette. We shot the scene with no sound. There was no music playing. I was just miming to a beat. After we wrapped the movie, the music department was coming to us, and they were playing, like, Duran Duran or whoever Paramount had some deal with. I said, “That isn’t punk rock music. Punk rock is really raw and gritty and dirty.” They said, “Well, we don’t really deal with the Sex Pistols and stuff.” I said to Leonard, “You know, let me write you a song. I can do a song.” I was becoming good friends with the sound editor, Mark Mangini, and a couple of the guys in his sound department. I told Leonard, “We can do a song for you that will sound like a punk rock song. Just let us do it and you won’t have to pay for the rights or anything, and it will be better than Duran Duran.” So I went in with Mark and he wrote the music for it. I had a melody in mind, but I don’t write music, so he turned it into something that could be played on the guitar. We then recorded it in the hallway of the post-production sound facility that Mark had so it would sound bad – very distorted, as if recorded in a garage. We actually used the mics that the sound guys use to do key codes like, “Spock walking down the street, Take 1.” It’s just a cheap mic so it would sound really bad. We did this one weekend and Leonard came in on a Saturday and he listened to it, cracked up, and said, “Great. That’s it. We’ll use it.” And that’s how “I Hate You” came to be.

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    PLUME: It was used in another film, wasn’t it?

    THATCHER: Yeah, it was used in Back To The Beach, with Frankie and Annette. They called me up and said, “Can we use it?” and I said, “Yeah.” I actually got paid more for them using it in that than I did for Star Trek. Hey, here is a little known fact for all the Trekkies. The voice of the computer, at the beginning of Star Trek IV when Spock is doing that computer test, that’s me. I actually wrote those questions. We shot with my voice as a temp track, which we sped up, just so Leonard would have something to react to. So we shot with that and we used it on the temp track. Finally, they’re getting ready to redo it, and they asked Leonard and he says, “Naw, it’s fine. Just use that.” So after doing all this other stuff, that’s how I got my SAG card. For being the voice of the computer! And it’s the only thing that I’m not credited for, because if it was, my name would have been in the credits four times. It would have been in there more than anyone else’s name.

    PLUME: You just insinuated yourself everywhere.

    THATCHER: I did, yeah. It wasn’t anything I lobbied for. It just sort-of happened. When I hear that computer voice now , I cringe because it sounds so goofy.

    PLUME: Well, the film still works.

    THATCHER: It’s amazing. It made about $130 million in the US, and I believe the last Star Trek movie only broke $90 million. It just blew all the other Trek movies out of the water with how successful it was. I think a lot of it is due to Leonard’s sense of humor and the fact that Leonard wanted to make a lighthearted romp instead of a serious science fiction picture, and it really reached out to a broader audience.

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    PLUME: What was your next project after Star Trek IV?

    THATCHER: A woman I had met through a special effects company we had worked with knew Jim Henson. Her first husband had directed The Muppet Movie. I was starting to pitch movie and TV show ideas with creatures at the time, and she said, “Would you like to meet Jim Henson?” and I said, “Sure, I’d love to.” She said, “I’m sure he’d like this kind of stuff and I’m sure you two would get along.” This is about 1987, and Star Trek IV had just opened, I think in February. So I met Jim in March of that year, and we hit it off and I showed him a bunch of creatures designs and story ideas and all that. We started working on some story ideas, and in March of ’88, after I’d know him for about a year, I moved to New York to work on The Jim Henson Hour. I lived in New York for year and worked in New York and Toronto on The Jim Henson Hour and became very good friends with Jim. In ’89, The Jim Henson Hour was done, and I didn’t really enjoy living in New York, so I moved back to LA and worked on some stuff with Henson, as well as Walt Disney Imagineering. I worked at Disney for nine months, and while I was working there, Jim and I started working on the concept for Dinosaurs. Unfortunately, that’s when Jim passed away, but we took the ideas that he and I had kicked around and started working with a couple of sit-com writers Michael Jacobs and Bob Young who had a development deal at Disney television. Alex Rockwell and I were the Henson side of things, I designed the characters and helped flesh out ideas while Michel and Bob started working on the scripts. Alex, who was the development person at Henson, oversaw the development process. We sold it to ABC in 1990 and in 1991 it went on the air. I worked on Dinosaurs for about four years as a writer and a character designer, and then I started writing the Muppet movies with Jerry Juhl. I cowrote Muppet Treasure Island and a couple of other Muppet films which haven’t been made. I think three all together. So that’s what I’ve been doing till now. I also worked a lot on Muppets Tonight!.

    PLUME: Regarding The Jim Henson Hour and Muppets Tonight!, what do you think were the reasons that neither show gelled either with the audience or the networks?

    THATCHER: I believe The Jim Henson Hour didn’t gel because I think NBC didn’t know what to do with it. I think it was a little all over the place.

    PLUME: It did seem a bit schizophrenic.

    THATCHER: It did, and I don’t think the network was really behind us. If the network is really behind you, I mean, you’ve seen some of these horrible shows that run forever. I think they really didn’t know what to make of it. The great thing about Jim was that he never really repeated himself. It wasn’t just a Muppet Show again. I think that was part of it. We only did thirteen, and I think they only aired six or seven. The same thing with Muppets Tonight!. ABC put us on midseason and they ran eight, then they ran a few off over the summer and kept changing our timeslot, and I think they really didn’t know what to do with us. We weren’t bowling people over in the ratings, but I think we would have found an audience. It’s hard to know why those things don’t pick up. I think a puppet show is kind of a tough sell. I think you’re always going to have a hard time getting people to watch up front. With the Muppet Show, it didn’t really catch on until it’s second season. If it was on a network, it never would have made it past it’s first. With Muppets Tonight!, people still come up and say, “You worked on that? Man, that was such a great show.” We only made 22.

    PLUME: It’s unfortunate that Muppets Tonight! hit its stride in its second season, when it was cancelled.

    THATCHER: Exactly. And it never really aired. Those episodes didn’t air until it moved to the Disney Channel. It takes awhile to figure out what a show is and how it’s going to work. Muppets Tonight! never got that chance with the audience since they pulled us after about 10 shows, and you’re right, we did start to get all the kinks worked out. It takes a while to find out what works and what doesn’t, and to see which characters are going to grow. I think both of the shows would have held up if the networks had given them a longer run.

    PLUME: I noticed with Muppets Tonight! that there where a rather large amount of Star Trek references, along with the wonderful George Takei appearance.

    THATCHER: Yeah, we got George and Bill and even Leonard did a little cameo. I wish we’d done more with Leonard. Bill Shatner’s cameo was very funny. George was hysterical. He had a ball.

    PLUME: And you’re basically lampooning him quite harshly.

    THATCHER: Oh, and he got it. I went up to him and said, “George, Kirk Thatcher.” Like he remembered me, and he said, “Ohhhh yes.” in that big baritone he has, and he said, “Oh my.” And we’d written “Oh my” in there, and he said, “You know, that’s what I say. They play that on Howard Stern.” I said, “I know George, that’s why we wrote it in the script.” He said, “Well, you’ve got me down. This is so much fun.” He totally had a ball lampooning himself, because he’s a very loquacious, very chatty with anecdotes, and he’s got that great voice, and he knew were not being mean. That we were just having fun. And we all like to poke fun at the Star Trek fans.

    PLUME: I’ve also heard that his anecdotes sometimes go beyond a person’s endurance.

    THATCHER: That’s not really true. One of the jokes we made was that he was boring people, but he’s not that bad. He’s actually a very sweet guy. It was funny, though, because I can imitate him pretty well, so in the readthroughs I would do his part and people would laugh. Then he came on the set, and when we did the readthrough with the actor, everyone was elbowing and nudging me and coming up to me later and saying, “Oh my God, he talks just like that! I can’t believe it!” I said, “Well, that’s how George is. He is what he is.” He’s a very theatrical guy with this terrific basso profundo voice.

    PLUME: Were there any episodes of Muppets Tonight! written but never produced?

