Yes, that high-pitched whine
you hear is Dan O’Bannon’s coffin spinning out of the grave and into low orbit.
I watched the second half of the ALIEN:
EARTH TV show. (From episode five on, I wrote escape capsule hit-pieces as
episodes aired, just so you know.)
In my
earlier blog post on the first four episodes, I wrote that the key feature of
any story featuring the ALIEN
franchise is this: at some point, smart people in space must do dumb things for
the story to move forward.
Damn it. Episode five acknowledges this in
the script itself. Proof of how stupid
smart people can be. It’s built into the story. Too close to the alien
bone?
Now…I glossed over a whole bunch of things
from the first four episodes. Take episode four, for example. In which Battle
Angel Alita Wendy Darling becomes an alien snake-charmer. Or something. She
can talk to the animals.
But it is time to return to those earlier
episodes in talking about smart people in space doing dumb things. In episode
one, you get the idea that something goes horribly wrong on the spaceship that
looks awfully like Ridley Scott’s idea of a spaceship on the inside.
But we aren’t shown that story.
We see glimpses of the set.
A load of viewers believed…if you build a whole set and don’t show the
story in full, then there’ll be a flashback episode later. Explaining all
of that nasty stuff in gory detail. As sure as chest-bursting follows a meal,
that’s what we got in episode five. Must use the set. Built it for something.
Use it.
There were hints in earlier episodes of what
went down. But we really must see the whole thing. And this is the point at
which Dan O’Bannon’s coffin achieves escape velocity.
Here’s the flashback set-up. Two aliens
escape their containment pods. They hug faces. One member of the crew dies in
an ill-advised surgical procedure. Acid, baby. The other is placed in a
cryogenic suspension pod.
Oopsie.
The alien bursts out of that chest and flees
the pod. Glass breaks when the plot demands. Hiding in the vast ship, somewhere,
the alien creates the perfect set-up for an alien jailbreak. This li’l alien
can sneak through vents and ignore holes in the plot or some shit, and reaches
the other aliens in their safe glass containers. Mm.
That would be okay. Believable, if you
squint hard enough. One alien slithers in, fucks shit up, and slithers out
again. I’d buy that. But I’m not purchasing what actually happens. The aliens
in the lab stage a jailbreak by opening their prisons from the inside.
They’re smarter than the average bear, see.
This is dumber than a box of moon rocks. Use
the alien that already fucking escaped. Let it wreak havoc in the lab. It’s the
alien, for fuck’s sake. But…no. When
these other aliens aren’t solving the Times
crossword or Mr Rubik’s fiendish cube, they are staging a jailbreak. By…
Now this bit is the worst bit in the
episode. Breaks all the rules. It is drummed into anyone who ever sat in a
science class. And it applies to the lab. NO FOOD AND DRINK
IN THE LAB. Ever. True, this is an ALIEN gig…so smart people must do dumb things in space for the
story to move forward over a cliff.
There’s a lot in earlier episodes set up to
pay off in this flashback, and then advance the story by switching to the here
and now. But the golden opporchancity was there, and they blew it. Let the
alien, from ALIEN, do its alien thing
in fucking shit up. Then the new aliens can cut loose and do their alien thing.
Don’t keep sidelining the original monster.
Instead, we see the Skullfucker Octoball try
to take on the adult alien. But there aren’t any eyes to pluck out. As fucking
expected. At the end of the episode, we dip back into BLADE RUNNER territory with the appearance of Lady Yutani…and, for
once, she isn’t on the phone to Mr Morrow the cyborg. She’s there, in person,
with a bunch of mad-looking corporate samurai dudes. Send in the clones. Don’t
worry. They’re here.
The ALIEN
movie gave us an alien horror with a dose of corporate evil thrown in. Here,
the corporate comedy hijinks take the main BLADE
RUNNER stage. In flashback land, there’s a saboteur on board, ooh, blasting
bits of the spaceship into the cosmos.
I’m surprised the alien didn’t just turn to
the camera and ask the audience what the fuck it was doing here. In Michael
Caine’s accent.
You’re
only supposed to blow the bloody doors off.
It’s one of those TV shows. If you can’t
work out which of these characters we are meant to care for, root for the
alien.
Am I meant to care for Mark Musk Elon
Zuckerberg and his obsession with Battle Angel Alita Wendy Darling? I’d
have preferred a woman in the role of the trillionaire. Blonde. With a
roll-neck sweater and a fixation over Steve Jobs.
Her company, being in the ALIEN universe, has to be called Theranos Thanatos. I still
wouldn’t care about the character, but there’d be far more scope for comedy.
Yes, it’s true. I’ve watched these episodes, and…I only care about the original
alien. Neglected. Ignored. Forgotten. Sliced up. Missing in action. And then
lit brightly in a fucking fish tank.
When we reach episode five and a flashback
containing some xenomorph action, we are treated to microwaved leftovers from
an earlier cinematic experience. A flurry of half-hearted positive reviews out
there in the dark all mutter out of the side of the mouth when declaring…
You
know, we’ve had worse out of this franchise.
And so on. This is, at heartless heart, The Emperor’s New Skinsuit. The only
thing connecting ALIEN to BLADE RUNNER is the director who used
similar production techniques and items in both films.
So why turn this ALIEN TV show into BLADE
RUNNER by another name? Yes, it has been strangely watchable. I could be at
the top of a skyscraper, on the corner, looking down on a police chase on
Strangely
watchable. And there’s nothing I can do about it except look away. But I
look. Would this show reach physical media? Disney releases are patchy and
unpredictable, that way. Would I buy a 4K set? No. This is one…and very done.
There are loads of ALIEN and PREDATOR films
out there that I didn’t buy. I’m pretty sure I didn’t even watch a bunch of the
PREDATOR ones. ALIEN should never have been a franchise. Luckily, HIGHLANDER was never a franchise.
Fortunately, THE MATRIX was a
one-off. And
BACK
TO THE FUTURE stuck to the plan. No more movies after the third one. Sadly,
over my dead body might apply here
once Zemeckis hangs up his director’s hat for the very last time. No one is
going to remake that story with the main character as Marsha McFly. The crush
sub-plot was icky enough with Marty.
(Also, technically, the main character in BACK TO THE
FUTURE is the most important time traveller – the dog.)
What of ALIEN:
THE WILDERNESS YEARS as a franchise? Battle
Angel Wendy. FAUX RUNNER. Do Androids Dream of Monsters Under the Bed?
I should go on, but you get the point. Oh, very well. ASLAN VERSUS ALIEN VERSUS PREDATOR VERSUS CALVIN AND HOBBES: MA’AM,
THIS IS A WENDY’S. Now I’m done.
We have Wendy the snake-charmer or The Alien Whisperer. I suspect a lot of
the show is going nowhere. And no more is this evident than in episode six. The Fluff. It’s an episode about padding
and nothing much going on. If that.
Once more, we question basic lab techniques.
No one should be alone in the lab. And the aliens should all really have a lab each. Think the show missed a trick,
there. Each alien needs its own unique lab.
Yes, give each lab a sense of character and
an alien in it. At least then the show would have some character. But no, we’ll
keep these lions in one room and in glass cases. Yes, if you were paying
attention in the previous episodes that didn’t lull you to sleep, then you’d
know there’s this other alien. Awaiting a slow tease of an appearance.
And we get to the goods in this episode. Not
worth the wait. The central plank of creating your superhero team, those lost
boys and girls, is giving the audience synthetic characters who aren’t affected
by the aliens. Creating synthetic characters. There’s an idea that’s a hostage
to fortune.
Superheroes aren’t affected by the aliens. Except…this
is an ALIEN franchise offshoot, and
so we’ll be fucking around with that expectation more than once. Battle
Angel Wendy got into a tussle with an alien and lived to tell the tale.
She’s all better now.
In this episode, we see feeding time at the
zoo go horribly wrong for a synthetic character we don’t have energy to care
for. Dolly the sheep just sheeps in, fucks shit up, and sheeps some more.
