Alright, let’s talk about Light My Fire. You’ve probably heard it a million times on the radio, but trust me, you’ve been missing the point. The short version you hear is just a tease, a little taste. If you want to understand what The Doors are really about, you have to dive into the full album version. It’s a seven-minute trip, and the journey it takes you on is all about the instrumental break in the middle. It’s not just a pop song; it’s a full-blown experience that defined an era, blending psychedelic rock with a dark, bluesy undertow that still sounds fresh today. And here’s the kicker—the guy who wrote and composed this entire masterpiece, Robby Krieger, was only 18 years old when he came up with it. Eighteen. Let that sink in.
Now, the engine of this whole thing is Krieger’s guitar. It’s easy to get hypnotized by Ray Manzarek’s carnival-like organ solo that comes first—it’s a wild ride on its own—but when that ends, Krieger steps in and things get seriously real. This is where the song truly catches fire. His style is so unique; he wasn’t just playing rock and roll riffs. He was pulling from flamenco and jazz, bending notes and creating a sound that was both aggressive and almost conversational. He’s not just showing off; he’s telling a story with his guitar, and it’s absolutely hypnotic. Remember, this is a teenager crafting this—not some seasoned pro in his thirties. It’s mind-blowing.
You really need to pay close attention to when the guitar solo kicks in at 3:18. This isn’t a quick, tidy solo you’d hear on a standard pop track. It goes for over two minutes, and it builds and builds into this incredible peak. It’s crazy to think that at a time when most pop songs were winding down, The Doors were just getting started, stretching the boundaries of what a “hit song” could even be. It’s a serious statement from a band that wasn’t afraid to be different, and it’s why the radio edit is often seen as a crime against music. That an 18-year-old kid had the vision and the guts to push for something this ambitious just makes it even more legendary.
So, do yourself a favor. The next time you’re in the mood for something that’s more than just background noise, put on the full version of Light My Fire. Crank up the volume, close your eyes, and wait for that 3:18 mark. Let that searing guitar solo wash over you, and think about the fact that a teenager was behind it all. It’s raw, it’s poetic, and it’s the kind of pure, unfiltered musical magic that you just don’t hear anymore. Honestly, once you experience it in its full glory, you’ll never want to hear the short version again.
Light My Fire
You know that it would be untrue You know that I would be a liar If I was to say to you Girl, we couldn’t get much higher
Come on baby light my fire Come on baby light my fire Try to set the night on, fire
The time to hesitate is through No time to wallow in the mire Try now we can only lose And our love become a funeral pyre
Come on baby light my fire Come on baby light my fire Try to set the night on, fire yeah
[guitar solo @3:18]
The time to hesitate is through No time to wallow in the mire Try now we can only lose And our love become a funeral pyre
Come on baby light my fire Come on baby light my fire Try to set the night on, fire yeah
You know that it would be untrue You know that I would be a liar If I was to say to you Girl, we couldn’t get much higher
Come on baby light my fire Come on baby light my fire Try to set the night on fire Try to set the night on fire Try to set the night on fire Try to set the night on fire
Hi, everyone! Tonight, on Mastodon, I will be hosting the #TubiThursday watch party! Join us for 1990’s Troll 2!
You can find the movie on Tubi or Prime and you can join us on Mastodon at 9 pm central time! (That’s 10 pm for you folks on the East Coast.) We will be using #TubiThursday hashtag! See you then!
4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
Today, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy birthday to director Steve Miner. It’s time for….
4 Shots from 4 Steve Miner Films
Friday the 13th Part II (1981, dir by Steve Miner)
Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Wednesdays, I will be reviewing 1st and Ten, which aired in syndication from 1984 to 1991. The entire series is streaming on Tubi.
This week, Joe Hears meets his fate.
Episode 4.5 “….The Clock Runs Out”
(Dir by Stan Lathan, originally aired on November 2nd, 1988)
Poor Joe Hearns!
Last episode, Joe went from being a skid row windshield cleaner to being a defense coordinator to being a linebacker on the team. This episode …. well, he dies.
Seriously.
It’s not a particularly noble death either. After a rookie player (played by Kevin Sorbo, of all people) is seriously injured in a prank involving a bull, Hearns decides to go back to the farm and challenge the bull himself. The show ends with the bull charging at Hearns and since Harold Sylvester (the actor who played Hearn) is not listed as having appeared in any episode of 1st & Ten beyond this one, I can only assume that the bull won.
