Multi-dimensional superheroine with more adventures than a comic book museum, stuck in a grandmother's body.
Thursday, January 8, 2015
The Daughter of Dawn
I love learning about the history of film, especially lost or forgotten gems. Director Christopher Eilenstine of The Soulless had shared this article on Facebook and if you read it, you'll see how amazing this discovery is. Thank you, Chris for sharing this with us.
This silent film, The Daughter of Dawn, featured and all-Indian-cast. Some of the scenes feature authentic Native American dances and ceremonies. It was filmed in 1920 by Norbert Myles and casts the beautiful people of the Kiowa and Comanche Nations.
Here is the site for the article:
http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2012/08/28/discovery-long-lost-silent-film-all-indian-cast-has-historians-reeling-131494
Here is a sample of the film, The Daughter of Dawn.
More from the film:
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Part Three of Steampunk Granny's Interview with Director/Actor Patrick Devaney
I saved the best for last on my interview with the very talented Patrick Devaney. Enjoy
Marie
Gilbert: “When is the last season of the Zombie Hunters? I want people to know
who read my blog.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“For the last season, the eleventh episode will come out in the summer and then
the final one (Episode 12) will be filmed starting January 31, 2015, and
probably will come out in January or February 2016 and, as always, it will be
on public access all over the country. If people e-mail me or come they come to
a show and they see us there, we have DVDs of all the different work that we
do, all of it on DVD and any public appearance that we do, anyone can come to
talk to us and get whatever they’d like to see.”
Marie
Gilbert: “You’ll be at the film festival in New York this year?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“The New York Horror Show? Yes I’ll be there on Sunday only because we’ll be
filming the other two days of the event.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“I actually won’t be this year because I’m swamped with production of so many
things and, this year they’ve asked me to be one of the judges of the film
festival which is an enormous honor and I immediately said yes. Adam Ginsberg
and LC Macabre, they told me that they wanted me to do this and as soon as I
agreed, they informed me that I had 124 films I needed to watch and I said,
“Oh, I understand, okay...that’s a lot, but I’m in!” They gave me and the other
judges access to them all. The films are some of, especially the short films, they
are some of best that I’ve ever seen in my life.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Well I’m a big supporter of Independent Films because you’re allowed
more freedom and you get better quality because you’re not tied to a big
Hollywood studio and you have more of a say on film.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“I’m happy to hear that, and I’m all for it as well because you don’t have to
follow a formula. A lot of the films that I see that are so successful and so
brilliant, but they would never get off the drawing board in Hollywood because
they didn’t follow a specific marketing formula that they can match to make
money. I understand that it’s a business and they have shareholders and they
have to make money and that’s how the big gears turn, but on the artistic side,
it lacks much. That’s why I love Independent Films, especially Independent
Short-form work,, which is my favorite to watch and some of the ideas that I’ve
seen in the past six weeks is just amazing work. It’s so nice to see so many
people doing such wonderful things.”
Photo courtesy of photographer, John Sheehan
Photo courtesy of photographer, John Sheehan
Marie
Gilbert: “One more question. You were in a band or you had your own band?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Yes, and an interesting time with that. I was in a number of different bands
on the New York circuit in the early to late 80’s. When Manny and Lindsay
Serrano from Mass Grave Pictures told me they were looking to set Blood Slaughter Massacre in October of
1984, I was actually in a recording band at that exact point in time, and they
asked me if I had any little demos to add to the film’s soundtrack. I not only
had that but, the two guys that were in the band with me are both professional
musicians today and one of them is in a very successful band that tours the
world. I said to Manny and Lindsay “If I can schedule everyone together,
they’ve actually agreed to re-record one of those songs for your movie.” So we
got the band together twenty-eight years later and we re-recorded some of that
music and it’s used it in the film. Blood
Slaughter Massacre about to be released by Wild Eye Releasing this spring.
Also, you can talk to the crew from MGP
too, if you want, because that movie is nutty and I’m even one of the
characters in that too. I play Captain Bracken, the Chief of Police of the Town
of Havenwood in the film.”
Marie
Gilbert: “So when I see that movie, I’ll be listening to your music?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“There is a particularly gruesome death scene that you’ll be hearing our music
during, yeah.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Because of your busy schedule, do you have time to devote to your
music?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“I really haven’t at all. I stopped performing over twenty years ago and just
to get this one song together for their movie kind of re-sparked interest in it
for me, but I kind of try to leave the work in the hands of the professionals.