The Skullfucker Octoball in charge of the
sheep is biding its time, playing tenth-dimensional chess, and shit. Oh no. The
CGI fly eats wobots for bweakfast. For a top secret research facility, I notice
the cameras on
Characters stumble around in and out of
various situations. The Veronica Cartwright Veronica Cartwright
character was damaged but she’s all better now. They gave her a mind-wipe, but
didn’t warn anyone else on the island about not telling her that. So now she
knows she had a mind-wipe after being told. Would have been better off with a
facecloth and some mild soap.
Inevitably, after much padding, and more fan
service out of focus in the background, we reach the hugging of a face. And
when this face was hugged, I found it hard not to laugh out loud. I
half-expected the actor to start moonwalking, and I just couldn’t take it
seriously.
What’s that? The guy who was fired in this
episode didn’t make it off the island? Instead he was dragged into one of those
standard air vents large enough to fit several plot holes through? Explain why
the secure lab needs a massive ALIEN AIR
VENT™ at floor level. Or, indeed, at any level. Explain. Show your working.
There were so many other ways to build up to
SOME CHARACTER WE DON’T CARE ABOUT™
being hugged in the face by an alien. I say we take off and nuke the entire show
from orbit. It’s the only way to be sure.
Damn.
It’s sad seeing the alien in a well-lit glass
cage doing sweet fuck-all. Not an ALIEN
moment. The same is true of the actress playing Lady Yutani. She finally gets
her teeth into a scene. Regrettably, it’s a scene from a BLADE RUNNER show no one asked for.
All the padding, all the waffle, questioning
what it is to be human…the fluff belongs in another type of story. Is there a
place for it here? There is. In small doses. But not as padding. So much for
episode six, which, in the closing seconds, attempts to make the Skullfucker
Octoball the star of this show.
IT ISN’T.
What stays with me in this episode?
Pointlessness. There’s a talk about what Wendy will do. She could be family to
her brother. But there are loftier goals. She should develop travel faster than
the speed of light, and explore the universe. Wendy must make the right choice.
Except…there’s nothing to stop her eternal
self being family to her brother until he
dies of old age. Then she can explore the universe after. She can have it
all. It isn’t EITHER/OR. The show
flounders arse-deep in too many moments like that.
And then there was episode seven.
Two of the Very Lost Boys lead their pal the
scientist dude into the jungle. Basically, Lennie is being taken to see the
rabbits. (Spoiler for another story.) The Peter
Pan framework should have been referenced with a light touch. Too late for
that. The whole show lumbers along, top-heavy with enforced symbolism.
You’d be better off watching The Lost Boys. That’s a movie about
rebellious Kiefer Sutherland being all rebellious and shit.
The different spaghetti strands of
storytelling veer off and converge just about as messily as you’d expect. Those
behind the show have certainly seen the movie Predator. So it is time to throw in a bit of that in the jungle.
But not too much, lest the show be accused of turning into Predator.
Normally I’d say Wendy’s plan comes across
as one of the worst plans in the history of science fiction television. But I
can’t stop there. Wendy’s plan is one of the worst plans in the history of
plans.
I’ll release
my tame alien as a distraction, so we can escape
Again, we come back to this thing of the
alien in a glass cage, sidelined by the shenanigans elsewhere. Characters queue
up in slow motion, waiting for death. When death comes, it arrives with CGI
rapidity.
They know, making this show, that scenes of
the alien escaping and killing lab techs in bright light…well, those scenes are
just not going to cut it. So we’ll switch to the security cameras, for a more
obscured look at the CGI tomfoolery.
And so it goes, again, when in the jungle.
An instant problem arrives. Soldiers. An instant fix arrives. Predator.
The alien. This time the fight is in broad daylight, so we have to obscure our
alien by using the bushes.
Perhaps more than any other episode, this
episode feels like it is about to (chest) burst into being a musical. Soldiers
with bad timing turn up to miss the main event. Characters with no planning
flit in and out of sight.
It takes a very long forty minutes for
Wendy, Veronica Cartwright Veronica Cartwright, and Communist Manifesto
Guy from ANDOR to reach the boat, the boat, and we don’t even
have Mr Roarke or Tattoo standing by to wave them farewell.
There’s one episode to watch. Before it
airs, I wonder what it sets up. This whole show is about a mission to bring
alien samples back for study. But even that
mission was off the back of an earlier unseen sequence in which a whole bunch
of people died. We were told this.
So we may yet see another prequel. Where are we, by episode seven? Number of deaths
so far? Don’t care. Number of characters worth caring about? Don’t care.
Trillionaire-ism is bad. Corporations are bad. People are no better. Just bet
on the alien for the win.
What else didn’t I care about on the show?
Screens. They flashed up with information on the aliens. We live in a TV age of
visuals that are clear enough. You can pause the data dumps and read snippets
of what the aliens are all about.
And I just didn’t care. We’re told about the
Skullfucker Octoball. And we’re told about the really fucking boring plant
thing. I’m waiting on the base being overrun by plants when the inevitable
fire/explosion sequence kicks in. And then the killer plant can really go to
work. Presuming it crawls into a handy ventilation shaft where it can survive
the fire/explosion.
No, I didn’t care about the text screens.
They could have flashed Surprised in the
Butt by Ripley’s Xenomorph Lover: a Chuck Tingle Dinosaur Romance on one of
those screens for all the difference those screens made.
And so. To episode ate eight. The
scenewy’s pwetty. Be vewy vewy quiet. I’m hunting humans wabbits humans
wabbits for a story. We go a li’l bit Predator, a li’l bit country, a li’l bit rock ’n’ roll, and a bit Terminator 2.
Two Terminator machines go at it in a lab,
in a rather inconsequential fight…in an inconsequential episode. This is the
last episode in the show, and I expected the deaths to mount up. Instead, we
had a whole lot of nothing.
Okay. There were deaths. Soldiers, on the
island, dying under the alien’s teeth and claws. Don’t forget the tail. There’s
a good story here, stumbling through the ruins of other stories. I can see what
they were trying to go for. Alas…
The entire episode does, indeed, act as
set-up for the next series. I expected a whole bunch of characters to die. You
have practically the whole bunch in a room. One bomb and it is done. But no.
Yutani doesn’t even get to phone in her
performance here. She’s flashed up on the screen as a reminder of her
existence. There was so much noodling around, too much padding, for the late
arrival of her army to make a difference.
That army should have arrived earlier in the
story, full force, with chaos the result. Chaos in which the monsters get to
feed. Here’s an idea. In the future, just have jail cells that are locked the
old-fashioned way. With a physical key. Don’t operate the cages by electricity.
It’s the dumbest thing. All the creatures,
and the other prisoners in this narrative, are locked in electrically-powered
jails. What if the power goes? There’s a back-up. What if the back-up goes?
NOTHING. The fucking doors stay locked, you cunts!
Wait. Let me tell you how I really feel.
Welcome to
Everyone is in a rush to be the next model, rendering the last model
obsolete. That notion does a few handstands and backflips as characters
manoeuvre around each other…to no great effect.
The Peter
Pan stuff sputtered out episodes ago. Boy Genius isn’t Peter Pan. He’s
a symbolic coded fictional watercolour painting of Elon Musk
refusing to accept an autistic
trans daughter.
Misunderstood. He’s misunderstood. And irritating. We don’t even get his plan
out of his lips.
He sends the minds of children into
artificial bodies. They’ll have access to the whole of human learning. And they
can then improve the process so that adult minds can transfer into human
bodies. That’s when Elon Zuckerberg makes his move. But that isn’t even a plot
here.
There’s a movie worth watching to reach a
conclusion about the handling of the Boy Genius in this show…
The
Dirty Dozen. In that film, one of the dozen is the character you love to
hate. You cannot wait for Archer Maggott to die. When’s he getting shot? That’s Archer Maggot’s story right there.
And so it should be with the Boy Genius. He
serves no purpose beyond being set up as an evil doll-figure who is
bitch-slapped by an alien at just the right time. Boy Genius deserves to be on
the way out by episode three.
Even that Veronica Cartwright
Veronica Cartwright character, who appeared to die in episode seven, made it
back for episode eight. The two mad scientists assisting the Boy Genius are
still in play by the end of this show. And, spoiler, one of them is dead.
Adrian Edmondson, as some sort of cybernetic
Odd Job henchman, minus the bowler
hat, is still ticking along merrily by the end as well.