    THATCHER: Nope. We wrote 22 and we filmed 22. What usually happened was that the biggest issue on those programs was the guest star. We often would have a guest star, and they would change on us literally a week before the shoot, so we’d have to rewrite the entire script since it usually revolved around these guest stars. In fact, we made a show about that where the guest star died and we had to find a replacement. The reality was that we just kept losing guest stars, so we made up the episode where we just couldn’t get a guest star, and the one that we got died, and we had to keep running around to find one. It also became known as the cameo show, since we didn’t have just one guest star, we had a bunch of them. It was a nightmare. We’d get somebody and then they’d change their mind or their schedule would change. Actors and stars have very transient schedules, but whenever they worked with us, they were great. It was just nailing them down that was the problem.

    PLUME: What was the easiest guest star for you to work with?

    THATCHER: They were all easy, but easy in terms of just totally having a ball and getting into the Muppet spirit I would have to say Garth Brooks. He was so much fun. I think it was so much fun to work with him because he was having so much fun. It was like he was a kid and he totally got it . He just wanted to be so out there and goofy, and he’s just a really charming and likeable guy. Jason Alexander was fun, but I think Garth was the easiest, just because everything we wrote, he loved, and he totally threw himself into it.

    PLUME: How closely are you associated with the Henson Company right now?

    THATCHER: I have a consulting deal to develop TV shows.

    PLUME: Hopefully you’ll move into directing the features.

    THATCHER: That would be nice. They seemed to like what I did with second unit on Muppets From Space. I recently wrote and directed some stuff for the new Odyssey Channel. Some bumpers and interstitials. Stuff like that. They were fast and silly. I got to work with Frank Oz and that was a blast.

    PLUME: Well, you certainly provided a relaxed atmosphere to work in.

    THATCHER: Thanks for noticing. My main goal was just trying to get what they wanted and try to keep it fun. It’s scary, but I’ve been working on movie sets now for 18 years. I sound
    like an old man.

    PLUME: Does it sound odd to you, to say 18 years?

    THATCHER: It scares the beejeezus out of me to say that I’ve been working in movies for 18 years.

    PLUME: Are you happy with where you’re at right now?

    THATCHER: Yeah, pretty much. If you’d asked me 10 years ago, I’d say that I would have directed a couple movies by now, but I’m very happy. I love working with the Henson people. They’re incredibly sweet and very genuine. I’ve been very fortunate, actually. If I ever write my biography, I’d have to call it “The Luckiest Guy In Hollywood”, because I’ve never worked with jerks. From the Lucas people to the Star Trek people to the Henson people. All nice, classy people.

    PLUME: Sounds like you picked the right companies.

    THATCHER: Exactly. It’s the companies that are known for quality stuff and the people have all worked together for years and nobody’s in and out. They’re all basically showbiz families. It’s like going from one circus to another circus. It’s all people who have been together and really respect one another and know how to treat each other, so I’ve been very fortunate. The one thing I learned is that the work is very hard. Importantly, it’s the attitude or the tone of the set from the Director or Producer at the top – that can make the entire process comfortable and fun. When I was the guy in the trenches mixing plaster or standing on the set with 300 other people making sure that the actor with the rubber mask on could breathe, I really appreciated people with a sense of humor who kept it light and let everyone know that, “Hey, we’re in this together. It’s not like you’re the peon and we’re the brilliant geniuses who tell you what to do.” It’s more like, “Hey, how about this? Let’s try this?” When I was down in the trenches, I said, “When I’m up there, I’ll treat people the way I like to be treated.” And fortunately, the way I was treated. It’s like families where you grow up with nice parents.

    PLUME: There was a very marked style difference between your directing and Tim Hill’s on the film. His set was much more hushed.

    THATCHER: That’s the way a lot of director’s like it. Very quiet with the director very deep in thought, and that’s the way they work. I tend to be more exuberant and loud, and that’s because that’s just the way I work. That’s who I am.

    PLUME: I was actually quite surprised that you had never directed anything before then.

    THATCHER: If you’re on enough sets, you now what it’s supposed to be like. It goes back to being a lot of hard work. If you can make it fun and at least keep people from thinking that you’ll bite their heads off if they get it wrong, then you’re doing fine. I guess…I’m not an expert…

    PLUME: So, what was your final take on Muppets From Space?

    THATCHER: I think it’s nice how it’s contemporary and brings the Muppets up to the present day and it’s great how we get to see and meet some of the new characters we developed on Muppets Tonight!, like Bobo, Pepe, and Clifford. I liked that about it. I liked the fact that it’s not just another Kermit and Piggy story. It’s an interesting risk that we took, because in some ways, you don’t go to a James Bond movie to go see Moneypenny. We’re taking a bit of a risk saying Kermit’s there and Piggy’s there, but it’s Gonzo’s story and he’s dragging the rest of the Muppets with him. It’ll be interesting to see what the audience thinks about that. The other Muppet films are ensemble pieces, but it’s interesting to see the crux of the story not be on Kermit and Piggy. To be honest, from the inside, I’m a little tired of that. It’s like, “Okay, they’re not married. They probably won’t be. Let’s move on.” On the other hand, people love that dynamic. Those are the things I liked going into the film. What we were trying to achieve.

    PLUME: Well, I think we’ve covered a good chunk of material. Is there anything that you’d like to mention?

    THATCHER: God bless America. I just hope to write and direct my own shows someday. So keep those cards and letters coming!

    PLUME: Is directing what you want to focus on for the future?

    THATCHER: Writing and creating movies and TV shows and directing movies. That’s all… Pretty typical goals for a creative working stiff in Hollywood these days…

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    NOTE: Here… fully printed & intelligible for the first time anywhere (to the best of my knowledge)… are the complete lyrics to Thatcher’s punker / hate song from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home:

    “I HATE YOU”

    Lyrics by Kirk R. Thatcher

    Music by Mark Mangini

    (to be sung Allegro con Temptible)

    Just what is the future?
    The things we’ve done and said.
    Let’s just push the button.
    We’d be better off dead!

    And I hate you!
    and I berate you !
    and I can’t wait to get to you…

    The sins of all the fathers,
    being dumped on us – the sons
    The only choice we’re given is:
    How many megatons?

    So I eschew you!
    And I say “SCREW YOU”!
    And I hope you’re blue too!

    We’re all bloody worthless,
    Just greedy human scum,
    The numbers all add up
    to a negative sum…

    And I hate you!
    And I hate you!
    And I hate you…too!

    (Repeat in angry scream ’til hoarse – or blood sprays from throat. Whichever comes first…)

    -This piece courtesy of & copyright Kirk R. Thatcher

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    10 QUESTIONS

    1. What is your favorite piece of music?

    “Pictures At An Exhibition” by Mussorgsky, as orchestrated by Ravel.

    2. What is your favorite film?

    I have three favorite films, each of different mood and genre, they are in no particular order: Star Wars, Citizen Kane and Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

    3. What is your favorite TV program, past or current?

    I’ve logged so many hours in front of the television, I can’t pick one. The original Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits were very influential. Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Laugh In, and the classic Warner Brothers cartoons shown on Saturday morning were also a big part of who I am today. Recently, I’ve enjoyed South Park, The Simpsons, Northern Exposure, and Spongebob Squarepants.

    4. What do you feel has been your most important professional accomplishment to date?

    Directing a movie…finally!

    5. Which project do you feel didn’t live up to what you envisioned?

    There are certain aspects of every project I’ve worked on in my career in all sorts of capacities that didn’t live up to what I had envisioned, but I have strange and elaborate visions… which is usually why I was hired to work on the projects in the first place. So I guess I’m dropping back and punting on this one…

    6. What is your favorite book?

    I love too many to pick out one, but one of the most influential was a series of books printed in the early part of the twentieth century entitled, My Book House by Olive Beaupre Miller. It was an incredibly beautiful series of six children’s books filled with amazing artwork, incredible stories, and poetry… A trifecta of visual and literary inspiration for me at a very early age. The set I have belonged to my father when he was young and I still leaf through the pages for inspiration and to get the sweet smell of old books.

    7. If you could change one thing about the industry, what would it be?

    By the “industry” I assume you mean “the biz” – babe! Seriously? If I were king of the forest? I would put creative people in charge of the creative decisions… Too many bankers and middle management type executives are involved in the creative pipeline and that is why we find ourselves with such an abundance of well financed dreck…

    8. Who – or what – would you say has had the biggest influence on your career?

    For what, see questions 2 and 6. As far as people go, it would be George Lucas, Jim Henson, and Leonard Nimoy. All three men mentored me in one way or another, Leonard and Jim in a more direct and personal manner. George Lucas has always been an inspiration to think big and outside of the box and to eschew what is considered standard operating procedure in Hollywood in lieu of better products or processes.

