Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 9/4/23 — 9/10/23


Jeff and I have been up at Lake Texoma since Labor Day.  The weather has been warm but nice.  The lake is beautiful.  This upcoming week, we’re supposed to be getting storms, which will provide just the right atmosphere for watching and writing up review for the horror films that we’ll be featuring during the annual October horrorthon!

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week:

Films I Watched:

  1. American Ninja 4 (1991)
  2. The Astronaut (1972)
  3. At Close Range (1986)
  4. The Bird With The Crystal Plumage (1970)
  5. Double Nickels (1977)
  6. My Dad’s On Death Row (2016)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Big Brother 25
  2. Dr. Phil
  3. Fantasy Island
  4. The Love Boat
  5. Night Flight
  6. South Central
  7. Steve Wilkos Show
  8. T and T
  9. Welcome Back Kotter
  10. Yes, Prime Minister

Books I Read:

  1. The Housemaid’s Secret (2023) by Freida McFadden

Music To Which I Have Listened:

  1. Big Data
  2. Bjork
  3. Britney Spears
  4. The Chemical Brothers
  5. Coldplay
  6. Dillon Francis
  7. Dire Straits
  8. DJ Snake
  9. Jennifer Lopez
  10. Kid Rock
  11. Lynard Skynard
  12. Muse
  13. Saint Motel
  14. Selena Gomez
  15. Skrillex
  16. Smash Mouth
  17. Tomoyasu Hotei

Trailers:

  1. 6 Trailers For Labor Day
  2. Godzilla Minus One
  3. Dangerous Waters
  4. Creepy Crawly
  5. Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget
  6. The Exorcist: Believer 
  7. No One Will Save You
  8. The Bikeriders
  9. Pain Hustlers
  10. In The Land of Saints and Sinners
  11. Thanksgiving
  12. The Burial
  13. One Life
  14. Nyad

Live Tweets:

  1. Double Nickels
  2. At Close Range
  3. American Ninja 4
  4. The Bird With The Crystal Plumage

News From Last Week:

  1. Smash Mouth’s Steve Harwell Dies At 56
  2. Danny Masterson sentenced to 30 years to life for two rapes
  3. Danny Masterson’s ex-stepdad accuses siblings of lying about upbringing to help rapist ‘That ’70s Show’ star
  4. Ashton Kutcher, Mila Kunis address ‘pain’ caused by Danny Masterson letters: ‘We support victims’
  5. Leah Remini speaks out against Church of Scientology after Danny Masterson rape sentencing: ‘I am relieved’
  6. ‘Poor Things’ Takes Top Prize at Venice Film Festival

Links From Last Week:

  1. Have You Heard Of The Secret Village Of Guarene Italy? A Castle Stay And Barbaresco Too!
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 9/8/23
  3. Happy Caturday! (9.9.2023)

Links From The Site:

  1. I reviewed The Astronaut, Backtrack, The Old Way, Enemies Among Us, 88, Office Space, Creed II, Creed III, The Toxic Avenger, Back To The Drive-In, Big George Foreman, Hired!, The Chemical Brothers At Glastonbury, and Abducted By My Teacher!
  2. I reviewed Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, South Central, T and T, and Welcome Back, Kotter!
  3. I shared my week in television!
  4. I shared an AMV of the Day!
  5. I shared scenes from The Day The Earth Stood Still, Happy Gilmore, Deep Red, Aguirre The Wrath of God, and The Caine Mutiny!
  6. I paid tribute to Fred Olen Ray, Elia Kazan, Werner Herzog,  and Edward Dmytryk!
  7. Jeff shared music videos from The Cars, Aerosmith, Green Jelly, The Pretenders, Slaughter, Smash Mouth, and Van Halen!
  8. Erin shared Ace Sports, Adventure, Exciting Love, Picture News, Inside Detective, Whisper, and Amazing Stories!
  9. Erin shared the covers of Gold Key’s Star Trek, Future Science Fiction, and Labor Day Pulp Covers!
  10. Erin offered up a Rangers update!
  11. Leonard shared the trailer for Thanksgiving!

More From Us:

  1. At her photography site, Erin shared Salute, The Corner, Lights In The Night, Be Prepared To Stop, Somebody Was Enjoying The Sunny Weather, Campus, and Road Work Ahead!
  2. At my music site, I shared songs from Skrillex, The Chemical BrothersJennifer Lopez, Selena Gomez, Bjork, Smash Mouth, and Dire Straits!
  3. At Reality TV Chat Blog, I wrote about Big Brother!