Yes, the killer plant finally makes its
move, and this is as underwhelming as you’d expect. That played out like a
random encounter with a Dungeons &
Dragons monster in a killer dungeon.
All dungeons are killer dungeons, whether
science fiction or fantasy. In this killer dungeon, though, the usual suspects
make it through. It’s almost as though there’s some evil hidden agenda. An evil
corporate agenda. To produce another series.
You had one job, television. One job. To
make sure the alien would kill a whole lotta people (and synthetics) in a show
that sidelined the alien in favour of letting a whole lotta people (and
synthetics) live. The final episode could’ve done with being a bit more final.
This TV show sounds a bit like an earlier
spin-off. ALIEN: EARTH isn’t a comic
book series. ALIENS: EARTH WAR is. I
enjoyed the raw energy of those comic book stories. This TV blip has a hard
task, true…
There shouldn’t be a franchise, yet there
is. So what’s the problem? Trade on the original story. Add something new.
Avoid fan service. Remember when? We
fucking do. Stop reminding us.
We want the familiar, but it must be
different. Advance on it. But not too different. So you won’t satisfy any audience. There are people out there in
deep space, declaring there is only one ALIEN
movie. There certainly shouldn’t be two television shows.
We don’t need to see Ian Holm’s acting dug
up from the vaults in some nonsensical scene. (I know I’ve seen that travesty,
but I refused to believe it.) If you must give us something, give us something
of substance. Evil Trillionaire Boy Genius could have experimented on the alien
and realised that – if you solve the acid problem – then the alien blood might cure
cancer.
That would be a better twist than anything,
everything, on this show. Was there a scrap of merit? Discovering the lost boys
and girls had their own graveyard on
Imagine watching a TV show and then turning
to Mark Verhieden’s comic books for something bright, fiery, and with its own
peculiar atmosphere. Those comics had the same hard task. Give us more of the
same, but not too samey. Verhieden was allowed to use the characters of Newt
and Hicks…
Until a shitty movie sequel came along and
killed them off. Then the names were changed to protect the indifferent. They
were changed back for the collected editions.
So, yes, there was a bit of fan service in
the comic books. But Verhieden tried to give us the atmosphere of an ALIEN story. Not a BLADE RUNNER one or a TERMINATOR
one. Or Peter Pan with robots thrown
in.
The television show feels sterile. Airless.
Unloved. It feels unwatched even as you watch it, and that’s no good. My view,
after watching? I turned to the comic books for a better experience.
What surprised me? That I watched every
episode. Please. For fuck’s sake. Don’t make a second show.
RLLauthor@outlook.com and @RLL_author GO TO AMAZON KINDLE STORE AND TYPE RLL. YOU WILL FIND MY BOOKS.
Wednesday, 1 October 2025
THE HIGH-PITCHED WHINE OF DAN O’BANNON’S COFFIN: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Monday, 1 September 2025
ON EARTH, THE ALIEN CAN HEAR YOU SCREAM: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Is the eight-episode TV
format a millstone around storytelling? ALIEN:
EARTH. I am four episodes in, with four to go. At that point, always ask
two questions. One. Is the final episode going to fuck this up and taint
anything of value that came before? Two. Is the final episode a trailer for
another series?
Don’t know. Is there anything of value that
came before? The series I’ve been watching, ALIEN:
EARTH, is really BLADE RUNNER: THE SERIES.
You can hear the corporate blood curling, curdling, as executives tell you,
through gritted alien teeth, that we
tried to do something new with the franchise.
Rule one. ALIEN should never have been a franchise.
And rule two. See rule one.
So they gave us something different. Didn’t
they? A spaceship that has the interior of the spaceship from ALIEN. This one has a crash-cupboard for
one lucky character to occupy. Didn’t see that in Ridley’s movie. But then,
Ridley’s spaceship didn’t crash. So we’ll retroactively say it was kitted out
with a safety cubicle all along.
Same spaceship interior. But the guy in the
crash-cubicle is a cyborg. That’s new. Is it new? Or is that a fusion of other
elements? If you crossed Yaphet Kotto with Ian Holm from the original movie,
and threw in some cyborg gadgets, you’d have the cyborg. Morrow.
Perhaps he represents tomorrow, despite the character’s history being deep in the cryogenic
past. We are told, in a BLADE RUNNER
opening text, all about cyborgs and synths and hybrids, oh my. All represent
different quests for immortality.
The cyborg idea is new to the TV show, if
not to the American superhero comic book.
Synthetic
characters are mechanicals, along the lines of Ian Holm’s performance in ALIEN or Lance Henriksen’s turn in ALIENS. The characters of Ash and Bishop
are machines with artificially intelligent brains.
So the idea of immortality there is one step
removed. Humanity creates these synthetic beings, artificial persons, in
humanity’s image: leaving them to travel the universe as reminders of humans
when humans are no more.
We shall say nothing of digging Ian Holm’s
performance up from the grave to appear in a spot of tenth-rate fan fiction as Rook – the rubbish one.
One step beyond the synth is the hybrid.
Take a human mind and load it into an artificial body. Create something that is
more human than human, to borrow liberally from another Ridley movie.
So far, so BLADE RUNNER.
The key point of any story featuring the ALIEN franchise is this: at some point,
smart people in space must do dumb things for the story to move forward. And so
it goes, here. Morrow is returning from deep space with a contraband cargo of
alien creatures.
Something goes horribly wrong on that ship.
The ship crashes on Earth™. An alien transfers from the ship to a skyscraper,
and hijinks ensue. Yes, the alien literally crashes into the BLADE RUNNER story that’s front and
centre in this production.
But we have to put something new in here.
How about new aliens? New to the franchise, perhaps. Or maybe not. Let us pause
to consider the Skullfucker Octoball. Spiders are passé. I blame Stupid Sexy
Shelob™ over in the strip-mined franchise of J.R.R. Tolkien for that.
Give us an octopus. The octopus is intelligent.
Give us more. An eyeball. And if this creature skullfucks your eyeball, it will
dig down into the brain and take over the body. We see this in the zombie cat
creature.
Oh, spoiler alert. Am I spoiling anything?
But we’ve seen this. It’s a cat. And it is
sick. Wait. It’s been possessed by the Skullfucker Octoball. And this was in
Ridley’s movie, originally. How? Symbolically. They took a thing from Ridley’s
film and they made it fucking literal.
Characters in ALIEN tend to have two syllables. There are exceptions. Brett and
Kane spring to mind. But there’s also Jones. The cat. As part of the suspense,
you think the alien is going to be there. It’s the cat. Then you are left
wondering. Well, is it just the cat? No, it’s the alien.
And so. Here, we have both at the same time.
Is it just the cat? No, it’s the cat and the alien, all rolled into one. Is
anything truly new, here? Bugs that drain you of blood. Those are all across
the movies. Nothing new to see here. And the plant that might not be a plant?
If it camouflages itself against a backdrop of plants, it ain’t blending in on
a spaceship.
I didn’t have much time for triffids in The Day of the Triffids. This
maybe-plant or possible-animal needs a jungle to hide in. Oh dear.
Welcome to
The alien crashes into a skyscraper owned by
Elon Zuckerberg. He’s a young quirky trillionaire who runs his own cult on
And there’s your villain. Except. There’s
another villain. She phones in her performance. Nothing against the actress.
It’s that kind of show – if you want hologram communications, go and watch STAR WARS.
As sure as night meets day, these separate
plot elements collide. One corporation brings the aliens to our world. Another
corporation sends the hybrid team to salvage goodies from the spaceship. Aliens
are bagged, tagged, and dangerous to know. They all go back to
What of these hybrids? They are children,
destined to die from disease. And only children’s minds can survive the
transfer to artificial bodies.
This means they already tried the procedure
with adults dying from disease. Elon Zuckerberg is young. But not young enough
for the transfer. So he must have trawled the elderly wards in the hospitals,
looking for disposable candidates.
Let’s gloss over this the same way the TV
show does. There are science fiction products that dip heavily and lumberingly
into other areas. Resident Evil gives
you a movie experience based around Alice and the Red Queen. So far, so
Wonderland.