    9. What is your next project?

    I have a lot of irons in the fire, as they say. I’m being considered for some solely as a director, the others as both writer and director. But nothing is going to move ahead until early 2003, so I’m not going to jinx anything by mentioning them here.

    10. What is the one project that you’ve always wanted to do, but have yet to be able to?

    To write and direct a movie of my own and then turn it into a videogame, a TV series, a novel and an amusement park ride.

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  • Win a STAR WARS: DARTH VADER MYTHOS statue from Sideshow Collectibles!

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    In conjunction with Sideshow Collectibles, we’re giving away a limited edition STAR WARS: DARTH VADER MYTHOS statue to one lucky winner!

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Thursday, January 9th.

    Please note: International winners agree to pay shipping on any prizes granted by Sideshow Collectibles during any contest or giveaway. International winners (including EU regions) will be responsible for VAT, duties or import fees on the shipment of their prize that may be assessed by their governments. Due to custom requirements, the prize will be assigned a value of at least US$1.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Thursday, January 9th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • My Favourite Things: April 2013

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    APRIL

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    It’s the first of May. Our friend Jonathan Coulton is no doubt receiving an endless amount of bad jokes on Twitter today. I however have decided to instead dedicate my time to bringing you my favourite things from last month. You know, because I’m awesome like that.

    1) Thumb Snatchers From The Moon Cocoon

    This is a rather mental short film from Bradley Schaffer. It a hand-made stop-motion story of a Texan Sheriff taking on a bungling alien invasion. It has deservedly won a ton of awards, maybe not specifically for being bat-shit insane but I’m sure that is a big part of it. Think Axe Cop meets Mars Attacks and you’re half way there.

    2) Patton Oswalt’s Star Wars Filibuster

    No doubt you’re already aware of this. It has already become legendary. Parks & Recreation had comedian Patton Oswalt as a guest star for a couple of episodes. In the following scene the producers of the show asked him to come up with his own words for the filibuster he had to act. What Patton comes up with is nothing short of inspired and completely crazy. I mean, Moon Knight is a Marvel A-lister? C’mon!

    3) And on that note…

    Harrison Ford appeared on Jimmy Kimmel’s talk show and questions of the new Star Wars movie came up. What happened was rather wonderful. He hasn’t lost a step!

    By the way, any video where Harrison Ford says “You Wookie sack of shit” will always get a showing in this column.

    4) Goalunited

    I’ve been obsessed for a number of weeks with this online football management simulator. It’s a real-time game so unlike most football games, you can’t skip to the next match. League games are Wednesdays and Saturdays and unless you’re playing in a cup competition or have arranged a friendly, you have to wait for Wednesday and Saturday for your next match. But fret not, there are loads of things to be doing in the mean time like organising training, scouting youth players, trading on the transfer market and negotiating sponsorships.

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    The Stadium complex I’ve built up so far.

    In fact, the game is so in-depth you even pick what products to manufacture in your club shop and have to arrange for production! Of course a lot of these features aren’t available at first, as you have to build up your experience but it doesn’t take long for things to become unlocked.

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    Not bragging but I totally won this match.

    I’m completely in love with my team (Phoenix Park Tuesday) and managed to win my league in my first season! But now that I’ve been promoted to a higher league I’m getting my ass handed to me on a regular basis. It’s a serious challenge.

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    To get your team and start playing go to goalunited.org and register. It’s free, so why not?

    5) Delta Gamma Zod

    Michael Shannon giving an acting master class with the infamous Delta Gamma sorority letter. I think that’s all the intro you need.

    Oh, and it’s NSFW if you weren’t aware as it features phrases like “cunt-punt”. Enjoy!

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    And that’s it! My favourite things of the last month.

    Aaron Fever is the creator of double ended arrows. He is also more accurately an internet whore and rarely leaves the house. If you like what you read here check out his blog http://www.aaronfever.com

  • Win LEGO STAR WARS: THE EMPIRE STRIKES OUT on DVD!

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    In conjunction with Fox, we’re giving away two (2) copies of LEGO STAR WARS: THE EMPIRE STRIKES OUT on DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, April 17th.

    HOLD ON TO YOUR BRICKS…FOR AN ALL-NEW ANIMATED ADVENTURE!
    Your favorite characters are back to save the galaxy in LEGO® Star Wars®: The Empire Strikes Outâ„¢. The heroes of the Rebel Alliance including heroic Luke Skywalker, swaggering Han Solo and steadfast Princess Leia have no time to celebrate their victory over the Empire as a new Imperial threat arises. But as Jedi-in training Luke embarks on this next mission, he discovers that his celebrity status as a “Death-Star-Blower-Upper” can be a double-edged lightsaber when he’s constantly mobbed by crazed fans. So much for secret missions! Meanwhile, Darth Vader and Darth Maul are locked in a hilarious “Sith-ling” rivalry as they compete for the Emperor’s approval. It’s an action-packed comic adventure that’s out of this world!

    Follow Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment on Twitter @FoxHomeEnt

    Enter the contest!
    Email:
    First name:
    Last name:
    Street Address:
    Address Line 2 (if needed):
    City:
    State/Province/Whatever:
    Zip Code/Postal Code:
    Country:
    Birth Month:
    Birth Day:
    Birth Year:

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, April 17th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 11/23/12: Eye Of The Beholder

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    So influential is its dynamic of a single event having many different interpretations based on the observer that the very title of Akira Kurosawa’s classic Rashomon (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) has become a shorthand to represent in the subjective nature of human observation. As a film, its exploration of truth and justice in the wake of a murder remains a masterwork, heightened by a beautiful sound and picture restoration from the folks at Criterion. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, an interview with Robert Altman, documentaries, interviews, trailers, and Criterion’s standard booklet of essays and ephemera.

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    So what’s this week’s Thinkgeek goody? Howzabout a new bit of LEGO? The Uruk-hai Army set ($29.99), containing a battlement, Rohan soldier, Eomer, and a quarter of Uruk-hai, is intended as a supplement to the already-massive Helm’s Deep set. So get building and let the battle begin.

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    I hope you’ve got plenty of bubblegum to chew, because there’s more than enough kick ass to be found in the long-awaited high definition arrival of John Carpenter’s They Live (Shout Factory, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.93 SRP), starring Rowdy Roddy Piper as an everyman who finds a unique pair of sunglasses that allow him to see that some of the people around him are actually aliens bent on enslaving humanity. Oh, it’s just fantastic, and now it looks great, too. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, an interview, featurettes, and more.

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    If you’re going into The Expendables 2 (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) looking for a great film, best to probably look elsewhere. However, if you’re looking for an actioner equivalent of Cannonball Run that funs and packed with all of your action heroes from the last 30 years, this is the sequel for you, as it adds in more Bruce, more Arnold, and even Chuck Norris. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    How do you know an entire generation has come of age? When their childhoods are packaged up and sold back to them as nostalgia. The consumer nostalgia machine has just laid claim to Saban’s Japanese perpetual repurposing machine with Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Complete Series (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$119.99 SRP), which contains all 3 seasons of the original run, plus the Alien Rangers mini-series and a pair of bonus discs featuring rare archival materials and retrospectives. And if those 19 discs weren’t enough, you can pick up the complimentary Power Rangers: Seasons 4-7 Collection (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-SRP), which picks up where the last set left off with the successor seasons Zeo, Turbo, In Space, and Lost Galaxy, plus EVEN MORE archival materials and retrospectives, and is available only from powerrangersondvd.com. So yes, former kiddies now all grown up, this is the way to snap up your lost youth and sit your own children down in front of it, knowing that you’re right and that Adventure Time they seem to love so much doesn’t make any damn sense.

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    Kudos to Shout Factory for ensuring classic TV shows make their way to DVD in their entirety, rather than languishing as abandoned single-season releases – as had been the case with the still-sparkling 70’s cop workplace sitcom Barney Miller (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$159.99 SRP). Well, fear not, for it has been rescued by Shout and released as a complete series set, collecting all eight seasons plus interviews, commentaries, the original pilot, and even the entire first season of the spin-off Fish, starring Abe Vigoda. Thanks, Shout!