Seriously, what was the point of that whole storyline? Bubba, Jethro, and TD all thought that Joe Hearns would be able to redeem himself on the Bulls. Hearns turned out to be suffering from massive PTSD, the result of having crippled an opposing player the last time he played. This episode, Joe has a near breakdown when one of the team’s new executives reprimands Joe for parking in his spot. And then Joe dies. I guess the lesson here is that he would have been better off if Bubba and Jethro had just left him in that parking lot.
Watching this show, I get the feeling that the writers really didn’t have much direction in the writing room. It’s amazing how often a potentially interesting character like Joe Hearn will be introduced and then dropped an episode later. There have been so many storylines that have been started and abandoned in a similar fashion. This very season started with the Bulls players buying the team and then, three episodes later, they decided that they didn’t want to be team owners after all.
The one thing that remains consistent? The bland affability of OJ Simpson. OJ may not have been a particularly good actor but he certainly was personable. That undoubtedly paid off for him later in life.
Unfortunately, Joe Hearns was not personable. And now, he’s dead.
Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Wednesdays, I will be reviewing the original Love Boat, which aired on ABC from 1977 to 1986! The series can be streamed on Paramount Plus!
Come aboard, we’re expecting you. And love …. won’t hurt anymore…. Actually, that’s not quite true. There’s some real pain in this week’s episode. Then again, there’s also Don Adams and Rich Little. It’s all a bit strange, to be honest.
Episode 7.24 “A Rose is Not a Rose/Novelties/Too Rich and Too Thin”
(Dir by Neil Cox, originally aired on March 17th, 1984)
Hey, Don Adams is on The Love Boat …. again! This time, he’s playing a novelties salesman who is in love with Audrey Meadows. Meadows, however, assumes that Adams is only pursuing her because he wants to place his gag gifts in her store. Adams doesn’t help his case by constantly bringing up his novelties. This was a silly story. It wasn’t bad but it wasn’t particularly memorable. It was pleasant in the way that watching an old sitcom with a grandparent can be pleasant.
Both Doc and the Captain have fallen for Jamie Sloane (Jamie Lynn Bauer), an actress who is up for a big commercial. Jamie worries about her weight. She pops diet pills like crazy. She doesn’t eat at dinner. Yes, that’s right — The Love Boat deals with anorexia! And there’s nothing wrong with that except for the tonal whiplash that comes from having a relatively serious story about a potentially fatal condition playing out next to Don Adams trying to sell novelty gifts and Rich Little pretending to be a woman.
Yep, impressionist Rich Little boards the cruise. He’s playing Barry Corwin, the best friend of singer Rose York. Rose has been hired to sing on the boat but she’s fallen ill. So, Barry boards the boat disguised as Rose …. no, come back. Come back. This is really dumb but at least let me finish the review. Of course, passenger Radford Harcourt (Arte Johnson) falls for Rose. In fact, no one figures out that Rose is actually Barry, even though Rose has a noticeable five o’clock shadow and is wearing a pretty obvious wig. Meanwhile, Barry falls for Julie.
And again, it’s not that this is really a bad story. It’s pretty much a standard silly Love Boat story. But there’s just a massive tonal whiplash here as the episode goes back and forth from Don Adams and Rich Little to a woman dying to be thin. As such, this episode really doesn’t work.
But I know what you really want to know.
How coked up was Julie?
Obviously, very coked up. I mean, she didn’t even notice that the cruise’s entertainer was just Rich Little in a wig. Somehow, I can’t help but think this could have been avoided if Ace had been on this cruise but this the second week in a row that the ship has sailed without its photographer on board.
Let’s be real for a second: Swordfish is not a good movie. It’s not even a particularly competent one. The plot is a Rube Goldberg machine of logical fallacies, the dialogue sounds like it was written by a teenager who just discovered Ayn Rand and energy drinks, and the central “hacking” sequences are so technologically absurd they’d make a Best Buy geek squad member spit out their Mountain Dew. And yet, here we are, nearly a quarter-century later, still talking about this 2001 techno-thriller with a weird mix of scorn and affection. That’s the magic of Swordfish—it is the cinematic equivalent of a sugar rush, a headache-inducing, neon-lit, logic-defying blast of early-2000s excess that somehow earned a cult following precisely because of its flaws, not in spite of them. This is the movie where John Travolta wears a soul patch, quotes Thomas Jefferson, and chews scenery like it’s his last meal on death row, all while Halle Berry casually drops the most gratuitous topless scene in mainstream cinema history and Hugh Jackman pretends to crack Pentagon firewalls with a laptop from a moving van. It’s trash, sure, but it’s gloriously, unapologetically, big-budget trash, and that’s exactly why we can’t look away.