Tron
owes a debt to The Wizard of Oz.
No one watched that Winnie-the-Killer-Bear film.
Here, as this is streamed on the Disney+
channel, there’s Disney property to strip-mine. And so the belaboured imagery
revolves around animated clips from Peter
Pan. But Wendy Battle Angel Alita Darling is the star.
She faces a problem or two. Sometimes the
effects aren’t that great. Jumping off a cliff to show she has
superpowers…could have been done better. If you have the choice between an
effect and a stunt, go with the stunt.
Lifting
the children looked better as a sketch than as the scene itself. We get it.
She’s a superhero. And she can battle Angel Alita the alien threat.
Wendy faces other things plundered from
Neverland. Neverland is the first
episode. Doesn’t get much more on the nose than that. Morrow has handy gadgets
in his fist, so that makes him Captain Hook.
We are fucking told that the alien is the
crocodile. Wendy can hear a clock ticking inside the alien. Or something like
that. Her friends, the dying children, transfer to robot bodies and become the
lost boys and girls.
In that grouping, we have Space Ginger from the SOLO STAR WARS HEIST movie. (Admittedly,
she’s dark blue in her scene at the start of the film. Everything is dark and
blue in her scene from the SOLO film.)
Space Ginger is playing the Veronica
Cartwright Veronica Cartwright character from ALIEN. You know. The one who loses her shit. And we have a few
other boys and girls in the mix. But one character steals from C.S. Lewis.
We’ll call him Edmund Pevensie. Morrow, the Captain Hook character, offers
Edmund a piece of Turkish Delight.
This sticks to Edmund’s neck and creates a
chat room for the two of them. Morrow is left behind at the crash. But he wants
to see the mission through for his boss on the phone. So he befriends Edmund
with tales of friendship online. Edmund lives in Narnia Neverland.
All Edmund has to do is this: wander around
Okay, groomer.
The synthetics are child minds inside adult
bodies. You got that bit, right? All of these plotlines swirl together at the
island. Wendy Darling wants to investigate the alien ship so that she can be
reunited with her long-lost brother who thinks she died.
Fighting the alien, Wendy is bwoken. And so
is her brother. His lung is donated to a corporate think-tank, which is an
actual tank full of lung and fluid. And then a transparent alien sperm creature
comes along, and, damn, this is a short hop, skip, and a jump from being a
musical.
Wendy recovers from being bwoken, as she is
Battle Angel Wendy. Her brother recovers from being bwoken as he’s fixed up and
bought body and soul by the company. For a show with ALIEN in the title, there’s 10% ALIEN
and 90% BLADE RUNNER tomfoolery
featuring evil corporations.
The original alien creature is by turns
noticed, ignored, forgotten, killed off, cut up, and then froths in its own
acidic blood. If there’s any hatred for Elon Bezos Zuckerberg, it’s reserved
for the moment when Dolly the Sheep skullfucks his brain and declares a new
project to fly everyone to Mars in the final episode which I’ve not seen yet.
Yes, there’s illegal experimentation on a
sheep. This plunders the original movie. How? The door into the chamber with
the sheep is a metal iris door. That’s from Ridley’s movie. Here, it’s smaller.
Skullfucker Octoball size.
With four episodes to go, it’s hard to say
who the Skullfucker Octoball will go after. Not the alien. It doesn’t have eyes
with notable sockets. Also, I think it will be hard for the Octoball’s CGI skullfuckery
tentacles to cope with alien blood.
The dumb money is on taking over Elon
Zuckertrillionaire. And then being slightly less evil than Elon Zuckervillain.
That’s bound to be a bit of a letdown. Will the killer plant/animal escape into
the jungle to start a new life? What about those alien eggs? They gonna hatch?
I left out a few characters. Instead of Ash,
or Bishop, or Rook, or any of the rest of the android photocopies
over-populating the franchise, there’s Kirsh. He’s excessively blond. If you
call that an Easter Egg, it’s an Easter Egg that opened its outer hatch and
face-hugged the audience with all the subtlety of no subtlety.
Not an ALIEN
reference. A BLADE RUNNER one. I’ve
seen ALIEN movies you people wouldn’t
believe. (Run, Charlize, run!) So
what is new here? I’m struggling with that one. Maybe in the final episode
there won’t be an ominous trailer for what could only be a much-diluted sequel.
Also running eight episodes.
There’s a lot rehashed in this show, and I
don’t feel like rehashing episodes to let you know every single detail that was
rehashed from a franchise. Yes, there is some plot engineering. Morrow scrubs
the spaceship of all records. This will force the company to send another
spaceship to the general location to pick up fresh samples.
And that is where the movie comes in. In
space, no one can hear you scream. I imagine there’s a section of the audience
on this planet, screaming away with hatred. For reasons unknown to me, I find
the show strangely watchable on an episode-by-episode basis.
With
half the show to go, I’m expecting it to crash and burn like the spaceship that
hit the skyscraper. I can’t lie to you about the show’s chances of satisfying
fans of the movie. (Whether ALIEN or BLADE RUNNER.) But you have my
sympathies.
Friday, 1 August 2025
I WALK PAST THESE BOOKS EVERY SINGLE DAY: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
On the way out of this
office, I go by a bookcase every single day. I don’t know how many books are on
there. And I don’t know how many I have read. At a wild guess, I’d say I also
don’t know how many are unread.
The bookcase hasn’t been there long. But
there it is, and it is practically full. It contains a mix of books moved from
elsewhere and books bought in recently. And now, as I blog, I am going to take
a break and count the number of books I walk by.
By the magic of typing, I have returned.
There are 198 books, with one I know is misplaced for now. If it isn’t in this
room, it is on this floor. I have space on one shelf for more volumes. How many
more, only the floorboards can tell. If there’s a crack and a yell, you’ll know
I’ve moved my collection downstairs in a hurry.
How many of the 198 books have I read? Not
all. I can’t read them all. After reading The
Devil’s Dictionary, by Ambrose Bierce, I resolved never to fully read a
reference book again – not even a joke of a reference book like his. I also
resolved never to read Ambrose Bierce again, and the world is a better place
for that.
You don’t read reference books. They are for
skimming. Diving into. Jumping out of. But they are not cover-to-cover
experiences. I shall return, by the magic of typing, to eliminate the reference
works there.
I spy three reference books. That leaves 195
books on the shelves. Of those, how many are duplicates? Oh, duplicates don’t
infest my stacks. Sometimes, inheriting a library, I gain a duplicate. By
typing arcane and most sorcerous, I shall reappear…
Ten books have duplicates. Some of these are
different editions with slightly varied collections of short stories. If I
wanted all the stories, I had to pick up two cheap editions when no overall
compilation existed, for example.
All duplicates were cheap. And I’ve read all
the material there. So we’re down to 185 books that landed in that part of the
room. Now to the question. How many of those 185 books have I read? I know this
one is tricky.
There are two books in a loose series. I
know for a fact I’ve read one of them. Which one, I can’t recall. I suspect
I’ll have to read both to be certain. And now, a fiddly counting process that
should be straightforward. It never is.
I’ve read 140 of them. And I’d like to read
a whole bunch of those again. We reached the point of the exercise. Every
single day, I walk by 45 books I haven’t read. And I leave them there, unread,
as I tackle other things.
Maybe if I blog about that, I’ll stop and
pick up a book to read. It’s an idea. Clear the reading list by bookcase. There
are nine bookcases here. Some are used for other storage purposes and only have
a few books on them.
I could polish off a whole case very
quickly, highly selectively, if I chose to. But I don’t choose to. Now I want
to tackle the books I ignore every single day. They run the whole range.
Fictional. Factual. In a series. Stand-alone.
Chunky volumes. Weighty biographies.
Historical pieces. Slim movie books. Frivolous works. Fairy stories. A book on
cocktails. From the
I find there’s nothing so heavy in life as a
pile of books you are moving cautiously from one place to another. Consolidated
stacks weigh plenty, and have slippery covers. Steady as you go. I’m staring at
omnibus editions of crime writers and also of comic books.
The rule of the comic book omnibus is
simple. Thou shalt place thine heaviest
of books upon the bottom shelf, or suffer indeed. Better that the heaviest
works break my ankle. That’s a grand alternative to having them snap my neck
from on high.