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    Oh, you can nerd out for hours, and hours, and hours while re-living scores of childhood memories perusing Star Wars: The Ultimate Action Figure Collection (Chronicle Books, $40.00 SRP) – a massive tome containing details on every single Star Wars action figure Kenner, then Hasbro, has produced over the past 35 years. Incredible, and just a little bit frightening.

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    You knew once they wrapped that a big box full of the entire run was inevitable, so relive all of the merry misadventures of the rising star Vincent Chase and his tacky Tinsletown Trio via Entourage: The Complete Series (HBO, $249.99 SRP), which contains all eight seasons of the Hollywood insider bromance. Bonus features include audio commentaries, featurettes, a pair of panel discussions with the cast & crew, a series retrospective and more.

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    They’ve covered dozens and bands and eras, and while I view it through the filter of my own preferences, I always find the Under Review series fascinating viewing for a music fan. The latest is The Rolling Stones Under Review: 1975-1983 (Sexy Intellectual, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP), which looks at the first part of the Ronnie Wood years.

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    It was inevitable that Dreamworks couldn’t resist exploiting the successful – and quite good – How To Train Your Dragon, so we get a TV series whose introductory premiere gets a DVD release with the Dragon Riders Of Berk (Dreamworks, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), featuring 4 episodes of the further adventures of Hiccup, Toothless, and their pals.

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    How excellent is it that Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure (MGM, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP) is now in high definition? Totally excellent. Bonus features include an air guitar featurette, radio ads, a featurette on the real Bill & Ted relationship the film drew upon, and even an episode of the cartoon series.

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    There have been many cinematic attempts at Zorro (Somerville House, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP), but one of the most enjoyable is one that I not only had never heard of, but also happens to be newly-available in high definition. Produced in 1975, this take stars Alain Delon as the titular masked avenger, and it’s worth a spin.

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    Only the BBC could produce a show like Call The Midwife (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP), about a midwife from a privileged background who joins an order of nursing nuns in poverty-stricken East London in the 1950s. Bonus materials include cast interviews.

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    Previously available only on DVD, all 4 specials featuring Joss Whedon & John Cassady’s take on Marvel’s mutant superteam are collected together in high definition in Astonishing X-Men (Shout Factory, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.97 SRP), featuring a behind-the-scenes featurette, music video, and interviews with Joe Quesada and Neal Adams.

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    If you’ve got a toddler about to enter the scary world of preschool, let the Muppets help out by picking them up a copy of the social primer Sesame Street: Preschool Is Cool – Making Friends (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), which provides fun acclimation tips to make things easier.

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    For this week’s soundtrack round up, we’ve got a pair of releases from Danny Elfman and a film about a boy and a tiger in a boat. First up from Danny Elfman is the score to the biopic Hitchcock (Sony Masterworks, $9.99 SRP), along with Elfman’s score to Silver Linings Playbook (Sony Classical, $8.99 SRP). And as to that flick with the boy and the tiger on a lifeboat, that would be Mychael Danna’s score to Life Of Pi (Sony Classical, $12.99 SRP).

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    I would be far more accepting of the awful reality and fantasy series filling up their schedule if the History Channel and A&E would just admit it they were no longer History or Arts & Entertainment and just change their names already. But they haven’t, so we get backwoods show about duck call nouveau riche in Duck Dynasty (A&E, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP) and the atrocious pseudo-history of Ancient Aliens: Season 4 (History, Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP). But I suppose simple folk need something to watch.

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    Hot Toys is well on their way to releasing just about every character seen in The Avengers, so it certainly makes sense that we’d get a figure of SHEILD Agent Clint Barton, aka Hawkeye ($189.99). And as we’ve come to expect from Hot Toys, not only do you get a damn good likeness of actor Jeremy Renner, but it’s also loaded with a slew of incredibly detailed accessories, from his strung bow to a quiver packed with individual arrows, plus a selection of swappable trick arrowheads so you can customize your display. Heck, he’s even got his sunglasses.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Contest Round-Up: 2010-11-11

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    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. Every week, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!

    In conjunction with Time Life, we’re giving away a copy of THE SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN on DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies each of DOCTOR WHO: SEASON 5 on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies each of SHERLOCK: SEASON 1 on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with Adult Swim Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies each of METALOCALYPSE: SEASON 3 on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with History Channel Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of ANCIENT ALIENS: SEASON 1 on Blu-Ray.

    In conjunction with History Channel Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies each of GANGLAND: SEASON 6 on both Blu-Ray & DVD.

    In conjunction with Scholastic, we’re giving away five (5) copies of STAR WARS – MILLENNIUM FALCON: A 3-D OWNER’S GUIDE.

    In conjunction with IDW, we’re giving away two (2) copies of BLOOM COUNTY: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION VOLUME 3.

  • Win STAR WARS – MILLENNIUM FALCON: A 3-D OWNER’S GUIDE!

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    In conjunction with Scholastic, we’re giving away five (5) copies of STAR WARS – MILLENNIUM FALCON: A 3-D OWNER’S GUIDE.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, December 1st.

    Enter the contest!
    Email:
    First name:
    Last name:
    Street Address:
    Address Line 2 (if needed):
    City:
    State/Province/Whatever:
    Zip Code/Postal Code:
    Country:
    Birth Month:
    Birth Day:
    Birth Year:

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, December 1st.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.

  • FROM THE VAULT: An Interview with Frank Oz

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    I first met Frank Oz on the set of Muppets From Space, in January of 1999. We got on quite well, and made plans to do an in-depth interview sometime in the near future.

    Towards the end of the year, our schedules finally met in the middle, and we had quite a long conversation, marked by Oz’s complete candor about his time with the Muppets, his move into directing, and much more. I also learned that Frank Oz swore.

    Like a sailor.

    It was an endearing verbal affectation that sticks out in my memory to this day. Here was an iconic performer who brought to life a fair chunk of my childhood – Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Cookie Monster, Animal, Grover – and he cussed. A lot.

    From the vaults, I present to you my chat with Frank Oz…

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    KEN PLUME: You were born in England. When did your parents move to the States? Why did they?

    FRANK OZ: I was born in Hereford, England in 1944. We moved when they had an opportunity to get a visa, about 1950. My Dad always thought Europe was a bit too small for him. He wanted to see the United States…

    The typical immigrant story. He wanted a better life for his children, too. He always tried to get the visa and it didn’t come up. Even before the war he wanted to come to the United States.

    At that time you had to have six months residence supported by a sponsor in the United States. He finally found a sponsor in Montana, bizarrely enough, so in 1951 he took my brother and I and my mom, who I think was pregnant with my sister, from Belgium to Montana.

    PLUME: What was your father’s profession?

    OZ: He was a window trimmer, like for Ladies’ apparel stores.

    PLUME: Your parents were both puppeteers, weren’t they?

    OZ: Right.

    PLUME: What was his profession in the States?

    OZ: He stayed a window trimmer. He was a freelance window trimmer.

    PLUME: So the puppeteering was a hobby…

    OZ: It became a hobby, right.

    PLUME: Did your parents foster puppeteering within the family?

    OZ: No. My brother had no interest in it whatsoever and my sister didn’t have interest in it till later years. My brother was into cars. It was something that I latched on to because it was a way to please them and it was a means of expression for a shy, self-effacing boy.

    PLUME: Did it come naturally to you?

    OZ: I have no idea. In the beginning I imagine you’re a kid, you don’t know what the hell you’re doing. It took awhile. At that time, it was only marionettes, not hand puppets.

    PLUME: Where were your interests growing up?

    OZ: The usual things: girls and sports. That was the interest, mainly. I never wanted to be a puppeteer. I stopped puppeteering when I was about 18. I puppeteered when I was eleven years old to 18 to make extra money to go to Europe, which I made half of and my parents gave me half.
    I bought a tape recorder and some stuff and went to Europe for three months when I was 18. The puppeteering was only there as a hobby. I wanted to be a journalist. When I was 19 and after I had spent about a year in college, Jim Henson asked me to come out and try puppeteering for awhile.

    PLUME: Where did you first meet Jim (Henson)?

    OZ: They have these puppeteers conferences, which I never used to go to… ever…except for this one I went to when I was 17 years old and Jim happened to be there.

    PLUME: Jim Henson wanted to hire you right out of high school, right?

    OZ: He saw what I did there, and I was working with an old friend of mine named Jerry Juhl, so he hired Jerry, who went on to be the writer for the Muppets. Two years later when I finished high school and was in college, he asked me to come out to work part-time with him. I tried to continue my studies at CCNY in New York, but that lasted only about a semester or two. I continued on with the Muppets. What was going on was too exciting.