Want to check out last week?  Click here!

Retro Television Review: The Astronaut (dir by Robert Michael Lewis)


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 1972’s The Astronaut!  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

NASA has successfully landed a man on Mars!  The entire world watches as Col. Brice Randolph (Monte Markham) makes his way across the Martian surface.  However, suddenly, the signal goes out.  Viewers are assured that this is the sort of thing that happens all the time with interstellar travel.  What they don’t know is that the signal went down because Brice suddenly died.  While the surviving members of the mission return to Earth, NASA tries to figure out how to keep anyone from finding out what happened to Brice.  NASA director Kurt Anderson (Jackie Cooper) knows that the President wants to cut the budget and the death of an astronaut would probably provide the perfect excuse for taking money away from NASA and canceling the Mars program.

Anderson’s solution is to recruit a substitute.  Eddie Reese (Monte Markham) has a slight resemblance to Brice, one that can be perfected through plastic surgery.  While the mission returns from Mars, Eddie goes through a crash course to teach him how to talk, walk, and think like Col. Brice Randolph.  Eddie is told that he’ll have to be Brice until the NASA scientists can figure out what led to Brice’s death.  Once they do know what went wrong with the mission, Eddie will have to go into NASA’s version of the witness protection.

Eddie proves to be a quick learner and it helps that he, like so many others, looked up to Brice.  However, while Eddie can fool almost everyone else, he cannot fool Brice’s wife, Gail (Susan Clark).  When Eddie actually treats Gail with kindness and shows sympathy for her nervous condition, she realizes that there’s no way that Eddie is actually her husband.  Apparently, Brice was not quite the saintly figure that the public believed him to be.  Eddie and Gail soon fall in love for real but when NASA finally discovers what led to Brice’s death, it looks like their new life together might be over as abruptly as it begun.

The Astronaut is a low-key conspiracy …. well, I hesitate to call it a thriller.  There’s little of the things that one typically associated with a conspiracy thriller.  There’s no black helicopters.  There’s no shadowy assassins.  There’s no army of men walking around in black suits.  Instead, there’s just a bunch of nervous bureaucrats who are desperate to keep the rest of the world from discovering just how much they screwed up.  As played by Jackie Cooper, the head of NASA isn’t so much evil as he’s just way too devoted-to-his-job for his own good.  In many ways, this is probably one of the most realistic conspiracies ever portrayed on film.

In the end, The Astronaut is a portrait of two lonely people who find love in the strangest of circumstances.  Susan Clark and Monte Markham make for a likable couple and the viewer really does hope that things will work out for them.  What this film lack in conspiracy thrills, it makes up for in human drama.  It appealed to both my romantic and my rabid anti-government sides.  What more could one ask?

Scenes That I Love: The Alien Arrives in Robert Wise’s The Day The Earth Stood Still


On this date, 109 years ago, filmmaker Robert Wise was born in Winchester, Indiana.  He started his career as an editor (and was Oscar-nominated for his work on Citizen Kane) and then eventually branched out into directing.  From the mid-forties to the year 2000, Wise directed every genre of film.  He won two Oscars for Best Director, one for West Side Story and one for The Sound of Music.  He was also the first director to helm a Stark Trek film with 1979’s Stark Trek — The Motion Picture.

Today’s scene that I love comes from Wise’s 1951 masterpiece, The Day The Earth Stood Still.  In this scene, America watched as a UFO darts across the sky and eventually lands in Washington D.C.  Though it’s a simple scene, it deftly captures the wonder of the moment.

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Fred Olen Ray Edition


4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More 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 the one and only Fred Olen Ray!  It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 Fred Olen Ray Films

Alien Dead (1980, dir by Fred Olen Ray, DP: Fred Olen Ray)

Scalps (1983, dir by Fred Olen Ray, DP: Larry Van Loon and Cynthia Webster)

Cyclone (1987, dir by Fred Olen Ray, DP: Paul Elliott)

Alienator (1990, dir by Fred Olen Ray, DP: Gary Graver)

Music Video of the Day: Good Times Roll by The Cars (1978, directed by ????)


How many soundtracks has this classic song appeared on?  Probably not enough.  This video of a 1978 performance is as close to an “official” video as this song every got.  If the song had been released just a few years later, it probably would have had a video that would have become an MTV mainstay.

Enjoy!