The premise, if you can call it that, is pure pulp madness. We are introduced to Gabriel Shear, played by Travolta with a level of hammy zeal that borders on performance art, a suave super-villain who leads a shadowy, off-the-books FBI black-ops cell that apparently operates with zero oversight and unlimited resources. Or is he a rogue agent? Or a master criminal? The film never quite decides, and honestly, it doesn’t care. What matters is that Gabriel has a plan to steal nine billion dollars from a government slush fund to finance his global war on terrorism—because, you know, post-9/11 vibes were still cooking in the editing bay when this came out, and the script was clearly written during a very caffeinated weekend. To pull off this digital heist, he needs the world’s best hacker, a man who can crack any firewall with a few furious keystrokes and a 3D visual interface that looks like a rave at MIT. Enter Stanley Jobson, played by Hugh Jackman, who was fresh off X-Men and clearly just happy to be there. Stanley is a former prodigy who got busted for writing a virus, lost his daughter to his vindictive ex-wife, and now spends his days in a rusted-out RV, presumably regretting his life choices. Gabriel offers him a deal: help with the hack, get ten million dollars, and win back his kid. It’s the kind of high-stakes, low-emotion motivation that drives every action movie protagonist, but Jackman sells it with a weary charm that makes you root for him despite the sheer idiocy of his situation.
Now, let’s talk about the elephant in the room—actually, let’s talk about Halle Berry. Her character, Ginger, is Gabriel’s sleek, deadly associate, and she exists in the film to look stunning, deliver cryptic warnings, and, most famously, get paid a then-record $500,000 to appear topless for a scene that has absolutely zero bearing on the plot. The moment is iconic for all the wrong reasons: it’s gratuitous, it’s abrupt, and it’s pure, uncut early-2000s exploitation filmmaking. Berry later admitted she only did it because the studio offered her a huge pay bump, and honestly, that transactional honesty makes the scene even more legendary. It’s not art; it’s a contractual obligation, and yet it became the film’s most enduring watermark. Every time Swordfish comes up in conversation, you can bet your bottom dollar someone will mention “that Halle Berry scene” before they mention the plot, the action, or even John Travolta’s terrifyingly sleek haircut. That’s the level of cinematic legacy we’re dealing with here—a film remembered more for a single shot than for its entire narrative structure. And because Ginger is just Gabriel’s operative, not a spurned lover or a damsel in distress for Stanley, the scene feels even more disconnected—it’s pure spectacle for spectacle’s sake, which in a movie this unhinged, feels oddly honest.
Speaking of unhinged, let’s properly set the record straight on that opening scene, because it’s arguably the film’s single smartest moment—and the biggest bait-and-switch. The movie kicks off not with an explosion, but with a tense, quiet café confrontation where Gabriel has already gotten the drop on Stanley and FBI agent J.T. Roberts, played by Don Cheadle with his trademark weary exasperation. Instead of a generic threat, Gabriel calmly orders a drink and launches into a rambling, passionate dissertation on Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon, using Al Pacino’s desperate bank robber Sonny Wortzik as his case study. He points out how that film manipulated audiences into sympathizing with a criminal, how the so-called “good guys” were portrayed as incompetent or antagonistic, and how the entire construct of heroes and villains is just a narrative shell game. It’s a genuinely clever piece of meta-commentary that immediately signals this movie’s winking, self-aware ambition—Gabriel is essentially telling Stanley, Roberts, and the audience that we’re all about to be played, that our allegiances will be toyed with, and that morality in this universe is strictly situational. Travolta delivers it with such gleeful, unhinged conviction, sipping his coffee while holding two men at gunpoint, that you almost forget you’re watching a movie that will immediately abandon that intellectual nuance for car chases and slow-motion explosions. The famous bus detonation actually comes later, during the opening credits sequence, serving as pure stylistic overkill that sets the bombastic tone for everything that follows. That café scene is the film’s thesis statement—too bad the rest of the movie is a B-minus student trying to write an A-plus paper.
The actual heist sequence involves Stanley hacking into a government mainframe using a wireless laptop from a moving van, while Gabriel’s team engages in a firefight with SWAT teams that feels like a Call of Duty cutscene. The climax features a helicopter dangling a massive chain through a skyscraper’s glass windows, which is visually stunning and physically impossible, but who cares? The movie moves at such a breakneck pace that you don’t have time to ask questions—you’re too busy watching Travolta fire two handguns while smirking like he just told the world’s greatest dad joke. The dialogue is another highlight in this carnival of cheese. Travolta delivers lines like “It’s not about the money; it’s about the message” with the gravitas of a Shakespearean actor, while Jackman counters with whiny retorts that sound like they were workshopped in a writers’ room full of Red Bull. Cheadle spends most of the film looking like he desperately wants to transfer to a different movie, and honestly, he’s the audience surrogate—the one guy who realizes how bonkers everything is but is powerless to stop it. The plot twists are telegraphed from a mile away, and the final reveal that Gabriel might have been a covert government asset all along is so half-baked it feels like an afterthought. Yet, none of this matters. Swordfish is not a film you dissect; it’s a film you surrender to. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a rollercoaster that’s slightly off its rails—terrifying, thrilling, and you’re not entirely sure you’ll survive, but you’re grinning the whole way down.