    PLUME: What were your first impressions of Jim during that first meeting?

    OZ: He didn’t have a beard. At that time I was 17, so he must have been about 23. He was this very quiet, shy guy who did these absolutely f***ing amazing puppets that were totally brand new and fresh, that had never been done before.

    (continued below…)

  • FROM THE VAULT: An Interview with Gary Kurtz

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    The wonderful sci-fi geek site i09.com recently linked out to an LA Times interview with producer Gary Kurtz, and i09 believed it to be the first time that Kurtz had spoken in-depth, on the record, about the creation of Star Wars and the issues he had with George Lucas during the making of The Empire Strikes Back that led to a massive falling out between the two creative partners.

    Well, not so.

    I’d done a massive interview with Kurtz back in 2002, which goes into a lot more detail about the falling out, plus Kurtz’s other work on American Graffiti and with Jim Henson on The Dark Crystal.

    Here is that interview…

    -Ken Plume

    ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 11, 2002

    In many projects, there are “unsung heroes”… people whose contributions are extensive, but have been overshadowed by the passage of time (or the bluster of others).

    One of those “unsung heroes” is producer Gary Kurtz, whose credits include American Graffiti, Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, Dark Crystal, and Return to Oz.

    I’m not going to try and explain Kurtz’s importance to Star Wars in this introduction – the interview will accomplish that.

    Without further ado, my in-depth interview with Gary Kurtz…

    KEN PLUME: I’d like to go back to the very beginning and ask about your introduction to the film industry.

    GARY KURTZ: Well, I went to film school at USC in Los Angeles. Actually, to go back even further than that, I was a music major, really, in high school in the southern California area and actually went to USC on a music scholarship to begin with. At that time, I was looking to major in composition and conducting with a possibility of maybe teaching music. But, it was a bit vague and in the first year one of the requirements of music scholarships is that you have to play in every group that’s available – so I was playing in the concert band, the symphony orchestra, the opera orchestra, the wind and other small ensembles in the classical music side, as well as the jazz band and a couple of other jazz groups that were organized at the school.

    PLUME: Was that just meant to give you versatility as far as that curriculum?

    KURTZ: Well, that was part of it, and also they always desperately needed members to play in the various groups and so they felt that music experience and performance – a lot of composition majors didn’t know how to play anything but the piano, so one of the important things was to get orchestral experience playing an orchestra instrument other than the piano. I didn’t have that problem. I played reeds primarily and then oboe and English horn, and dabbled in most of the rest of the instruments except for the heavy brass. I never tried to play anything other than a bit of the clarinet.

    In that first year at USC I did the music for three or four student films. It didn’t necessarily mean composing music, because the time deadlines were unbelievably short, so it meant mostly to assemble music from a variety of sources. Since they were student films, it didn’t really matter where they came from – there were no rights problems. In doing that, though, I became more and more interested in the films. I had had previous experience in high school at shooting 8mm and 16mm film footage, both documentary and sort of dramatic type materials, so it wasn’t a new thing to me. And I had been a keen still photographer for years, so moving to a cinema major wasn’t really that big a jump.

    PLUME: … and this would have been what, the mid-’60s?

    KURTZ: No, no … I went to USC first in 1959, so it was in the early ’60s. Very early ’60s.

    PLUME: So you were a part of that initial group of classes in the film department.

    KURTZ: No, the film department at USC had been going on since the 1920s, since the silent days … I guess it was the oldest film school in existence, because it started so early … It wasn’t really until the mid-’60s, after I’d finished and was gone, that the popularity of studying cinema became magnified 100 percent or more, because when I was there, it was very difficult to find enough students to make up film crews. As a matter of fact … in the first senior project year that I was in in that term, I was doing advanced camera, as well as sound and production management and other things, and I had to work on four of the seven projects. Normally, you’re only supposed to work on one! But everybody in the class that I was in worked on four or five projects, because there weren’t enough people.

    Then the next term, when I directed, I had a really hard time getting together enough of a crew. I had to actually do a lot of my own camera work – there wasn’t a cameraperson available. Film school wasn’t particularly popular at that time. It wasn’t until George Lucas and his group, John Milius and those guys, who went to USC also – they didn’t start until ’66 – by then it seemed to be much more popular. And certainly by the end of the ’60s, it was incredibly popular and they had to create all kinds of devices to wheedle out a lot of people by requiring a lot of portfolio work and films made in high school – all kinds of pre-requirements, just to get it down to a usable number of students that they could cope with.

    PLUME: During the time you were there, was it rather open?

    KURTZ: Oh, it was completely open. If you had projects – either written or film projects – they would look at early film projects or just written material, scripts and proposals for projects, for acceptance. But it wasn’t too definitive, because they were interested in having enough students to make up the program.

    PLUME: And at the time you were going, how respected was the film program by the industry?

    KURTZ: Oh, it was quite well respected. There were a lot of people that had graduated out of the program in the post-war period – the late ’40s, ’50s – that had become fixtures in the industry of one kind or another – studio executives or agents or television producers or a few film directors – but … it wasn’t a straight line to the creative heart, because the other big factor was the fact that the unions in the late ’50s and ’60s were very strong, and you couldn’t work in the industry unless you were a union member, as far as the crafts were concerned, and you couldn’t get into the unions because they were closed. A closed-shop kind of system. So the experience that I got while I was a film student was working on Roger Corman kind of low-budget exploitation films, and I worked on a lot of those – 40 or 50 over a three or four year period.

    PLUME: Generally doing what type of work?

    KURTZ: Well, everything really. I started out being a grip and an electrician and a sound boom operator, and on some of the later ones I was the director of photography and film editor or production supervisor.

    PLUME: So, basically, a jack-of-all-trades.

    KURTZ: Yes, yes, a little of everything. On some projects, there was so few crew that they were very much like student films. I remember one picture where I was production manager and the assistant director, as well as the editor and one of the cameramen – and the second unit director as well.

    PLUME: Now …in film school at that time, what were the aspirations for afterwards? I mean, when you talk to film students now, everyone wants to be a director right out of the gate.

    KURTZ: Yes, that wasn’t quite as strong then … there was a general feeling, in the very early ’60s, that people wanted to sort of break down the barriers of Hollywood and go into ALL of the various things. There were a lot of students who wanted to become editors, and there were a lot who wanted to become cameramen. There were quite a few who wanted to be directors as well, but it didn’t seem to be the only thing.

    PLUME: It hadn’t quite been placed on the pedestal it got placed on later, had it?

    KURTZ: No, no … the auteur theory really came out of the French new wave writings in the late ’50s/early ’60s, and we were reading all that stuff from Cahiers du Cinema and talking about it at school, I remember, and I think most of the students thought the concept intellectually was valid, but practically was rubbish because there’re so many accidents that happen on a film. The chemistry of the group that you’ve gotten together makes a huge difference, and yes, picking the right people is important. But it’s really difficult for a director – unless you’re Stanley Kubrick – to have the final say on every single little minute detail, so all the films are pretty much a group effort. It can be pretty much assumed that most of the aspiring directors felt that way – they had no illusions about the fact that they could become like French directors were.

    PLUME: Sometimes having absolute final say is one of the worst things that can happen if you have wrong instincts.

    KURTZ: Yes, absolutely. I mean, the whole point of having a group effort is that your crew becomes a sounding board.

    PLUME: I never understood the auteur theory when so much of a film is a matter of checks and balances.

    KURTZ: Well, I think that intellectually the auteur theory came out of the idea of looking at a body of work – like Hitchcock’s work or Hawks’s work or John Ford’s work – and trying to see common threads. Well, that’s perfectly acceptable as an analysis of the whole career of a filmmaker, because there are going to be tying threads there. A director’s not going to pick a project to do unless it has some meaning to them. You are going to find that it’s just the idea of the director being the only creative entity on a picture was the aspect that I think most people felt was a bit far-fetched.

    PLUME: And do you think that that trend has become detrimental over time?

    KURTZ: Yes, I do. Definitely. I especially think, since I’ve focused mostly on my career on producing and working with a lot of first time directors, I’ve felt that what’s happened is that the working producer’s job – basically, of being the director’s partner and being his mirror and sounding bound – has disappeared and the producer’s job has primarily turned to deal making. Most of the people whose names you see up on the screen don’t have anything to do with the making of the film, which is a shame, really, because it leaves the director kind of totally on his own – and it means also that there’s no one to say “Wait a minute, that’s terrible, don’t do that!”