What do they all weigh? I’d rather not find
out. If a bookcase fails, the spillage won’t affect me directly. Unless I am
passing by at the time. In that event, I suspect it’ll be the act of passing by
that triggers the avalanche.
How to tackle the unread books? From the top
to the bottom? Left to right? Certainly not alphabetically. Writers store books
where they fit in. Not in wasteful alphabetical order. That serves no one. Oh,
the crowd can rail against my view…
But my fucking library is not here to serve
the fucking crowd. It’s here to squeeze into the barely-available space.
A few books are linked thematically. Tackle
those together. Read what I want to. Most likely, the best approach. Maybe keep
an eye on the number of unread books per shelf. Is there a shelf with one
unread book on it?
Everything on the top of the bookcase? I’ve
read those tomes. Yes, they are wedged between bookends. Then we journey to the
shelf below. One unread book, there, it’s true. And a recent acquisition,
stashed where it will just barely fit and no more…
That’s to keep it with the others in the
series. And then, shelf by shelf, there are more unread books per section. No,
I don’t think there’s a pattern to this. (Other than light paperbacks at the
top and bullet-stoppers at the bottom.) A method? Just pick a book up and start
reading.
Question. By the time I tackle these books,
how many more books will I have brought into the house? I’m not sure. There are
books on pre-order. They’ll turn up when they turn up. Doesn’t mean they’ll fit
on that bookcase. I still have some space elsewhere.
Books on the way. I’ll try them for size,
naturally. If they fit on this particular bookcase, there’s no way to dodge. Oh, all the books there are read…no more
will squeeze in. Well. I guess we’ll just have to go with that, then, won’t
we?
We won’t. Books that arrive are unread, and still
count. No matter where they end up. You can’t fool the relentless stacks. The
rising booktide. Even buying in books I once read and no longer have…those are
bought to enjoy again.
Oh, I’ve read it. There’s no rush to read it
once more.
Bullshit. If a book comes into the house, it
should be read the same day. Whether I’ve read it before or not. Unfortunately,
I’m at the mercy of the delivery driver. If the parcel arrives late in the day,
early evening, I lose my shot at a great chunk of reading time.
And that, trivial as it may sound, puts me
in the thankless position of stashing the book somewhere. Next day is full of
petty distractions, and the book goes unread. And that, dear non-reader, is how
we build up entire sections of shelves that are unread and go unread and remain
unread until we are dead.
They aren’t books at that point. Just an
extra layer of wall insulation.
And so. Read. Chip at the iceberg of books.
Enthusiasm on purchase versus lethargy on acquisition. Followed by enthusiasm
again, on turning the page. Unless you detest the book. It’s been a long time
since I tackled a book like that.
The rule is to finish the damned thing. Read
it all the way through and be done with it. The
Devil’s Dictionary springs to mind. What of this bookcase I walk by every
day? Is a suspect lurking on the shelves? Could there be a book there that I just
won’t care for?
Purchasing is irrelevant. Most of those
books were purchases. A few were gifts. There should always be at least one
book in your library that you never set down on a shelf. It walked into the
stacks under its own steam, and you aren’t sure where it came from.
No. Purchasing doesn’t matter. If you bought
it and didn’t like it, you dodged a twelve-book epic. And if it was gifted to
you…just be fucking honest and say it wasn’t for you. Even though it was for
you, obviously.
And the book that appeared out of nowhere?
Might as well give it a shot. There’s a reverse mode to that one. A book that
should definitely be on your shelves, but isn’t. You moved it from its usual
spot, and now you can’t find it.
Where the fuck did that go? And why? Why?
That’s easy. You bought more books that will fit here, as part of a series. If
you take out that one lone book and move it elsewhere. I am still looking for
one book. It’s hiding. Or resting. Not sleeping. Resting its eyes.
To go back to one of the duplicates. I’d
bought a cheap paperback. It disappeared WHILE I WAS READING IT. Yes, that’s
quite a skill I have. Can’t recommend developing that ability. In the end, I
bought a cheaper duplicate copy and read it.
Only when you’ve done that, as usual, do you
then find the missing book. It was trapped down against the wall, by a series
of coincidental moves and unhappy accidents. Only found that when I rearranged
furniture, much later.
I had to sit a stack of heavier books on top
of the recovered volume, to bend it back into shape. It is rare that I damage
books. That one wasn’t damaged. Fixable. I fixed. So where do I stand,
concerning these books?
In front of them. Instead of walking by
them. It’s the only way to get them read.
Tuesday, 1 July 2025
WHO YOU GONNA CALL?: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
More. What is it good for?
Thanks to the internet there’s more of everything, and it is also readily
available. Deadly combination. This means there’s more crap readily available,
in terms of content out there and way out
there.
That doesn’t mean the crap is evenly
distributed. Crap is determined, nay, destined, to go after you. The
consumer-seeking missile is piled high with crap, and is knocking on your door,
hiding under your bed, and raiding your fucking fridge all in the same
electronic breath.
Your mission, should you choose to accept
it, is to seek out new forms of entertainment, be entertained by some of it,
and filter out the rest. Filter. Burn.
Filter out the rest, in a fire.
Boldly go where a shit-load of people have gone before, and shit a load of
movies and TV shows out of your system. Save time. Sidestep. Swerve. Avoid.
Once, in the before-times, there was a view:
you had to watch something to determine whether or not it was of any use to you
as a form of entertainment. Not so much, now. When there’s so much, now. The solid construction of a decent movie trailer is a
long-lost art. (Ignoring all the shitty trailers that were made down through
movie history. Fuck it, let’s be severely
selective here. That is, after all, the point of the exercise. Limit your
intake of intake.)
Movie trailers developed a mutated purpose.
They no longer sell movies. Instead, they signal all the shit to avoid. This is
how they are built.
Once upon a film, the trailer sold you on
the idea of a fantastic piece of entertainment.
Twice upon a film, we started to sense the
idea that we wanted the people who made the movie trailers to be the same
people who’d made the movies. Sadly, the trailer people were not the movie
people, after all, and we were sold lies.
Then, thrice upon a film, we reached NOW.
And NOW, the shoddy construction of the movie trailer makes it electronically easy
for us to walk away. We don’t need to be in a movie theatre or in front of a
television showing adverts to experience the trailer. YouTube saves a lot of
effort.
It’s caustically easy to be dismissive.
For those wondering about the difficulty of
making trailers, there are a few problems.
One. Showing footage from the movie that
never ends up in the finished film. The joke here is that you’ll see a trailer
for a comedy and there’ll be five jokes in the trailer but only three jokes in
the film. Not one joke a funny jab, either.
Two. Giving away the plot twist in the trailer.
Obviously, I can’t spoil any plots in this text here. Except to say showing the
fucking iceberg in that Titanic
trailer is poor form. But wait a bit. Why is that guy starting a gunfight on
board the ship during these icy shenanigans?
That addition to the trailer made me realise
I wouldn’t be foaming at the mouth to watch a load of old bollocks. Let’s bolt
an action movie onto a film about a ship sinking, to, you know, make the story
more dramatic. Or something.
The less said about Avatar the better.
Hey, Vasquez.
Ever been mistaken for a character in another movie?
Yes. Have
you?
Three. Trying to sell enough of an idea of
the movie…without giving away all the jokes in a comedy or twists in the plot of any kind of thriller. Yes, that’s tricky.
What was my most disappointing experience,
after staggering away from a movie trailer? GHOSTBUSTERS.
I must add…the 2016 version of the film. The trailer sets up an idea in text.
What did we know? New movie. Four women team up to be ghostbusters.
30 YEARS AGO…FOUR SCIENTISTS SAVED
Stick a knife in the last three words,
there. We’ll conduct an autopsy later.
I instantly thought we were getting the
daughters of the original ghostbusters in some kind of continuation sequel.
That felt like the set-up, right there in the text.
It’s a
very basic idea for a movie continuation, but it is good enough for government
work. If the original actors appear, getting on in years, then they are passing
the torch to the next generation of characters. Tired. Worn-out. As plain an
idea is it gets. But. Workable.
Well the text fucking lied to us.