I know much better musicians than I am so I try to work with a lot of different
people, like Charlie Maffia and Steve Montano, the two people I was speaking
about earlier. The band we had was called ‘Romeo Penguin’, the band that did
the work for Blood Slaughter Massacre.
I also work with a wonderful composer
and arranger named Bernadette McCallion, who scores music for shows like The Shield and The Real World and many other major network shows, and she gives me
the time to do my independent films as well, which is a godsend with her.
We’ve been friends for twenty-five years
and she does this for a living and I get her hand-me-downs mostly, but with my
film Aemorraghe,
she actually did the score for it. It was all original music and, it’s amazing
how everything tied in. She worked with Charlie and Steve from her studio as
they worked in The Bastudio in Bayside, NY, on other original music as well as
all the Foley. Bernadette also composed at home and then sent the themes over
to them and then I would approve everything once they had it properly placed
and mixed. Charlie also enlisted a beautiful track from a London-based producer
named Vahn who recorded with a singer called Imonomi, and that was the icing on
the cake for the soundtrack. I could not
have asked for a better sound team to work with, and that’s why I left it to
them!
When you see the film, you’ll see how
everything has come together for it. It’s one of the best-sounding Indie short
films I’ve ever seen, and I can say that because I take no credit for that
aspect of its production. I like to find the most talented person I know, and
often, that isn’t me. So I say okay, who is the best for this, and can we get
them? That’s what I like to do. Bring everyone in and let all their strengths
shine and its one cohesive picture.”
Marie
Gilbert: “If my readers want to see Zombie Hunters: City of the Dead, how would
they find it?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“They can find it on Amazon Prime. They can download that or pick up DVD’s from
Amazon. DVD copies might also still be for sale in stores like FYE, if you can
still find them.
I want to add that for the people
reading this: if they appreciate horror and Indie film the way we do, then they
should go out to the festivals and go out to the conventions and talk to the
people who make these films and support them.
A lot of times, you go to conventions
and you’ll see the cast of “The Walking Dead” and you can spend 300 dollars to
get a picture with them or, you can spend a fraction of that and pick up three
or four Independent Films that you may get more from than a picture with a
celebrity. The convention scene is drastically changing now where it’s focused
on stardom and these photo ops, and what happens is the Independent producers
come in and some of them are mortgaging their houses to make these films and
selling them for ten dollars, but people just walk by them and say, ‘I can’t, I
just spent one hundred and twenty-five dollars to meet Norman Reedus.’ (this is
something that has actually been said to me, and more than once.)
People have different interests, and
there’s nothing wrong with autograph collecting. But if people truly love
Independent work: sci-fi, drama, horror or whatever, then it needs to be
supported. If it’s really good, then people have to be told, “You know this
film was exceptionally good.” This will encourage them to do more things and
that’s how you keep art going because if not, then it’s just Hollywood and just
Transformers movies and that’s all you’ll ever see. That would be a real shame.
There should be room for both.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Thank you, Patrick for being my guest. It was a pleasure talking and
you have to thank Joe Parascand.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“The pleasure was mine. Thank you very much. Joe is awesome and in an industry
that’s built on selfishness, he is the most open guy and the most selfless
person who will put everyone ahead of him and equally promote everyone and he
really takes cross-promotion to a whole new level. I love the guy as a person.
I’ve known him for years, but just being able to work with him...I’m going to
be directing him on January 17th and January 31st in different
scenes in for the last two episodes of Zombie Hunters.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Tell Joe I said hello. You know Joe has referred a lot of people to
me to interview and you are all nice, good people, who love and do top quality
work. Thank you again, Patrick.
And to all my little zombie snacks out there, if you make it out to the New York Horror Show
go looking for Patrick Devaney and tell him Steampunk Granny sent youMonday, January 5, 2015
Part Two of Steampunk Granny's Interview of Director/Actor Patrick Devaney
Hi, my little zombie snacks.