    PLUME: There’re no ‘no-men’ anymore.

    KURTZ: There’re no ‘no-men’. Yes, exactly.

    PLUME: Do you think that leads to the working producer now being more of a traveling man than they were in the past? You used to be able to see that certain directors worked hand-in-hand with producers over ten films. Now you’ll be lucky if they work past two films, if one of those is a success.

    KURTZ: Yes, I think that’s a result of most of those relationships having risen out of the deals. Sometimes the producer’s relationship with the director and the writer on a project is only because either they own the property in the first place or they’re the one that pulled the money together, so that there is no actual working relationship. The legwork that the producer should be doing is shared out amongst the production staff, some of it being done by the production supervisor and others, and the rest being absorbed by the director. I mean, I’ve never felt that it’s fair to a director, in a way, to saddle him with having to deal with all that stuff. I’ve always felt that a good producer should insulate the director completely from having to deal with the studio and any outside influences, to allow him to get on with working with the actors and putting the film together.

    PLUME: Do you think that film schools today – and to a large extent apocryphal evidence that filters down – have made directors nowadays believe that any and all producers should be seen as enemies to whatever the vision of the director may – or may not – be?

    KURTZ: I’m sure they do, because that’s probably the case. The producer is looked upon as pretty much the same as a studio executive, who may not have any idea about the project. Whereas if you go back to the ’60s, ’70s and even before … even of the big studios days, prior to the studios losing their real power in the ’60s… the producers that were working – the Arthur Freeds of the world, and David O. Selnicks – they had the power. The directors were their hired hands. That’s not necessarily great either, but those kinds of producers from the ’30s and ’40s seemed to have a fairly grand vision of what they wanted to see on the screen. The directors that they hired went along with them – and that was part of the studio system anyway, when they all were employees of the studio. So it isn’t fair to try to compare that with what’s going on today.

    PLUME: The irony is that a good deal of major directors nowadays have become those type of producers as well, bringing on other directors as hired hands.

    KURTZ: Yes, exactly… Because they had the power to do that. But there’re so few good movies made today, it’s difficult for me to believe that it’s all because the directors don’t have any vision in what they want to see. I think it’s primarily due to the fact that the studios are now all owned by big conglomerates who are interested in making money to the exclusion of everything else. Now, the studios always wanted to make money – that was one of their reasons for being in existence – but the men who ran the studios, no matter how difficult they were, they had some sense of what being a showman was like.

    They were willing to take chances on oddball projects, and you don’t see that as much anymore. There are smaller companies who will, but there’s so many stories about projects floating around the last ten years that couldn’t get made because the elements weren’t right. When you just look at the list of the elements that the studios wanted, you know it wouldn’t work that way. But it’s a security blanket to have it be a Tom Cruise picture, or a Jack Nicholson picture, or whoever. Whether they’re right for the project or not, the studio executive is not going to get fired if the picture fails if they have A-list talent.

    PLUME: Right – and then they complain about the audience, for not accepting it.

    KURTZ: Yes.

    PLUME: I’m interested… when you talk about the Golden Age of Hollywood, as opposed to now, there seemed to be a better balance between “Okay, these are our A pictures, and then these are our B pictures, the experimental ones that we’ll toss money towards, but … we’re going to bank on the A ones, if the B ones hit – fine.” Now it seems that everything has to be a blockbuster.

    KURTZ: Yes, that’s exactly right. I mean, I was part of the program at Universal Studios in the early ’70s – the low-budget program that was run by Ned Tanen which produced twelve or thirteen pictures, all under a million dollars at that time. Anything under a million dollars was considered bare bones movies. The most famous film that came out of that group was, of course, American Graffiti – and it made the most money – but all the films that were made under that program were interesting, quirky films that at least made their money back. If you count video and things over the long run, they all made money … it’s not Jaws business, but American Graffiti even wasn’t Jaws business. American Graffiti was a very, very small picture that went on to do reasonably well. I think it eventually did $60 million in America, which wasn’t big box office even in the early ’70s. But, based on the cost of the picture, it was pretty phenomenal. The other pictures in that program – Doug Trumbull’s Silent Running and John Cassavetes’s Minnie and Moskowitz and Milos Forman’s Taking Off and Peter Fonda’s The Hired Hand and the other one that I helped produce, Monte Hellman’s Two-Lane Blacktop – all of those films are interesting films and they’re worth seeing today.

    PLUME: They hold up very well.

    KURTZ: They do hold up very well, and because they cost so little money, the studio didn’t worry about them. But no one seems to be willing to experiment with a program like that today – at all. They’re not willing to make small films, or if they do, they make them by – well, they don’t make them, actually. They have a classics division of some kind or another like Fox Searchlight or Miramax that seek out odd projects, and they get made independently and then just released by the studio. The studio doesn’t instigate the making of those projects.

    PLUME: So they have no initial costs…

    KURTZ: No, they do have costs. They wait for the filmmakers to come to them with a developed script.

    PLUME: Or, in some cases, a completely filmed project…

    KURTZ: Well, yes, that happens, too.

    PLUME: It seems like the industry depends solely upon initiative, nowadays, rather than taking any risks.

    KURTZ: At the time we were doing American Graffiti at Universal – which was not a picture made on the lot, although we had an office there – it was made in San Francisco, and we were very rarely at the studio. But some of the times when I was at the studio for meetings and various things, I realized in talking to some of the story department people that they had probably 100 projects in various stages of development – script development – that they were paying someone to develop. They don’t do much of that anymore at all. I suppose the idea is now that the scripts will somehow be generated. Either the independent producers or the writers themselves will spend the time and energy to develop them to the point where they can be seen. I think one of the reasons that there’re so few good movies is that that process has been truncated so much. Too many films go into production before they’re ready.

    (continued below…)

  • Soapbox: Stargate Odyssey

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    Stargate Odyssey

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    In November of last year, Roland Emmerich announced that he was working on a TV spin-off to his latest disaster movie, 2012. The proposed spin off series is to be called 2013 and will follow on from the events of the movie, following a group of survivors to an island off the coast of Africa, where presumably the survivors will find a pile of unused Lost scripts. Whether 2012 was actually a disaster movie or a disaster of a movie and whether 2013 will need to have its title updated if it runs for more than one year are questions probably best left unasked. One question that might be worth asking is if Emmerich honestly thinks that this proposed spin off has a chance in hell of being anywhere near as popular or successful as the only other TV spin off from an Emmerich movie?

    The Stargate movie was released in 1994, written by Emmerich and Dean Devlin and directed by Emmerich himself. The movie was a big success for MGM, who own the rights to Stargate and who decided to make a spin off to the movie called Stargate: SG1. Since SG1 first aired in 1997, Stargate has been on our TV screens for a total of sixteen years. Or seventeen years if you count the animated Stargate series, Stargate: Infinities. But please don’t, nobody else does…

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    SG1 ran for a total of ten seasons and remains that longest running consecutively aired hour long Sci-Fi series in America with two hundred and fourteen episodes having been aired. During the eight season of SG1, Stargate: Atlantis began to air and the two series ran concurrently for three years up until SG1‘s cancellations. Atlantis ran for two more seasons after that, finishing in January of 2009 with a milestone hundredth episode. In October of 2009, Stargate: Universe came to air, is in presently in the final weeks of its debut season and has been renewed for at least one more season by the Sci Fi network. Despite initial criticisms labelling the show as “Stargate: Voyager” because the setting of the series is in a spaceship, the series has already proven that it can deliver every bit as much as the previous Stargate shows. There has also been two direct to DVD movies with two more possibly scheduled for production after MGM recovers from the current financial woes that have even brought Bond to a halt.

    Since 2007, the caretakers of Stargate have been Brad Wright and Jonathan Glassner, who developed the SG1 series and MGM who own the rights to the Stargate TV franchise. None of the success that Stargate has achieved since the debut of SG1 has had anything to do with Emmerich or Devlin and they’ve criticised the shows whenever a chance came up to do so and saying that their vision for Stargate is the real version and that the vision that’s endured since 1997 is basically a crass fraud. But MGM’s financial woes have put a halt on development of any feature films for the time being. So Emmerich and Devlin have to hold off on their “real” Stargate sequels, which give Emmerich a chance to bring 2013 to life. Will 2013 be a vindication for Emmerich? Will it out do the success of Stargate? My crystal ball says “no”.

