Buys
After finishing Book 3 of Foundation (see below), I know I'm gonna want to get to the end, so I got the three later books I was missing (Earth, Prelude and Forward). I've also gotten TwoMorrows' American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1990s, completing my collection of those volumes (at least, until they put out another).
"Accomplishments"
At home: According to Jiu Jitsu, a Predator-like alien came to Earth ages ago and taught our ancestors jiu jitsu (#NotJiuJitsu) so we could give him a fun fight every 6 years. Set in Myanmar and making full use of Tony Jaa's stunt team, it could have been fun. Unfortunately, director Dimitri Logothetis doesn't really know how to shoot the action. Only Tony Jaa himself holds my attention and he's maybe fifth on the call sheet. His fights are more spectacular, last longer without cuts, and that's where Logothetis allows himself more creativity (like the bit where the camera is a fighter's point of view. Otherwise, not all the hits actually hit, and it feels rather limp as a result. The actual protagonist is Alain Moussi, and he can't act his way out of a paper bag. Nick Cage enlivens things up as a mentor figure who's kind of lost it, but he's not a convincing fighter. The story gets points for the sci-fi remix of the well-worn fighting movie genre, and for Jaa's action, but I know what a good martial arts flick looks like and this isn't it.
In Spellbound, Ingrid Bergman gets to play a psychoanalyst who thaws out when she meets Gregory Peck, a man suffering from amnesia and accused of a crime he doesn't remember, but feels sure he committed. What follows is part whirlwind romance, part detective thriller as she desperately tries to cure him and solve a wholly psychological mystery. The dream imagery inspired by Dali's paintings - and announced in the opening credits - is an interesting component, and Hitchcock gives himself license to get a little surreal at time. Amazing final shot too. I like it. Between those flights of fancy and the unusual detective story, there's plenty to keep one's attention, but there's also some suspense because we don't know what happened and what Peck's character might do next. And then there's Bergman, who sells both the romance and the fierce intelligence of her character. There's some chauvinism on show in this 1940s world which CAN pinch, but I'm not complaining too much because it seems realistic and doesn't stop Bergman from forging ahead.
50 Years of SF/1974: Though essentially best known for Sean Connery running around in a red diaper, I'll give full marks to Zardoz for its ambition, a dystopian SF film by way Jodorowsky and in the vein of 70s musicals (Tommy only comes out the next year), but this is no Holy Mountain. It LOOKS interesting, and it's obviously ABOUT something, but it's at once too opaque and personal to director John Boorman, and not enigmatic enough. On the face of it, it's Campbellian - a primitive man (Connery) discovers knowledge and kills his god, sending him spinning to "civilization". That civilization of hedonistic and effete Eternals (the satire of communes has passed its expiration date, but I think we can relate with the general feeling) is stagnating because it has lost touch with their primal selves... or something. It's just not quite clear what the film is trying to say exactly and who it is attacking. If the Wellsian Eloi, then why make the "Brutal" hero a mass murderer and rapist? And if the film is generally misanthropic, well, ouch, you hurt my innate humanism. Ultimately, while Zardoz is intriguing, it feels like a symbolism for symbolism's sake and never really comes together for me.
Actual best from that year: Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla
1975: In terms of premise, it's the science-fiction equivalent of Rosemary's Baby. In The Stepford Wives, a woman is also moving to a new place where the people are strange, and her controlling husband soon follows suit. Filled with an anxiety about losing oneself in a marriage and becoming an accessory to a successful husband, Joanna (Katharine Ross) makes a good feminist hero, bristling at the vapid subservience of the suburban wives around her, and trying to figure out the mystery of their "conversions". This is one of those movies that has since become iconic ("Stepford Wife" has passed into the English idiom), so the mystery's solution is well known. To the film's credit, it doesn't matter. There is such great care taken with with themes involved that there's plenty of interest along the way. Knowing what we do, an early scene with a teddy bear takes on great relevance, for example, and the set dressing is always thoughtful too. One of the great paranoid sf thrillers of the '70s.
Also from that year: The Rocky Horror Picture Show, Death Race 2000, Rollerball
1976: Westworld is such an enduring 1970s SF icon, everyone tends to dismiss and ignore its sequel, Futureworld. Nevertheless, it's got a pretty strong cast, with Peter Fonda and Blythe Danner playing dueling journalists invited to tour the new, refurbished, hopefully non-lethal theme park. Danner is especially fun to watch. While the "ooh! aah!" discovering ____World is out of the first film, it really has its own story to tell. Westworld was a disaster movie that turned slasher. This one is a detective story and a paranoid thriller actually more Stepford Wives than what the original offered. That said, it's got problems keeping its rating to merely watchable. First, it oversells Yul Yul Brynner's participation - that he shot any new scenes at all is total fan service and surplus to requirements. Second, it kind of ends on an extended shoot-out starring Fonda, which I find boring and interminable. Danner has her own action climax and it's shorter, cooler, and better shot (pun not intended). But for what it is, a sequel that uses the same world without retreading every little plot point, it was pretty watchable.
Actual best from that year: Logan's Run
1977: Anyone who knows me knows I can't stand the conspiracy theory about the faked moon landing. Set 5 minutes into the future, the astronaut thriller Capricorn One doesn't believe that either, but it arranges a set of circumstances where it might be politically convenient to stage a MARS landing. Now if only the astronauts, led by James Brolin looking his most Gil Gerardest, would cooperate. I know there are no roads in space, but I kept wanting this movie to PICK A LANE. It's a procedural that becomes an action thriller. At times (surely the best of times), it's about a journalist following a conspiracy (Elliott Gould being very bantery with various characters); other times, it's a survival picture where the astronauts try to evade the Men in Black and cross the desert (opportunities to create close parallels to the Martian landscape, but they don't do anything with it). There are some impressive but quite occasional stunts, but the film is rather turgid and slow otherwise. Plot holes abound. And I'm sorry, but what they seem to suggest with the abrupt ending is complete nonsense. (Or maybe it's supposed to be about a feeling, and okay, but there's no indication elsewhere that the movie is at all expressionistic.) It's watchable, don't get me wrong, but such a mess.
Actual best from that year: Star Wars, Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Comments
But that's just me.