I’m back with Part 2 of my interview of Director/ Actor Patrick Devaney where we
learn more about the First Zombie series on television and Devaney’s character
in Ryan Scott Webber’s Pretty Fine Things. Join me now as I learn more about
the world of Independent Film
Marie
Gilbert: “On your IMDb, it has you working with Ryan Scott Webber and Pretty
Fine Things, and you are an actor in that film, right?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Yes, I’m one of the leads and I play Thomas Banner, one of the three Banner
brothers that are the main protagonists as well as the anti-heroes of the film.
We are three brothers who are criminally insane in different ways and we come
home because our dad’s health is failing, so it’s a very creepy story. We play psychopaths
in it and I get to work with Joe Parascand, who I love working with. I’ve
directed him before, I’ve acted with him and I love it, but I also get to work
with Adam Ginsberg, who is just fantastic, so the three of us as the brothers
in this movie... I hope everybody gets to see this because they are going to
really enjoy it.”
Patrick Devaney, Joe Parascand, Adam Ginsberg
Marie
Gilbert: “Joe Parascand is in the film too? He’s the one that introduced me to
you. He’s been very good at promoting people and he knows that anyone that he
sends to me is someone that I’m excited to interview. I met Joe because of The
Soulless. So...now you’re wrapping up on the Zombie Hunters: City of the Dead
and I see in your bio that you do star in non-horror shows like Elementary, Law
and Order, but is your love really for the horror films?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“I would say that up to a point, my love has always been for horror films and
for sci-fi films. I find myself going more into the science fiction/fantasy
realm of horrific things and my favorite director in the world is Guillermo Del
Toro. I mean, I love Pan’s Labyrinth
and could watch it every day, and the Hellboy
movies. The things he comes up with, that dark fantasy and the science based
fantasies? I love that, and I’ve been working more towards that.
My first move towards this, while we
were doing the second season of Zombie
Hunters, I made a short film called ‘Aemorraghe,
which is a based on a story from Heavy Metal Magazine back in 1982 that I read as a teenager. I found the
artist, an amazing illustrator named Caza, and got the rights to it and wrote, produced,
and directed the film. It was shot by Mark Boutros and the crew from MGP, and
stars Vivienne Cleary, an amazing actress that carried the weight of the film
in ways I could never have even hoped for. But yes, it’s definitely the vein I
want to go more into. It’s pure science fiction and science fantasy. It has
some horrific elements to it in terms of theme, but overall it’s a positive
film and yeah, it just got into its twenty-first film festival this year.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Wow, alright.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Yeah, I’m pretty happy with that.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“I’ll send you the link and the password for it and you can watch it online;
the screener that the festivals watch.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Okay and you have to let us know how it does at the festival. When is
the festival?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“The next festival that we know it’s in will be the Patterson Film Festival
this Spring. It’s already done twenty others since it premiered at the Macabre
Faire Film Festival last January, and I’m waiting to hear from about forty
other festivals it’s running for over the rest of its public run. We tried to
book it in two-hundred-fifty of them. We got about a twelve percent acceptance
rate, which is pretty good.”
Marie
Gilbert: “I would say so. Now, what was the film that hooked you onto horror
and science fiction as a child?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Whenever I talk about this, I always blame my mom. When I was an infant, she
would sit me up in front of the T.V. with her and watch the original Dark Shadows first run. As I was growing
up, I would sit next to her and she would explain, ‘Okay, now that’s Barnabas
and he’s a vampire and Angelique is a witch,” etc. And, what’s really cool is
that I just got to meet Sharon Smyth who played Sarah Collins in the show! I
got to tell her that story and that was very cool. She’s a wonderful lady and
if you can meet her, she’s amazing. It started for me from there and for horror
stuff, but the first movie I remember seeing on television that really scared
the hell out of me was a T.V. movie called Let’s
Scare Jessica to Death.”
Marie
Gilbert: “I think I remember that one.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“It was a weird movie about vampires and had a very strange take on them and it
scared the hell out of me. But, for the sci-fi stuff I grew up watching Star Trek even the first run Star Trek, and before Star Wars came out, there was a
wonderful show that came out of England called Space 1999. It stared Martin Landau and Barbara Bain from Mission:Impossible and it was a
beautiful science fiction show on BBC in 1975 and that hooked me into sci-fi
instantly and then two years later, Star
Wars came out and I was done, totally addicted. I was a nine year old kid
watching Star Wars and saying, “Okay, I’m done. You can end it now, I’m good!”