Why has Swordfish become a cult hit? Simple: it’s the perfect guilty pleasure. It came out in that sweet spot of the summer movie season where studios threw insane budgets at anything with a cool title and a poster with shiny fonts. It’s a time capsule of post-millennial anxiety, when we were terrified of hackers and fascinated by sleek, amoral anti-heroes. The film’s ludicrous premise—secret FBI shadow cells running black-bag ops funded by digital theft—plays like a fever dream of libertarian fan fiction, but it’s sold with such straight-faced conviction that you can’t help but admire its chutzpah. Travolta’s performance alone is worth the price of admission; he’s clearly having the time of his life, twirling his metaphorical mustache and delivering philosophical diatribes between sips of espresso and bursts of gunfire. He elevates the material from forgettable schlock to memorable camp, and that’s a rare skill. Meanwhile, Berry’s Ginger isn’t given much to work with beyond cool stares and that one shocking moment, but she owns every second of screen time, making you wish the script had actually bothered to make her a three-dimensional character instead of a human prop. And Cheadle, bless him, plays Agent Roberts with such grounded frustration that he becomes the audience’s anchor in a sea of absurdity.
Moreover, Swordfish understands the first rule of summer blockbusters: never let logic get in the way of a good time. The hacking scenes are laughable—Stanley types at lightning speed, bypassing encryption in seconds while 3D grids spin around him like a screensaver from 1998. The action is over-the-top, the explosions are massive, and the body count is ridiculous. But it’s all in service of that visceral, popcorn-munching rush that defines the genre. You don’t watch Swordfish for a coherent narrative; you watch it for the sheer audacity of its existence. It’s a movie that dares to ask, “What if we paid Halle Berry half a million dollars to take her top off, put John Travolta in a bad wig, let Hugh Jackman pretend he understands PHP, made Don Cheadle play the straight man to all this chaos, and opened the whole thing with a pretentious café debate about Dog Day Afternoon?” And the answer, gloriously, is a cult classic that we’ll be arguing about for decades. It’s dumb, it’s dated, and it’s utterly irresistible. Even its theatrical one-sheet—with Travolta, Berry, Jackman and Cheadle sitting—looks less like a movie poster and more like the cover art for an alt-rock band about to drop its angsty sophomore album. So fire up your DVD player, crank the volume, and let the entropy wash over you—because Swordfish is, and always will be, the definitive summer guilty pleasure.
“Sometimes, in order to see the light, you have to risk the dark.” — Dr. Iris Hineman
There’s a particular pleasure in revisiting Minority Report now, decades removed from its 2002 release, because it’s aged in the strangest possible way: it hasn’t dated so much as it’s caught up to us. Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s short story plays like a glossy, big-budget action thriller on the surface, all sleek gestural interfaces and Tom Cruise sprinting across rooftops, but underneath that polish is a film that’s quietly become one of the most unnervingly accurate predictions of how surveillance, data, and policing would actually evolve in the real world.
The premise is simple enough to fit on a poster. In a near-future Washington D.C., a special police unit called PreCrime uses three psychic “precogs” to see murders before they happen, allowing cops to arrest people for crimes they haven’t committed yet. John Anderton, played by Cruise with a kind of haunted, grief-soaked intensity, is the unit’s star detective, a true believer in the system who lost his son years earlier and has thrown himself into the work as a substitute for healing. Then the precogs name him as a future murderer, and the rest of the film is Anderton on the run, trying to prove his innocence inside a system explicitly designed to make innocence irrelevant. It’s a clever structural trick because it forces the audience to watch the hero discover, in real time, all the holes in a system he’s spent his career defending.
What makes the film work as more than just a stylish chase movie is how seriously Spielberg and his screenwriters, Scott Frank and Jon Cohen, take the philosophical rot at the center of the premise. PreCrime isn’t framed as a dystopian villain organization; it’s framed as something genuinely good and genuinely popular, a program that’s driven murder rates to near zero and that ordinary citizens are grateful for. That’s the unsettling part. The film isn’t asking you to be afraid of an obviously evil system. It’s asking you to be afraid of aSteve Harris system that works, that delivers real safety, and that nonetheless requires you to accept punishment without due process, fate without appeal, guilt assigned before the act. Cruise’s Anderton spends the film discovering that the machinery he trusted contains exactly the kind of ambiguity and abuse it was built to eliminate, and the film never lets you forget that the most dangerous systems are the ones that feel necessary.