That expectation was on me, and it’s my
fault. No, fuck off. That expectation was mine as I read the text in the
trailer. After I’d done so, the rest of the trailer dropped. That text
deliberately drove us to the edge of a cliff seconds before an earthquake. And then. The rest of the trailer, sadly. That is what happened, then.
It’s
not as if the trailer gave me an expectation that died when going to the
movies. No. The trailer gave me an expectation that died seconds into the
trailer. Daughters of the original squad. Cool. We’ll see cameo roles. It’ll be
the least-forced cameo run in the history of cinema. Parental ghostbusters. But
no. The rest of the trailer dropped off that cliff I mentioned.
Oh, it’s a…reboot/remake with elements of
things we’ve seen before and…frankly, from that trailer, effects that didn’t
really come across as all that good. With the passage of 30 years, you’d think
the effects would look better and not…
Smoothed over, to cater to a 3D version of
the film no one asked for. Ultimately, contrary to expectation, the 2016
movie’s artificial gloss can’t compete with the charm of earlier effects. I
expect a 1980s movie to have effects like a 1980s movie. Some movies come
across as better when they age.
For example: THE THING. Its effects are way better than the
reboot/prequel/side-by-side movie that landed later. A crying shame that the
practical effects in the reboot didn’t have the backing from those higher up in
the movie process…leading to everyone getting fucked over on that gig. Watch
John Carpenter’s version instead. Not every effect is great. But almost all of
those effects add atmosphere.
You get that in abundance from the effects
in the original GHOSTBUSTERS. Sure,
it’s a quirky atmosphere, but it is a ghost comedy. Then we jump to 2016. When
a trailer pisses on an already patchy movie franchise and shits on its own
release, you go with the vibe of that trailer. The vibe ain’t good. Five jokes
in the trailer but only three jokes in the film. That kind of deal. Not that
it’s a deal.
I frowned at the trailer instead of smiling
or laughing. This is a comedy, and I am not laughing. Well. Damn. And it’s not
the four daughters of…fuck’s sake. It isn’t difficult to write the obvious
script.
Unless it’s for 2016 GHOSTBUSTERS, apparently. For once, in the name of cinema, just go
with the fucking obvious, take the unoriginality hit, and plough heavily into a
well-worked field. Play to the nostalgia, if there’s any nostalgia left. The
daughters of.
But
no. Instead. That mess. It’s not a sequel…hell, it’s nowhere near an equal. While
I’m briefly on that non-topic, marketing terms of that stripe need to die in a
fucking fire.
When the director spouts nonsense about
showing you a film you haven’t seen before but maybe it is a film you have seen
before, you know he’s the wrong director. For anything. A lot of people
involved in that film patted each other on the back through gritted contractual
teeth at the time, or so it felt to me.
After the original film came out, the basic
idea of more films in a series…filtered itself through its own anus, it’s true.
It was very difficult to face the concept of a sequel. And after the second
film, it was even harder to wade through the notion of GHOSTBUSTERS 3.
Often discussed. Never materialised. Hoped
for. Then not hoped for. Maybe it is for the best that the spectre of GHOSTBUSTERS 3 was exorcised. And yet,
somewhere in a musty tomb, there were plans for a continuation of a retread of a
rethink of a ghostly return.
What do we get from GHOSTBUSTERS (2016) as a movie prospect? Cameos from original cast
members, sadly. Pointless cameos from original cast members. Also. Never set
your movie up for a sequel that isn’t going to happen. That’s another point
against it.
Have faith in the title of your movie. It is
GHOSTBUSTERS: ANSWER THE CALL. Apparently.
Who you gonna call? Not this director. If you, as the director, object to the
movie’s full title and need to have it buried in the movie’s closing credit
sequence, you are the wrong director for anything. Including traffic.
I’ve mentioned the trailer for GHOSTBUSTERS: AFTERLIFE before. There’s
a thing in that trailer that should not be there. Won’t say here. It’s a cool
moment that should be part of the movie experience. Not the trailer experience.
If you plan to watch the movie and you
haven’t seen the trailer…just watch the movie. There never was a GHOSTBUSTERS 3. (Which we, now, all
suspect would’ve been ghastly.) Instead, we faced a second reboot…
Someone has to save this cash-cow. Reboot
with AFTERLIFE.
Was AFTERLIFE
any better than the 2016 reboot? The 2016 reboot mess just barely wallpapered
over the original movie. Then the wallpaper fell off. The misguided attempt to
reference the original, while breaking free into “new” characters and cameos
one-step-removed…tried and failed to tap into an audience for a much-loved
earlier film.
And then AFTERLIFE…strip-mined
the ever-living fuck out of the nostalgia train at an industrial scale, harvesting
the feel-good factor all the way down to the nostalgia train’s rails. It was a
basic-bitch move. Take relatives of an original ghostbuster and pass the torch
on.
Either you’ll hate that more than the 2016
reboot…or…you’ll embrace the barbed wire of nostalgia in the hope that the
distraction allows you to ignore the pain. I recommend swallowing two pills beforehand
– the first two movies in the series. Then you’ll be as fresh as possible when
it comes to the assault on the nostalgia front.
And it is a barrage. It doesn’t pretend to
be anything other than a corporate entity dipping into the audience’s pockets
looking for those nostalgia coins. And, damn it. I hopped on that nostalgia
train knowing the audience was in for a corporate mugging.
There were a few giant missteps in AFTERLIFE and also in its immediate
nostalgia-steeped sequel, FROZEN EMPIRE.
As ever, there are rumblings about what happens next. It’s getting harder to
care when yet another movie bod is thrown on the pile of people talking up
what’s next. Nostalgia is next.
When does it end? More. What is it good for?
GHOSTBUSTERS II is okay. And it did
enough money at the time to hold out the promise of closing the movie franchise
on a third film. Alas, it was not to be. The second film’s legacy was, at a
considerable distance, the revival of
There is no
Chaaalz. Only Zuul.
Ruh-roh.
There’s that word. Legacy. Don’t
concern yourself too much with the legacy of a movie that was great on its own
and patchy as a franchise. You always have the original. It’s right there. That’s
your golden ticket to nostalgia. A crap sequel does not ruin a great film. Even
if the people you liked from the first production took the money and ran after
filming the later one.
A bad movie adaptation of a good book
doesn’t destroy the book. And a good movie adaptation of a good book…is a movie. What works on the page may have
to be condensed on the big screen.
GHOSTBUSTERS
isn’t ruined by GHOSTBUSTERS 2016. Of
course, I must add…maybe you don’t care for the first film at all. Or any other
films in the intermittent series. This blog post isn’t about your tastes,
though. It was about my allergic reaction to a movie trailer, welded to recent movie people talk of where the franchise
goes next.
As movie trailers devolve instead of evolve,
I feel there will be more allergic reactions that spare me from experiencing
entire franchises. Movie trailers are tailored to phone screens. When movies
are filmed on phones, we shouldn’t be surprised to learn that movies are set
up, in terms of cinematography, to be viewed on phones in a Covid-tainted
environment.
Covid
just speeded up the inevitable tumble into the abyss technology periodically
provides. They don’t make ’em like they used to. That’s because you used to see
movies on the big screen or on TV years after the cinema release.
The trip from movie to streaming is a short
one, now.
One day, they’ll beam the movie into your
brain. And you’ll have a fast-forward function for an extra fee. By fuck,
you’ll pay it. You say you won’t, today. Bless your wee cotton socks. You’ll go
from sweet summer child to sour winter adult in one swift move.
GHOSTBUSTERS from 2016 was pre-Covid. It’s difficult to compare
box office results for what followed. AFTERLIFE
boasted post-Covid box office numbers. The box office returns weren’t too far
off each other. Tellingly, AFTERLIFE
had a slashed budget. Made it more of a winning proposition for the sorcerers
being employed down in accounts.
We shouldn’t concern ourselves with budgets,
box office receipts, or movie companies and their creative accounting. When
creators talk to you through gritted teeth for contractual reasons, you tend to
tune out the noise.
What’s really telling, here? Time. With the
two movies from the initial run, there’s a gap of five years between releases.