    Despite the fact that Stargate is one of the most successful scf-fi shows in the world and the fact that it airs on a station called Sci Fi (I still can’t get my head around SyFy), it doesn’t seems to have many of the usual sci-fi fans. No matter what walk of life you’re in or where your friends come from, whether you consider yourself a nerd or not, you’re guaranteed to know at least a handful of hardcore Star Wars fans. It’s the same with Star Trek, though Trek does get scorned a little more than Wars does by the general public. Hell, if I wear a Browncoat t-shirt into work on any given Friday, at least one person will tell me what a big Joss Whedon fan they are, even though they’ve never seen an episode of Firefly (which is a damn shame). Stargate fans are hard to find. I honestly don’t think I could name two people that I know well who are Stargate fans. Part of this may be due to the fact that Stargate fans are collectively known as “Gaters” which sounds for all the world like it should be a Florida-based basketball team.

    In 2005, I went to the Wizard World convention in Los Angeles, and given the nature of the convention, almost every kind of nerd fandom I can think of was pretty well represented there. It was primarily comic-oriented, so it wasn’t unreasonable to expect that the bulk of the people who were out in costume would be there dressed as comic characters. It wasn’t until I noticed so many other people who were representing a multitude of tv shows and movies that I realised how under-represented and down right ignored Stargate was. Even in a room with a few thousand other nerds, Stargate fans are still the folk who end up going to the Prom alone.

    But almost anyone with even the most peripheral knowledge of Stargate will be able to tell you one thing they know about the franchise, and that one thing is that the main cast member in SG1 was Richard Dean Anderson. To this day, he remains one of the most enduring symbols of the Stargate franchise, having appeared in numerous episodes of both Atlantis and Universe (including both series’ pilot episodes) and the two direct to DVD movies.

    The producers of the three Stargate series have always chosen their actors with great care, knowing full well that incorporating actors from Star Trek, Farscape and Firefly would be virtually guaranteed to bring in new viewers, as well as ensure that the quality of the show remains constant.

    A few months after SG1 aired its last episode I got a message on MySpace (yes, it was that long ago) from one of the Dublin Browncoats. I had met the Browncoats a few times and had enjoyed having a few pints with them while talking about nerdy things, but talk had never turned to anything Stargate related. The MySpace message said that Richard Dean Anderson was in Dublin for the midnight launch of Halo 3, and asked if I’d like to join herself and some of the other Browncoats in Dublin to meet RDA. Seeing that my social calendar was fairly quiet at the time, I said I’d love to.

    After a little bit of research that day, I found out that Nathan Fillion, Adam Baldwin and Alan Tudyk from Firefly were all in the voice cast of Halo 3 and one of the characters was even to be named “Sergeant Reynolds” after Nathan Fillion’s Firefly character, Malcolm Reynolds. Add this to the fact that RDA is most widely knows for playing MacGyver, and I was pretty convinced that I would be the only person there who was looking to see the guy who played Jack O’Neill for the better part of a decade.

    The plan was to meet in Dublin city centre at 6PM to scout out the location that RDA was due to be appearing at and then when we were to go for dinner in the nearest convenient pub. Even though I didn’t know the Browncoats all that well, it was a plan that I could get behind. So before meeting the Browncoats, I went to the local comic shop to pick up an SG1 comic, or poster, or magazine. Hell, even a MacGyver DVD would have done the trick. You can’t go to meet RDA at a video game launch where you have no intention of actually buying the game without having something for him to sign. That’d just be rude. I ended up buying a badly written SG1 comic that had a pretty good photo cover. Stargate merchandise is pretty hard to find in retail stores, even in comic specialty stores. I didn’t have time to put an order in with QMX for merchandise and wait six weeks for delivery, so I had to make do with what I could find.

    According to what I’d been told on MySpace, RDA was supposed to be appearing at a store called Game which was in Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre, the building next to where I was working. So periodically during the day, I’d go to check out what was happening in Game. And through the day, all of the signs were pointing towards something pretty big happening, the store was being cleaned, floor space was being cleared, promotional material was being hung up all around the main shopping centre that Game was located in, and most encouragingly of all cameras were being set up inside and outside Game. Yeah… there was no question I was going to meet Jack O’Neill that night.

    When I met up with the Browncoats outside the main shopping centre at six o’clock (a full six hours before RDA was due to appear), we went up to the Game store and started asking questions to anyone who was around. They pretty much confirmed what we knew, which was that Halo was being launched at midnight, that the store was opening at midnight and that there was a strong rumour that RDA would be there to launch the game.

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    After we found out what we knew already, we decided to head to the nearest bar to have a few pints and grab dinner. I’d only met the Browncoats a few times and some of the people I was with that night were total stranger to me, but we all knew a good idea when we heard it. Even in the company of nerds, beer is the great equalizer. But nerds as a whole are generally very welcoming people anyway.

    In between eating and drinking and talk of Firefly there was little mention of RDA or anything else Stargate related. But it was an opportunity to do a bit more research on what was happening that night. Mobile internet wasn’t as effective back then as it is today and all that we could ascertain was that RDA was indeed in town, that he was staying in one of three possible hotels in the city centre and that… the day was Thursday.

    After searching for information online, we started making phone calls and each phone call that was made gave us more information but each phone call that was made also gave us conflicting information. RDA was apparently going to be at Game in the Stephen’s Green shopping Centre, at Microsoft HQ, at a rival video game store on the Northside of Dublin and doing a live interview with Ireland’s national broadcaster RTE all at the same time.

    A big part of what I love about Stargate is that despite it’s sources of mythology, it keeps it’s own continuity in tact. Most franchises that have multiple writers can’t keep a coherent timeline established. Star Trek suffers from this more than most. In the sixteen years worth of episodes and three live action series, Stargate has drawn from Egyptian mythology, Roman and Greek mythology, the legend of King Arthur and has even shown us Roswell aliens. All that is without even mentioning the times that the franchise has tackled religious fanaticism and difficult subjects like rape and slavery. No matter how big the franchise grows and how deep the mythology becomes, Stargate has always been very accessible and it’s always been consistent in its timeline and in the facts presented.

    The facts that we were getting that night in Dublin City were anything but consistent.

    At about eight o’clock, we went back to Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre to see what was happening and there was a huge amount of activity happening all around the front of the building. More cameras were being plugged in, food stands were being set up, and equipment trailers were being off loaded. The situation was still the same in that nobody could tell us exactly what was going to be happening or who was going to be appearing, but out of all the options we knew of and all of the events going on around town, this looked like the best bet for some RDA action at midnight. One thing that we did find out though was that the shopping centre was going to remain locked up tight to anyone who wasn’t working there until ten o’clock.

    So faced with the prospect of a two hour wait before we could even start queuing, we made another group decision to go to another pub and wait there for a while. We spent roughly two hours in another bar and somehow managed to add three more people to our group by the time we went back to the shopping centre. None of the three new folk were big Stargate fans. I made a point of asking.

    When we got back to the shopping centre just after ten o’clock, the place was in a frenzy. There was already a queue of people a few hundred yards long, music was blaring from a stack of speakers about fifteen foot high, three girls who must not be able to feel cold were handing out free cans of Red Bull and there were was someone walking around in a fairly cumbersome looking Master Chief outfit.

    Over the course of the next ninety minutes, we moved from the exterior of the shopping centre to a small cordoned-off area outside the Game store. Barriers were erected and very strict lines were set up where people were told to wait. The front of the actual store was hidden from view by two curtains, indicating that there was indeed something or someone that they were hiding. While we were waiting, we played video games, read comics, watched the teenage boys go wild over two girls who were dancing outside the store to whatever cheesy music the cheesy DJ was playing, and generally we managed to entertain ourselves while speculating endlessly about where RDA might be.

    At about a quarter to twelve, fifteen minutes before the launch, we collectively had one of those weird moments. You know when you’re in a big group of people, maybe a few hundred or more, and all at the same time, every single person stops talking all at the same time? Well, that’s what happened. The music stopped, the DJ stopped, and we all stopped. Then… the music started up again, but not the same music. It was the theme tune to MacGyver. Every single person in the building, whether they were Gaters or gamers or just people who liked to stand in queues, cheered wildly and the party atmosphere was turned up to eleven.