So yeah, that strange combination of
character-driven horror and over-the-top science-fiction, I always try to
combine those two things and hopefully, I can be doing this for the rest of my
life.”
Marie
Gilbert: “You write a lot of the scripts, so you’re a writer, director, actor
and producer, so what hat do you like to wear the most?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Currently, I really enjoy being someone else for a while and, I enjoy acting
in different things. I get to work at least one if not two days a week on
different network television shows, mostly as background and sometimes featured
roles, but mostly general background. I get to watch those kinds of crews again,
and that helps me in being a director because now I can see what actors really
need from their crews and their director. I’m really enjoying that a lot right
now and also to be able to work with guys like Joe Parascand and Adam Ginsberg
and to act with that level of ability; to work with those guys and bounce back
and forth from them? That was just a total gift.
Photo courtesy of photographer John Sheehan
But I really love doing it all. For
example, I’m currently writing a web series that we will start filming in May
with an upcoming producer named Lauren Loizidis. We created this fictionalized version of
Mastic, New York, called “Mastic PD”, where all these strange kinds of things
go on and we are members of the police department and have to investigate them.
This is a project based off characters from the Ormsby’s Cinema Insane universe, created by John Sheehan. I’ve been
writing that with her for maybe three months, but she’s also one of the new
Zombie Hunters, so it’s very interesting. I get to direct her in scenes, but
she’s also my new writing partner. It’s an interesting dynamic where we are
wearing different hats with each other now; a different way of doing it. But, I
work some aspect of this every single day. I’m doing some kind of production
every day and I do write every day, even if it’s just a note to myself saying ‘make
sure you finish that story about the cop that did this…’. Yeah it’s a daily
task, but I love it.”
I'll be stopping part two here, my little zombie snacks and returning on Tuesday with part three of my interview with Independent Director/ Actor Patrick Devaney. Don't be late. There is more to learn.
Sunday, January 4, 2015
Part One of Steampunk Granny's interview with Patrick Devaney of Zombie Hunters: City of the Dead
Steampunk Granny has a guardian angel
named Joe Parascand who tells me about some very talented people in Independent
Films. Through these many interviews, I’ve made a lot of new friends, but it
seemed that with the different interviews that I’d done about Independent
Films, there was one name that kept coming up, Patrick Devaney. It was time for
me to meet the creator of the first zombie show on television.
Marie
Gilbert: “Thank you for taking the time to do this interview with me, Patrick.
Why don’t we start off with you telling us a little bit about yourself, your
acting, directing and am I right, producing?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Yeah, I actually started out that way. I always wanted to do film work in
general my whole life, but I kind of put that on pause because I was in the
music industry for a while, then I was doing finance for a while. But at one of
the places I worked at doing finance, we rented space out to the various Law and Order shows. And, I was selling
them locations and at one point I was doing four different Law and Order’s several times a year, so they were a regular staple
and I would watch them film and I watched this for years. The more I watched it
the more I thought; you know I think we have enough people that we could do
this.
We always wanted to see a zombie based
T.V. series and there never was one, so we could wait the rest of our lives or
we could make our own. I got a number of people together that had gone to film
school and I asked them their advice and then got some other people together
and asked if they would want to be in it and we started Zombie Hunters: City of the Dead. We came up with the idea in 2005
and it first aired in December of 2007, but the only outlet that we had was
public access T.V. I had no contacts other than renting out space for L&O, so the only place we could get
access was on public T.V. Since we started with one station in Queens, we’ve
been on seventy-five stations across the nation since.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Wow, so Zombie Hunters: City of the Dead came out before The Walking
Dead?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Oh yes, we came out several years before The Walking Dead, actually. We were
the very first broadcast zombie-based T.V. series in history. We were the very
first ones ever on the air, the debut was in December 2007 with the pilot
episode and it has been continuously on the air ever since in one way or
another. It started out on Queens Public Access and it’s still running on
Queens Public Access to this day.”
Marie
Gilbert: “I did get to see the first episode of season one, so with Zombie
Hunters are you using the same cast every season?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“We’ve made it pretty much consistent, I’ve been very lucky in that. If someone
doesn’t die, they pretty much come back. We’re actually wrapping up the series
this year. We’re filming the very last episode in 2015 and that’s going to wrap
up the entire series and some of the people that were from the very first show
and continuously with the show will be there at the very end and, we are even
bringing back some of the zombies that were in the very first pilot episode.