Then nothing in cinemas until 2016. I’m aware of the cartoons and the video
game that’s the spiritual version of GHOSTBUSTERS
3.
After the failed reboot, Covid stepped in
and changed the landscape. Technically, AFTERLIFE
is just barely a pre-Covid film, having finished shooting in late 2019. But
Covid dogged the movie’s release. So you had a reboot followed by the release
of a reboot five years later.
If you want to wrap up a trilogy, don’t take
more than a decade to release it. Yes, The
Lord of the Rings spoiled moviegoers who were into Tolkien’s work. Year on
year, Frodo Baggins turned up in winter with the frequency of a pantomime
character in search of a fortune.
Much-delayed sequels deserve our contempt.
When you look at the inevitable exposé of what went on behind the non-scenes,
there’s only one conclusion to draw.
The scrip
wasn’t right. That had nothing to do with the script. Movie development hell simply means someone in production
wouldn’t pad out the pay packet of an actor.
Sunday, 1 June 2025
GLADIATOR AGAIN: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Can I say anything positive
about the Gladiator sequel? What is
the title? Gladiator 2. That’s not
it. Gladiators. Far too obvious. On
the cover, it’s a very Roman Gladiator
II. Unfathomably, Sir Ridley Scott™ harks back to ALIEN with the title lettering appearing in a vaguely animated
form. So, on screen, the movie is GLADIIATOR.
But really, the movie is Gladiator Again. A film you’ve already
seen as Gladiator. By the numbers.
Tick off the story points from a checklist based on the first movie. This time
around, there are far more computer effects on display. And almost everyone in
the film is miscast. Except for those who returned for the sequel.
Connie Nielsen and Sir Derek Jacobi are cast
perfectly as the same characters they played before. Jacobi was cast in Gladiator off the back of the grumpy
director’s memory of the actor’s TV role as Claudius. And Jacobi was cast in Gladiator II off the back of the grumpy
director’s memory of the actor’s role in Gladiator.
It would be terribly awkward not to mention
Russell Crowe. And also terribly awkward to mention Russell Crowe. He does indeed
appear in this sequel, using footage from the first film in flashback. Can’t
really fault the casting, there. But practically everyone else has wandered in
from another film.
Chief contender in the miscasting category
is an actor who truly has wandered in from another film, and brought his own
plotline with him to blur the thin story of this one. Denzel Washington is fucking
great in this movie. It’s just…that he was cast off the back of the grumpy
director’s memory of having worked with Denzel before.
Every second on screen, Denzel fills the
movie with crackling sparks…and a plot from somewhere else. If they’d stripped
all the pesky Gladiator and Gladiator II stuff out of this film,
then there’d be another film entirely. One starring Denzel Washington. And one
we’d all be interested in.
Okay. So what’s the thin plot, here? There’s
a man lost in the turmoil of battle. Sad things happen. He is forced to become
a gladiator. Quickly, he learns how to handle his new life in an arena out in
the sticks. There, he meets Oliver Reed Denzel Washington. No one buys
or sells any giraffes.
There’s a shot at taking out the villain in
the much larger arena in
It’s Gladiator
Again.
Our hero is the down-on-his-luck adult who
was the kid from the first film. At least that’s a valid reason for waiting
over two decades to make a fucking sequel. I’ll almost give them that. It might
have worked, too, if they’d cast the child actor in the adult role. But they
cast, miscast, someone else.
Spoiler.
Russell Crowe’s character is very dead. Most sincerely dead. He could’ve been
alive and in the sequel. We’ll talk about
Back to the secret kid. Not that the kid was
a secret. Maybe his real daddy was a secret, in the first film. Vague hints. We
couldn’t have anything more than vague hints. You see, Maximus Derivative
Sequelus…
Fuck it. The whole point of Russell Crowe’s
character in the original film is that he’d have his vengeance in that film and
not the next. Maximus had to avenge the death of his wife and son. And for that
reunion at the end of the film to have an emotional impact, out in the filtered
wheat fields, his character couldn’t have a secret son after banging Connie
Nielsen’s character.
But here,
as too many movie and TV scripts utter, here
we are. The secret son has grown up, turned his back on the Evil that is
I’ll
see you…on the beach! That opening bombast is partly Saving Private Ryan, partly Ridley Scott advertising something – we
aren’t sure what – and partly snippets taken from Frank Miller’s 300. The gladiatorial movies share the
same stunning levels of historical accuracy with 300, I am happy to report. I wouldn’t have batted an eyelid if a
tyrannosaur turned up in that fancy arena, replacing the computerised rhino.
Maybe look for that feisty reptilian action in
the third glorious movie: Gladiators
Three. An epic return to form as the two dead fuckmuppet Emperors from this
movie are brought back to life by ALIEN™
technology to ride into battle aboard their steam-powered pet dinosaur Duke
Daisy. It’s a musical comedy. I can hear the critics sing, singing a song of
angry men. Starring the desecrated digital bones of Ian Holm…
I’ll stop there. Just don’t get me fucking
started on that fiasco.
How often do I think about the
Really should stop calling him Ridley. People will think Daisy Ridley
directed Gladiator II. No, even when
watching a Rome-themed movie, it appears that I never think of the
There is no homo-erotic subtext in one film
or the other film. (It’s in both films.)
Plot twist. Gladiator Haribo and General
Stand-In are now at odds with each other. Oh no. One is the secret son of
Russell Crowe’s character Maximus. The other secretly worship’s Russell Crowe’s
character Maximus. Only in cinemas.
The opening of this movie is full of blood,
thunder, thud, blunder, bombast, bomb blasts, napalm, death, and one or two
digital sequences. I counted one or two. Then lost interest in counting the
rest.
There’s a new score featuring reheated
elements from the original score. Inspirational speeches abound, though they
are served up late from the microwaved leftovers from the first film.
Speaking of microwaved leftovers from a
better movie, the Emperor was replaced by two of the most miscast actors in a
What we do in life echoes in the sequel. Are
we not entertained? You’re damned fucking right we are not entertained. Ridley
has one eye on another pointless ALIEN
sequel, showing us what would happen if the alien infected a family of baboons.
They could have spent a whole lot more money
on the computerised baboons. Wouldn’t have mattered. Strangely, I found the
rhino a hell of a lot easier to accept. There’s a sliding scale of acceptance
in this movie…
It runs…rhino, yes. Baboons, no. Rubber
sharks…fuck off. All of the computer
models for animals are miscast in this film. Even the rhino. But that hardly
matters. Here, they are outshone by the miscast humans. Loads of ’em.
Pedro Pascal, General Stand-In, is miscast
as a man who is miscast in a film. Yes, even his miscasting in this movie feels
a bit off, a bit extra, in the department of wrongness. In the final analysis,
that’s nothing. Nothing. Compared to…
Matt Lucas as a Roman game-show host. Yes.
That bit of stunt casting. Miscasting. David Hemmings wasn’t available. Death
will affect the casting process that way. Yes, we miss Oliver Reed as well.
This farce of a gladiatorial movie almost
had me nostalgic for Gor. That’s a
lie. I will never have nostalgia for Gor.
Not even for all of the Oliver Reed scenes in Gor. They should have called this Gladiator: the Rematch. This time it’s personal. Only in cinemas.
Gladiator:
the Rehash. Okay. I get it. If the role is also part of the title, then
we’re going to see some gladiatorising at some point. Gladiator Rising might have been a far better bet as a title. Is
there any director out there, way out there, more inconsistent, more fucking
random, than Ridley?
Advertising jobs saved him. Made him. He
owed it all to Captain Birdseye. If you listened to Captain Birdseye, though, Ridley
was an arsehole. Mucking around at the BBC, Ridley was almost in a position to
design the Daleks for Doctor Who. Why
didn’t he design the Daleks? Because they’d have fucking resembled him. And Ridley
wouldn’t have fucking cared.
Scrolling down the patchy Scott filmography…it’s
definitely a thing. By fuck, he veers wildly from film project to film project.
He’s still going as I type, so, luckily for him, GLADIIATOR won’t be his last film.
At least no one made the GLADIATOR sequel about Russell Crowe
returning from the dead as an immortal assassin hell-bent on killing Jesus. Yes,
that was my response when I first heard about it. Either
Friday, 2 May 2025
SEQUEL OF GOR: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
In my last blog post I
changed a bulb and watched the Gor film.