    Now, I should probably mention at this point that out of the dozen or so people in the group that I was in, only one of us actually had any interest whatsoever in actually buying the game. If the “we’re with him” plan didn’t work for the rest of us, we had a contingency plan to buy the game so as to meet RDA and bring the game back the following day to get a refund or at the very worst, get store credit. It was worth that effort just for the chance to met RDA.

    So, it was with that plan that at five minutes past midnight (nothing ever happens exactly when it’s supposed to in Ireland. It was midnight-ish, which was close enough) when the curtain came down from the front of Game that we marched slowly in to the store. I had my much read issue of the SG1 comic in my hand ready for RDA to sign. And when I got in to the store, I saw… nothing. Jack O’Neill wasn’t there, MacGyver wasn’t there. They couldn’t even organise a minor Irish celebrity… which was probably a blessing in disguise.

    To this day, I can’t help but think that who ever had to edit the footage that the video cameras recorded that night had to edit out a lot of footage of people just looking disappointed. Because we were in the middle of a tightly controlled queue, we had to shuffle around the racks and wait in line to actually get out of the store. When we were outside of the store itself, we started talking to some of the media guys and it turned out that one person we talked to was on staff for RDA. He genuinely was due to be there that night but got delayed in traffic and had to divert to an alternate location. We told him out story and told him how much we were looking forward to meeting RDA. There was nothing he could do for us that night but if we could be at Dublin airport at nine o’clock the next morning, he would be able to organise for us to meet RDA and actually get photos with him. It was a tempting offer, but work commitments kept any of us from taking him up on it. So instead we cut our losses and walked down the road to commiserate with some Chinese food.

    Before that night, and many times since, I’ve travelled to various parts of the world and have met quite a few people that I admire, but I’ve yet to meet anyone who’s been in anything that’s Stargate related.

    Though that night didn’t quite work out the way I hoped it would, it was a massive amount of fun. A group of people, some who at the start of the night were strangers to each other, went on a quest. Along the way, they found mystery, they found comedy in the drama, they found friendship and they ended up having a very entertaining night.

    Basically… it was a Stargate night. But not the Stargate that Roland Emmerich would have us watch.

    Simon Fitzgerald

  • Soapbox: DeLoreans To Hot Tubs

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    Time Travel Ain’t What It Used To Be

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    The original Back To The Future movie is celebrating it’s twenty fifth birthday this year. In 1985, the idea of using a flux capacitor inside a car as a time machine was a pretty radical one, especially given the fact that the DeLorean Motor Company went out of business three years prior to the release of the movie. Back To The Future quickly went on to be a smash hit movie and started to bring time travel from the realms of science fiction into a much more mainstream arena.

    Since then, we’ve seen a myriad of time travel shows and movies in which we’ve seen the past, the future and alternate version of the present day. Though the conceit of time travel itself isn’t by any means an original one, and it far predates the first Back To The Future movie, the means by which the time travel aspect of the story is performed can vary wildly.

    In the past twenty five years, we’ve seen time travel being achieved with DeLoreans, phone booths, wormholes, Stargates, alien spaceships, time displacement machinery, slingshot effects, a TARDIS, a TURDIS, remote controls, cryogenic freezing chambers and even a time travel-code printed on a rub on tattoo on Philip J. Fry’s butt. The latest addition to the stable of time travel devices is”¦..a hot tub time machine.

    I don’t know if it’s a coincidence that if a television show or movie is aimed at a wider, more mainstream audience, then the device used in the narrative to facilitate the time travel aspect of the story can be almost anything in sight. In The Butterfly Effect, simply reading a childhood story transported Ashton Kutcher’s character into his own past. In Click, Adam Sandler travels forward and back in his own life using a multimedia remote control. All that Eric Bana had in The Time Traveller’s Wife was an errant gene that caused him to travel though time. Neither diary pages nor remote controls have huge marketing potential for movie souvenirs or props, and the logistical difficulties associated with putting an errant gene into a glass display case are too huge to surmount.

    Hot tubs and DeLoreans are both capable of sending people through time, and both manage to do so in movies featuring Crispin Glover, but a replica of a hot tub will never sell well in a toy store or a comic shop. DeLorean replicas sell very well, and in fact they sell so well that it’s possible to buy a replica from any one of the three Back to The Future movies with packaging appropriate to each particular movie.

    In the late seventies and early eighties, after the release of Star Wars, it became very apparent very quickly that nerds like merchandise. A huge part of what makes sci-fi so popular is that it has great gadgets and gadgets lend themselves very well to time-travel. The Stargate, the TARDIS., the DeLorean are all vital parts of the narrative of their respective shows and movies. As well as being a tool to get the protagonists from one setting to another, they’re also characters in their own right.

    Movies like Hot Tub Time Machine aim for a broader, more mainstream audience and only use the time travel device as an instrument to set up the story or the next gag. Any effort, and all too often that effort is minimal, that goes into explaining the mechanics of time travel involved in the movie are there as a matter of necessity in order to make the story plausible or to bring the characters back to their own time and give the tale a nice emotional ending where everyone learns something about themselves only to find when they return home that their actions in the past have made their present-day lives infinitely better. Sometimes this is achieved simply by putting a wig on a character and throwing in some sight gags

    Generation X is the first generation that has had full time exposure to television and movies since birth. Generation X has had more disposable income, more free time and more access to technology than any generation that came before it. The whole generation has grown up surrounded by a million different stories and it’s meant that that generation has become savvy to story telling tropes. What used to be hard to grasp is now par for the course. Even characters like Gregory House can confidently tell us “luckily, it’s been well established that time is not a fixed construct” without fear of losing the understanding of the audience. Personal timelines and narrative timelines don’t have to run side by side. Characters from different points in their own timeline can be introduced for the first time more than once.

    Perhaps it’s fitting that the longest running Sci-Fi show in the world is using this plot device to great effect. A couple of years ago, the Doctor met a woman named River Song for the very first time. But in her own timeline, she had already met the Doctor in her past. Time travel stories make such things possible and easily acceptable, creating character dynamics that wouldn’t otherwise be possible. Even Marty McFly had a similar experience when he met his good friend Doc Brown thirty years in the past, long before Doc Brown ever met Marty.

    Time travel movies and shows tell us that there’s an infinite amount of time, but we’ve learned from a life time of viewing that there isn’t an infinite amount of ideas. And in the end, time travel movies usually boil down to one of two types. Either they’re about using the timeline for personal gain, or the plot involves trying to restore or maintain the integrity of the timeline. Folks in mainstream movies who time travel in a hot tub give lip service to maintaining the integrity of the timeline but ultimately they’re out for themselves and end up doing whatever they feel is best for them. Soldiers and scientists who travel through Stargates in sci-fi movies with a narrower appeal work purely to restore the timeline to the way it should be. Back To The Future manages to be the ultimate crossover movie in that it mixes a very clear intent to restore the timeline with the unintended benefit of improving lives. Marty’s mission in the movie becomes clear very quickly; he has to restore future history to the way it originally unfolded and in attempting to do that, he manages to change the future slightly, and almost entirely for the better. His family was happier, healthier and Biff Tannen had been put in his place. Though environmentalist probably weren’t happy when Marty returned to 1985 only to find out that Twin Pines Mall had changed to Lone Pines Mall.

    It’s not unusual that nature sometimes has to suffer for science, but that may change. Just give it some time…

    Simon Fitzgerald

  • Contest Round-Up: 2010-03-04

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    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. Every week, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!

    In conjunction with Shout Factory Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of GI JOE: SEASON 1.3 on DVD.

    In conjunction with Shout Factory Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of SMALL WONDER on DVD.

    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of SCARECROW & MRS. KING on DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of ALICE IN WONDERLAND on DVD.

    In conjunction with First Look Pictures, we’re giving away three (3) copies of NINJA on DVD.

    In conjunction with Hasbro, we’re giving away a STAR WARS: CLONE WARS SUPER BATTLE DROID Figure.

  • Win a STAR WARS: CLONE WARS SUPER BATTLE DROID Figure!

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    In conjunction with Hasbro, we’re giving away a STAR WARS: CLONE WARS SUPER BATTLE DROID Figure.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, March 24th.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, March 24th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.