We are bringing them back eight years
later. I’ve already spoke to some of them and they were like, just let me know
when! It started out just to see if we could do it and to date, we’ve had over
four-hundred people work on the show.”
Marie
Gilbert: “How many episodes do you have per season for the last eight years? In
2015, it will be eight years.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“The first season was eight episodes and the second season was going to be
another eight, but we cut it down and are wrapping up the show on the twelfth
episode. For a while we were averaging two or three episodes a year, and in
later years since we had gone onto so many other film projects; to get one out
a year has been a miracle. We realized that with so many projects going on
right now, we had to shorten the series down and are ending in 2015. Yes, we
are going with that, but it has been a continuous storyline and continuous
characters and the entire series only takes place over the course of five
months.”
Marie
Gilbert: “Oh, okay.”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Yes, so in the storyline, this event happens and no one believes it at first.
What we tried to do was show what if George Romero and John Russo’s original
idea for Night of the Living Dead actually
happened in New York City today. What would it be like? So that has always been
the premise of the show. And what we thought was that in a city like New York,
no one would believe it at first. If you saw things going on, you would just
call the Cops. You wouldn’t think there were zombies. You would just think that
they were crazy people or on drugs or whatever and, if the government actively
covered it up, we go for almost a month before anyone in authority even admits
that this is happening! So, it’s not worldwide and it starts in New Jersey and
it spreads out from there, so...it’s a slow progression and most people still
don’t buy it until it’s too late and by the time it’s too late; no one is
prepared for it. That’s where we are right now and things have gotten horribly
worse and no one is prepared except for us and, the end of the world is upon
them.”
Marie
Gilbert: “That is so interesting especially since it is taking place in the
city because normally when you talk about a zombie apocalypse, they always say
that the city is the worst place to stay. It’s better to go out to the
countryside. But, your guys are staying in the city. How was staying in the
city better for the characters?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“Well, we sat down and talked about this and I think that most people wouldn’t
think to leave. I mean, I’ve lived in New York City for forty-six years and I
couldn’t think of where else to go. I don’t have a house anywhere else and most
of my family is still in the city.
I wouldn’t even know where to go,
really. I think a lot of people in New York, most don’t have firearms and most
get around by the train so what do you do? Do you rent a car and find a gun and
try to go somewhere that you don’t know, or would you figure out maybe I’ll
stay put and see what happens.
Unfortunately, we had that really happen
when 9/11 occurred and most people did not flee the city. Most people stayed
exactly where they were and if they had to get to Queens, they walked over the
bridges. What we did was stay in the city not knowing what would happen next
and knowing that the city was a target; we all stayed in the city and we all
went to work two days later. So, I think that in any kind of emergency, people
in a major city, until they see that it’s bad and the food runs out and the
water stops and the gas runs out, they are going to stay put. So, our
characters pretty much said, we’ve been lifelong New Yorkers and we have access
to some guns and we know people where we can get more guns from. We’re going to
stay put and that’s what we do until it’s really far too late.”
Marie
Gilbert: “In a way, that does make sense. You stay where you’re comfortable and
you know the area. Now you play Billy Cassidy in this series. Is he the main
protagonist of the story? Is everything centered on Billy?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“He started out that way, but it’s quickly progressed that the real leader of
the group, who has been holding it all together, is Paul Michael Bates, who is
played by Christopher J. Murphy. He is also a fan-favorite and people really
respond well to him.
Billy is kind of a jerk. He’s moody and
he’s not very positive and the character of Bates is like, “Listen things are
bad, but we got this by the ass,” to quote Dawn of the Dead, “We got this by
the ass and we are fine.” Bates has readily become the fan-favorite, so you see
in the series as it goes along that he’s started taking more of a leadership
role, also because Billy kind of vanishes for a while and Bates has to deal
with everything on his own. Eventually, Billy comes back into the fold and he’s
changed. He’s different and when the series wraps up, you’ll see the changes in
him. There are a few main characters like John Salazar, played by Rick Martinez,
who is always there and he plays the voice of reason. He is the only person
with military training. He is the person who holds things together on a much
more non-emotional level and on practical level. We see the things that he goes
through; he loses his entire family at one point so we see the different ways
that the different characters progress and we’ve lost some along the way. Yeah,
so anyone who has survived so far will be there at the end.”