At double speed. This was an improvement. In a stunning development, Jack
Palance turned up at the end of that movie extravaganza and promised a sequel.
Who in their right fucking mind was going to
fund a sequel? Ah. Distributed by the Cannon people. Fired from a big gun, this
movie missed. It’s certainly a skill, missing the planet you are on.
But we are not on our planet. No. We’ve been
transported to the world of Gor. This movie contains a montage of the previous
film at the start. By fuck, if I’d known that I’d have skipped the first
fucking film.
Our hero, Carl. Whoops. Tarl Cabot. Damn it.
I’d have saved time and effort by reading Almuric
comic books instead. Ironhand Esau Cairn would wipe the floor with Carl.
Whoops. Tarl Cabot. On with the story…
The story is a two-word script. When
characters aren’t shouting Cabot! they
are yelling Guards! Our hero…he
isn’t…our hero Cabot is summoned back to Gor by his flashing magic ring. It is
most precious to him. That was a lie.
Landing in the same dead stretch of desert
as before, he arrives with a new sidekick: Sleazy. He and Sleazy retread the
original movie. No, seriously. Practically fucking nothing happens across
90-odd minutes of sand.
Insert STAR
WARS quote about sand here. Thank me later.
What’s new in town? Fucking nothing. There’s
a warning flash. OZONE LAYER DEPLETED. This pops up every time we encounter the
leading lady, here relegated to a supporting role, whose hairspray-drenched
mane threatens to have a wholly separate career.
Cabot has been summoned arbitrarily. There’s
no real rush for him to be here, except as a sequel cash-in. Jack Palance looks
as though he’s had teeth pulled to star in this movie. I’m sure he had better
times before, and he’d have better times ahead.
But in this film, he looks as though he’s as
happy as a man having his teeth pulled one by one between takes. Maybe two by
two. Who knows? The best thing to say about Palance’s performance is that he
gets to wear a funny hat. No. Really. That’s all I’ve got here, and that’s
pretty weak gravy as it stands.
Gor is a free land. Except where people
aren’t free. We see the same scenes again in this movie. No, I’m not talking
about the flashback to original footage. After that, we pretty much retread the
original God-awful production.
Our hero meets people from the first film.
Not Oliver Reed. He fell to his death. But a half-hearted script could have
brought him back and no one would’ve cared. Certainly not Ollie. There’s a
king. And his evil queen. Blah-de-blah. The end. Roll credits.
The evil queen takes on the leading lady
status here. She hams it up. That’s all you can do. Cabot’s buddy Sleazy makes
moves on the queen and she uses Sleazy to prove she was elsewhere when the king
was mysteriously stabbed.
We have this side-action going on with Jack
Palance doing chemistry lessons for pay. The drink he concocts is irrelevant.
What’s important? The knife. This is what the queen stabs her husband with. Cue
the rest of the script.
Guards!
The king is dead. Long live the queen, I
guess. (It’s not that kind of movie. Spoiler for the end of the film. She’ll
never play piano again.) Someone killed the king. Was it Sarge? Rosemary the
telephone operator? Quick, get Scoob and the gang to investigate.
Yes. Someone killed the king. We’re all very
sad, here in movie land. But it wasn’t the queen. No. Sleazy stands up for her.
She was with him. If you catch his drift.
Right. So. The queen couldn’t be a murderer.
She was too busy committing adultery. Got it. Checks out. Would stand up in
court. Seems legit. I’d had enough of Sleazy when he and his atrocious dialogue
entered the start of the film like a virus entering a bloodstream. Maybe even a
human bloodstream.
But. I’d really had enough of him by now.
He’s the new thing in the story. And he shouldn’t be a thing. Have you seen the
Lethal Weapon movies, with Leo Getz?
Stop trying to make him a thing.
What about MARVEL products featuring Martin
Freeman and Julia Louise-Dreyfus? Stop trying to make them a thing. Joe Pesci
and those two, in certain films. In other things, I have no problem with these
people.
We revisit the first Gor film, in spirit. (Must we?) There’s a dance number. And the
leading lady from the first movie must get into a bitchy fight with a warrior
woman, all over again. And then another fight, after that.
Cabot, meanwhile, must go on the run. Into
the beige wastelands. Our queen, evil as ever, wants Cabot brought back alive.
She’s sent Sleazy off to the dungeon. Well, he is in leather. And the queen
decides to send a minion to hunt Cabot down.
All of this goes fucking nowhere. Cabot gets
into the usual low-rent fights you’ve grown accustomed to in this vague update
of a sword-and-sandal movie. The difference is the soundtrack. Needs more
cowbell.
Cabot almost dies of thirst and then almost
dies of quenching his thirst. The assassin appears out of nowhere after zero dramatic
build-up whatsoever, and Cabot is captured. I’ve no intention of relaying
events in chronological order. If I did that, one of my kidneys would rebel,
force itself up through my torso into my throat, and throttle my tongue.
Jack Palance seems to have the same contract
Oliver Reed had. Spread a few minutes of performing across the whole movie. The
evil queen is having the most fun out of an entire cast not having terribly
much fun.
Cabot is captured. Oh no. He’s going to be
taken before the queen and shouted at, I suppose, if she wants him alive for
breeding purposes or as a contract bridge partner. What is the point of this
film?
Jack Palance – it doesn’t matter what his
character’s name is – Jack, he offers Tarl Cabot a deal. Just go home. But that’s
fucking rubbish. So is the end of this movie. It looks like Jack Palance is
planning to poison the evil queen. But she stabs him first.
And then. The queen dies. Slain by her own
assassin, who throws his big spear at her. Carl Tabot does fuck-all except
shout excitedly from the sidelines. Wait, that isn’t his fucking name. Fuck it.
His pal Sleazy ends up back in the real world, and is taken away by the police
for having the audacity to appear in this sewer of a sequel.
I’m not judging you if you like the film – I
simply don’t have the energy for that. Did I not mention the title of the
movie? Outlaw of Gor. It’s the script
that’s the real outlaw here. Film in sand. Check. Use costumes from the earlier
production? Bring back the same faces. Can you cut the budget?
That’s twice, now. I’ve watched two films in
the same so-called setting. At double speed. Nothing happens. The same dance
numbers and gladiator girl combat. Everyone in bikinis. Not Jack Palance.
Wander, lost, in the landscape. You could have driven a bus behind the
characters, and no one would have noticed the mistake. Audience would just go
with the idea that the bus driver discovered another magic ring.
Shame there wasn’t a third movie. No, I
lied. What would a third movie be about? Let me take a wild guess. Going by
production timelines, I’m guessing Gor
III would have gone straight to video in 1991.
So we’d have Liam Neeson as the villain for
five minutes. Carl. Damn it to fuck. Tarl. This fucking guy. Tarl Cabot is
hanging around Downtown Sand Dune Number Six and he encounters a mysterious
sorcerer.
It’s Wade Webley. A stockbroker who…yes,
evil stockbroker. Is there any other kind? A stockbroker who has a glowing
ring. You’re making your own jokes up, now. He has found his way to Gor, and
likes what he sees.
Lots of women in bikinis.
He reveals that he’s not a sorcerer. Just a
guy armed with the technology of another world. His evil plan is to sell shares
in the planet Gor and then foreclose on the widow’s mortgage, taking control of
the beige land.
Carl Tabot™
stops him with a swift sword to the kidneys. This takes up the last ten minutes
of the film. In the first half hour, there’ll be a dance-off, two bikini
battles, and Jack Palance hiding behind the palace curtains.
Palance gets the same amount of time as
Oliver Reed had, but it’s a minute more than the span allotted to Liam Neeson –
barely recognisable in a state-of-the-art prosthetic mask…made from a
Hallowe’en mask. It’s Captain Kirk’s face, spray-painted gold.
We witness oodles of hairspray. Characters
are lost in the desert. They reach the sea, and find Charlton Heston laughing
as he walks back along the beach. Liam remarks that the production reminds him
of Krull, without the budget. Or Excalibur without the knights.
My work here is, just like the franchise,
mercifully done.