Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 6/19/23 — 6/25/23


What a strange week.

I started out hoping against hope that the Titanic submersible would be found.  Of course, by the time it was found, it was already too late.  A lot of people online took seemed to take a ghoulish joy in the tragedy, reminding me of just how awful some people can be.

(I have to be honest.  Whenever I heard about the submersible in the past, I assumed that it was built and equipped with state-of-the-art equipment and that it was being guided by grizzled but competent Navy veterans.  I didn’t realize it was basically just something that someone made in their back yard.)

I then got caught up in the Russian “coup,” which turned out to be a big nothing.  On Saturday afternoon, I tweeted this:

And, by the time I returned, it was all over!

And now, today, people are sending me pictures of RFK Jr. without his shirt on and it’s true that, for a 70 year-old, he looks about 10 years younger.  But I kind of yearn for a world where presidential candidates stay off twitter and keep their shirts on.  It’s just shaping up to be a weird year and 2024 is obviously going to be a lot stranger.

As for this week, I continued to work on my reviews for this year’s Horrorthon.  I’m getting an early start so I can enjoy October this year as opposed to spending all of my time playing catch-up.  I finished watching all of the religious films and now I’m watching movies about serial killers.  It’s a strange world.

Anyway, here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week!

Films I Watched:

  1. 2025 — The World Enslaved By A Virus (2020)
  2. A Little Game (1971)
  3. The Cross and the Switchblade (1970)
  4. Cross Purposes (2021)
  5. Day of Defense (2003)
  6. D.C. Sniper (2010)
  7. Drifter: Henry Lee Lucas (2009)
  8. Edge of Salvation (2012)
  9. End of Days: Global Catastrophe (2019)
  10. Exodus of the Prodigal Son (2020)
  11. The Exterminator (1980)
  12. Freeway Killer (2010)
  13. Happy Gilmore (1996)
  14. Hot Fuzz (2007)
  15. Plane (2023)
  16. Prayer Never Fails (2017)
  17. Step Over The Edge (1976)
  18. The Texas Railroad Killer (2022)
  19. Tiger Claws (1991)
  20. The Touch (2005)
  21. Trust (2018)
  22. The World’s End (2013)
  23. The Wristwatch (2020)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Andor
  2. Are You Being Served?
  3. Beavis and Butt-Head
  4. Bubblegum Crisis
  5. City Guys
  6. Dancing With The Stars
  7. I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson
  8. The Love Boat
  9. Making the Cut
  10. The Master
  11. Night Flight
  12. So You Think You Can Dance
  13. Welcome Back Kotter

Books I Read:

  1. Up With The Sun (2023) by Thomas Mallon

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Annie Hardy
  3. Britney Spears
  4. The Chemical Brothers
  5. Christina Aguilera
  6. Fiona Apple
  7. Haim
  8. The Hives
  9. Kid Rock
  10. Kylie Minogue
  11. Lynard Skynard
  12. Muse
  13. Phantogram
  14. Public Service Broadcasting
  15. Saint Motel
  16. Taylor Swift

Live Tweets:

  1. Tiger Claws
  2. Hot Fuzz
  3. Happy Gilmore
  4. The World’s End

Trailers:

  1. Priscilla
  2. Drive-Away Dolls

News From Last Week:

  1. Actor Fredric Forrest dies at 86
  2. Dean Smith, Olympian-turned-stutman, dies at 91
  3. Former Megadeth drummer Lee Rauch dies
  4. Guitarist John Waddington dies at 63
  5. Human remains found near where Julian Sands went missing
  6. No Hard Feelings opens soft
  7. The Flash’ Box Office ‘Disaster’ Exposes DC’s $1.1 Billion Problem for Warner Bros.
  8. All five passengers on missing Titanic submersible dead after catastrophic implosion
  9. Lost with the Titanic: Will submarine passengers’ remains ever be found?