Photo courtesy of photographer John Sheehan
Photo courtesy of photographer John Sheehan
Marie
Gilbert: “Besides working on Zombie Hunters that will end in 2015, do you see
this series becoming a movie?”
Patrick
Devaney:
“It’s funny, people have asked me that before, but we don’t really see it
becoming a movie only because we are finishing up the story completely at the
end of the season with the last episode and we actually explain everything that
goes on. We explain what the zombies are and where they come from and we do a
big reveal for this. The fate of the characters may be up in the air and that
is kind of left to the viewer, but what really happens is that we do finish the
series properly and explain everything. We don’t leave a lot to conjecture, and
it’s not going to just end abruptly.
But, like I said there are so many more
projects that we are writing and producing and moving on towards; plus, most of
my crew is made up of a company called Mass Grave Pictures and they have their
own projects going on right now. They finished their first feature film called Blood Slaughter Massacre, and they are
currently filming another one called In
the Shadow of the Imp. So, it’s very creepy kind of horror stuff and they
are all doing their own projects, so everyone is kind of spreading out from
there. To keep this series going, I mean we’re all for working together, but
there are so many projects to do.”
Okay, my little zombie snacks, we are going to end part one of this interview here and pick up with part two on Monday.
Okay, my little zombie snacks, we are going to end part one of this interview here and pick up with part two on Monday.
The Sci-Fi Boys
Last night my husband and I had gone to see the
Hobbit Movie: The Battle of the Five Armies and, while I loved it my husband
was not as impressed. We also got to see the trailers of upcoming films and
2015 is going to be a blockbuster year. On the ride home we talked about the
special effects of today’s films as compared to when we were kids. After Dan
had gone to bed, I worked on an interview which I’ll be posting later today and
then settled down to watch something different on television. I came across a
documentary called The Sci-Fi Boys. Hmmm? What was this about? I decided to
watch and I am so happy I did.
The Documentary
This was a tribute to the men who made special
effects an important part of the film industry and featured film industry
giants like Peter Jackson, George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, John Landis, Dennis
Muren, Rick Baker, Roger Corman, Ray Harryhausen, Forrest J Ackerman, Stephen
Sommers and my all-time favorite Ray Bradbury.
The focus was on the legendary
Ray Harryhausen for his stop-action Claymation monsters check his bio
here: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0366063/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm
And, also on Forrest J Ackerman for
bringing to life the famous monsters of Film in his magazine, Famous Monsters
of Filmland. He was the editor and principal writer of this
magazine as well as an actor, from the 1950s into the 1980s and was credited
for coining the name Sci-Fi. Check out Ackerman’s impressive history here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forrest_J_Ackerman
It was a delight to listen to famous directors who I
admire talk about their love of movies and how they were hooked into making
their own backyard horror films after seeing some of Harryhausen’s monsters and
reading Ackerman’s monster magazines. We even get to see some of their earlier
work on their parent’s 8mm camera.
I especially enjoyed seeing how the monsters were made
to look so realistic with the earlier methods of stop motion action and learning
what the directors’ feelings are concerning today’s CGI’s
You can catch this documentary On Demand or you can buy
the CD. Check out the official site of The Sci-Fi Boys: http://www.webring.org/l/rd?ring=worldwideindepen;id=15;url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Epauldavids%2Ecom%2Fsci_ficomp%2Ehtml
I found this on Youtube. Enjoy
I found this on Youtube. Enjoy
Friday, January 2, 2015
Steampunk Granny's Review of 2014:The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
This past year was one hell of a wild ride and that was even with the world’s safety belt pulled taunt across its chest. While we made epic strides with medical and science innovations, the circus performances of Global Politics, especially that of the United States Congress, left many of us wishing that we could pack up and move far away...like to another planet.
Luckily, there were a bevy of new movies, books, games and music to divert our attention from the wacky stuff that was happening around the globe. Grab hold of your wrecking ball and follow me.
Music
I’m a big fan of Black Keys, Of Monsters and Men, Lorde and anything by Parov Stelar plus my friends at Biff Bam Pop www.biffbampop.com offered a few of their favorites and I will share them.