Visually, this is one of Spielberg’s most distinct collaborations with cinematographer Janusz Kamiński, who bleached the color out of nearly every frame to give the film a cold, overexposed, almost silvery look. It’s a future that feels lived-in and grubby rather than chrome and gleaming, which was a deliberate choice; Spielberg and his production designers consulted with actual futurists and technologists to imagine a 2054 that felt plausible rather than fantastical. That’s part of why the gestural data interfaces Anderton uses, swiping and conducting evidence in midair like an orchestra conductor, became such a cultural touchstone; they didn’t feel like science fiction gadgetry so much as a believable next step from where computing was already heading.
And that brings us to the part of the film’s legacy that’s only grown more pointed with time. Minority Report arrived in June 2002, less than a year after September 11th, and it’s impossible to separate the film’s anxieties from that specific American moment. This was the period when the Patriot Act had just been signed, when warrantless surveillance and preventive detention were being normalized in the name of safety, when the entire architecture of American security policy pivoted toward stopping threats before they materialized rather than responding after the fact. Minority Report dramatizes that exact logic and then methodically exposes its flaws, showing a security state so committed to preventing harm that it’s willing to imprison the innocent, manipulate evidence, and treat dissent as a structural malfunction.
It’s worth situating the film alongside the other two movies Spielberg made in the years immediately following 9/11, because together they form a loose, unofficial triptych about post-9/11 American fear. War of the Worlds, his 2005 alien invasion film, restaged the trauma of a sudden, incomprehensible attack on home soil, with Tom Cruise again playing an ordinary man trying to shepherd his children through a landscape of falling ash, mass panic, and faceless threats descending from above, imagery that’s hard not to read as a direct echo of lower Manhattan that morning. Munich, released the same year, dug into the moral wreckage of a state’s decision to respond to terrorism with a covert campaign of targeted assassination, asking hard questions about whether vengeance dressed up as justice actually makes anyone safer or just perpetuates the cycle. Minority Report is the third leg of that stool, the one concerned not with the attack itself or the retaliation but with the surveillance and preemption apparatus built in the name of preventing the next one. Together, the three films trace a kind of emotional arc through American anxiety in that period: the shock of the unknown threat, the morally compromised vengeance that follows, and the paranoid, technologically enabled security state erected to make sure it never happens again. None of the three films name 9/11 directly, but all three are unmistakably shaped by it, by a culture suddenly suspicious of the outsider, willing to trade liberty for the promise of safety, and uncertain whether the institutions built to protect them could be trusted.
What’s remarkable is how much more relevant the surveillance angle feels today than it did in 2002. Predictive policing software is real now, with departments across the country having actually used algorithms to flag individuals or neighborhoods as high risk for future crime, often with the same built-in biases and feedback loops the film gestures at. Data brokers and advertising networks track movement and behavior with a granularity that makes the film’s retina-scanning ad billboards look almost quaint by comparison. The conversation about predictive algorithms making consequential decisions about people’s freedom, hiring, credit, and policing based on probabilistic models of future behavior is now a mainstream policy debate rather than science fiction. Watching the film now, the gap between its imagined 2054 and our actual 2026 feels uncomfortably narrow, less a futuristic warning than a documentary about tendencies we’re already deep inside of.
That’s what makes Minority Report so achingly prophetic, not just in its prediction of our tech, but in its prediction of our mindset. We live in a world now where predictive policing algorithms are actually being used, where social credit scores are a reality in some places, and where the debate over privacy versus security is a constant, exhausting hum in the background. We’re not at the level of precogs, but we don’t need to be. We have big data, machine learning, and a populace that’s been slowly conditioned to accept that if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear. The film is a warning shot across the bow of that complacency. It asks us to consider the cost of a crime-free society, and it suggests that the price might be our very souls. Spielberg, ever the optimist even in his darkest films, ultimately comes down on the side of human fallibility. He prefers a world with crime and free will to a world of perfect, totalitarian peace. And watching it today, in an age of deepfakes, biometric tracking, and algorithm-driven justice, that preference feels less like a luxury and more like an urgent, desperate necessity. It’s a hell of a ride, with more twists than a pretzel factory and a car chase that still holds up, but the real thrill of Minority Report isn’t the action—it’s the haunting feeling that we’re not watching a dystopian future anymore. We’re watching the news.