This was the first poster I saw for Star Wars. It had been pasted onto a wooden board that was screwed onto the gable end of the last house on our street. I can still recall seeing it on my way home from school and thinking "WOW!!" This would be about November of 1977 with the movie not released until December 27th.
Thursday, 11 February 2010
Retro Movie Posters: Star Wars
This was the first poster I saw for Star Wars. It had been pasted onto a wooden board that was screwed onto the gable end of the last house on our street. I can still recall seeing it on my way home from school and thinking "WOW!!" This would be about November of 1977 with the movie not released until December 27th.
Retro Sci Fi Mags: Fantastic Films
Fantastic Films #1 - April 1978
From the post Star Wars fallout circa 1978, a number of new science fiction/fantasy magazines began to appear on the shelves of your local friendly neighbourhood newsagent. Whilst mags such as Starlog and Starburst went on to have a long and healthy publishing lifespan, some only burned bright for a short period of time. One such magazine was Fantastic Films which was, in my opinion, the best of the bunch.
Published in the USA by Blake Publishing Corp, FF had it's own distinctive style with dynamic presentation and more in depth commentary/articles than it's competitors. For me, those years between 1977 and 1983 will always be the "classic" era when everything appeared new and the future one only limited by the imagination. FF captured that vitality to perfection. At first it was a bi-monthly mag but it's popularity quickly turned it into a monthly event.
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Issue #46 published in 1985 was the last one and featured Back to the Future on the cover. I still have a couple of issues packed safely away and are a great reminder of how much fun magazines were back then..
End Transmission.
Sunday, 7 February 2010
Retro UK Comics: Planet of the Apes
I loved and bought them all. But if I had to choose a favourite comic from all those I'd collected it would be the UK version of PLANET OF THE APES which was first published in October of 1974.
Sunday, 17 January 2010
Retro Sci Fi Television.
I was ten when it was first shown and it made such an impression that I have zero g hesitation in saying that UFO is absolutely unquestionably the greatest science fiction anything that I've ever seen.
Everything about the program is spot on. From the brilliant concept, the exceptional cast, the outstanding design and the bravura way those behind the production refuse to bow to the standard convention by shrouding the show with a dark and malevolent tone that leaves the viewer with a sense of unease that this world is not the centre of the universe. The purple wigs and silver mini skirts helped a bit as well..
I remember watching the series as a kid thinking it was dammed scary and totally different to anything I'd ever seen. The episode where Foster is captured and taken aboard a UFO is one which is forever burned on my psyche. The scene where the SHADO medics try to remove the alien helmet, which is filled with a thick green liquid to enable him to survive the trip to the alien homeworld, is as deeply unsettling today as it was back then.
I had all the toys. Spent many a happy hour destroying alien bases made out of lego with my gold Interceptor and the Mobile with it's flip missile launcher roof. All the other hardware was lovingly moulded plastercine. Skydiver looked particularly cool I recall..
As with most things in life, quality survives the passing of time. I remember and love many of the old sci-fi tv shows of my youth, but UFO is special. UFO is the one which will always endure. A true classic.
End transmission.