Thank you Glenn Walker: http://biffbampop.com/2014/12/15/biff-bam-pops-holiday-gift-guide-2014-nothing-has-changed-by-david-bowie/
And, thank you J.P. Fallavollita: http://biffbampop.com/2014/12/31/top-5-albums-of-2014-as-chosen-by-jp-fallavollita/#more-31591
This year, I’ve been listening to the “My Head is an Animal CD by Of Monsters and Men with my favorite song being “Little Talks”
This is my favorite Parov Stelar tune. I play this when I’m feeling down and feel lots better after I try to do the dance steps.
I love all the songs by Black Keys, but this is one of my favorites
Lorde has such a great voice and I think this was the song that hooked me. Royals...enjoy
Television
2014 was a good year for Television and not only did the fan favorites like Dr. Who, Grimm, “The Walking Dead”, American Horror Story: Freak Show, Sleepy Hollow, Agents of Shield and Gotham live up to KICK ASS expectations, but we were offered top-notch series like True Detective and Gracepoint, the American remake of BBC’s Broadchurch.
Shows that didn’t make my list of favorites: Under the Dome, The Following, The Goldbergs and Stalker.
Movies
There were some great thought provoking movies out this year and I have so many favorites such as, Maleficent, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, Deliver Us from Evil, Guardians of the Galaxy, The Drop, The Draft, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Her, Gravity, Mockingjay part 1 and, one of the best written horror stories this year, The Babadook http://thebabadook.com/home/
I will say that I have not seen The Interview which stars James Franco and Seth Rogen. Maybe it was because its plot has Franco and Rogen’s characters trying to kill real life North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un.
I’m all for free speech and I abhor censorship of said free speech, but I don’t think it wise to upset a world leader who is very anxious and capable of launching nuclear weapons and hacking into Sony’s stuff. Maybe the studio could have used a fictitious name or country. I will say that friends who saw the movie liked it.
Books
I reviewed a lot of books this year and wrote reviews for those books. I give a 4 star rating for: Jack Flacco’s second book in a series Ranger Martin and the Alien Invasion. It is a fast, fun action story that you can’t put down http://www.amazon.com/Ranger-Martin-Alien-Invasion-Flacco-ebook/dp/B00ONG04IA
I reviewed the Reading Glasses Anthology: Stories through an Unpredictable Lens http://tinyurl.com/qbbgonb You can find out more about Hypothetical Press here: http://www.hypotheticalpress.com/
And right now, I am honored and excited to be reviewing Wrapped in Plastic Twin Peaks http://tinyurl.com/lmez3m2 by Andy Burns, our fearless leader and Editor-In-Chief of Biff Bam Pop. I can’t wait to do the review and the interview.
Here is the synopsis: In 1990, avant garde filmmaker David Lynch (Eraserhead, The Elephant Man, Dune, Blue Velvet) and acclaimed television writer Mark Frost (Hill Street Blues) teamed up to create a television show that would redefine what the medium could achieve in a one-hour drama.
With Twin Peaks, the duo entranced audiences with the seemingly idyllic town, its quirky characters, and a central mystery — who killed Laura Palmer? In a town like Twin Peaks, nothing is as it seems, and in Wrapped in Plastic, pop culture writer Andy Burns uncovers and explores the groundbreaking stylistic and storytelling methods that have made the series one of the most influential and enduring shows of the past 25 years
My Book
I have my book out, Roof Oasis book one of an apocalyptic tale with a twist.
Think Romeo & Juliet meet The Walking Dead written by Jules Verne http://tinyurl.com/nmdl27e I'm working on book two Saving Solanda which will be out in the summer of 2015
Conclusion
As far as world news, the lower that rat shit terrorist group called ISIS, the greed of Wall Street, the destruction of the Middle Class, Obama Care, GMO’s and the disgusting and dangerous practice of FRACKING along with the latest outbreak of the contagious Ebola Virus were the big topics around the water coolers and kitchen tables. I send my sympathies to the families who were infected in West Africa and here.
I could write about the buffoonery that went on in Congress, but I’m already taking too many pills for acid indigestion as it is. Enough said. Let’s hope that 2015 will find our world leaders using more common sense and our private citizens using fewer guns.
Happy 2015
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