Links From Last Week:

  1. Is This America’s Most Dangerous Hike? I Found New Video Of Our Hike To Angel’s Landing!
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 6/24/23

Links From The Site:

  1. I reviewed Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, City Guys, The Master, and Welcome Back Kotter!
  2. I reviewed A Tattered Web and Plane!
  3. I shared my week in television!
  4. I paid tribute to Billy Widler!
  5. I shared a scene from Evil Dead II!
  6. Jeff shared music videos from Andy Summers, Whitesnake, Pantera, Iron Maiden, Phil Collins, U2, and Metallica!
  7. Erin shared Walk in Darkness, The Search, The Murders of Fox Island, Road Kid, Summer Sidewalk, The Young Titan, and Super Science Stories!

More From Us:

  1. At my music site, I shared songs from Phantogram, Kylie Minogue, Christina Aguilera, The Hives, Kid Rock, Haim, and Annie Hardy!
  2. At Days Without Incident, Leonard share music from Spider-Man Across The Spider Verse and John Mayer!
  3. At her photography site, Erin shared Do Not Enter, Head in the Shadows, They’re Coming To Get You, Best Friends, Evening Tree, Get Down, and This Tree!

Want to see what I did last week?  Click here!

Retro Television Reviews: A Tattered Web (dir by Paul Wendkos)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 1971’s A Tattered Web!  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

Sgt. Ed Stagg (Lloyd Bridges) is a good cop and an overprotective father.  Ever since his wife left him, Ed has been determined to make sure that his daughter, Tina (Sallie Shockley), has a good life.  So, as you can probably guess, Ed is not amused when he finds out that Tina’s husband, Steve (Frank Converse), has been cheating on her with Louise Campbell (Anne Helm).  Ed has never liked Steve and would love it if his daughter left him.  But, Ed still doesn’t want want Tina to have to go through the pain of knowing that her husband is seeing another woman.

Ed decides to drop by Louise’s apartment and talk to her himself.  Louise, however, is not willing to let some old stranger tell her how to live her life.  After all, she’s heard from Steve about what a terrible and judgmental father-in-law Ed is.  Ed gets frustrated and shoves Louise.  Louise stumbles back, hits her head, and …. uh-oh.  Louise is dead!  To be honest, it didn’t really look like she hit her head that hard.  In fact, I had to rewatch the scene to see if she actually hit her head at all.  But no matter.  Louise is dead and Ed’s responsible.

The next morning, when Ed and his partner, Joe (Murray Hamilton), are called in to investigate Louise’s homicide, Ed is approached by Louise’s neighbor (John Fiedler), who gives him a description of a  young man who he says he frequently saw going up to Louise’s apartment.  The description perfectly describes Steve.  The police sketch artist draws a picture that looks like just like Steve.  Joe thinks that Steve is responsible.  Not wanting his daughter to think that her husband’s a murderer, Ed decides to frame Willard Edson (Broderick Crawford), an alcoholic who frequently comes into the station and confesses to crimes so that he can have a place to sleep for the night.

Yes, it’s a tattered web indeed.  Ed is able to talk Edson into confessing to the crime but then Steve does his own detective work and realizes that Edson couldn’t be the murderer.  Ed tells Steve that he should just let the police arrest Edson because, otherwise, they’re going to come after Steve.  Steve, however, says that he would rather be arrested and be given a chance to prove his innocence than just stand by idly while an innocent man goes to jail.  Being a veteran cop, Ed wasn’t expecting everyone to be so damn honest!

A Tattered Web isn’t bad for a 70-minute made-for-TV movie.  The film’s main strength is the cast, with Lloyd Bridges, Murray Hamilton, and especially Broderick Crawford giving strong performances.  The scene where Ed talks Edson into confession is especially well-done, with Crawford giving a performance of growing desperation while Bridges himself appears to be on the verge of tears as Ed realizes what his life has become.  Like his sons Jeff and Beau, Lloyd Bridges is such a likable actor that it’s hard not to care about what happens to the characters that he’s playing, even when he’s playing a murderer.  A Tattered Web is an effective thriller that reminds viewers that guilt cannot be escaped.

Music Video of the Day: 2010 by Andy Summers (1984, dir by ????)


Conceived and performed by Andy Summers, the guitarist for the Police, 2010 was a re-imagining of Also Sprach Zarathustra and was included as part of the soundtrack of the 1984 film, 2010: The Year We Make Contact.  Though the song itself did not appear in the film, a music video featuring scenes from 2010 was put together for the song and was occasionally played on MTV.

Enjoy!