Thursday, 22 May 2025
Jason King, Adam Adamant and The Champions DVD's
Thursday, 27 February 2025
ZERO DAY AND NIGHT AGENT
Thinking it was sci-fi I began watching a US series called Zero Day on Netflix.
It wasn't sci-fi but apocalyptic enough for me to carry on and finish the whole series in two nights!
Basically a cyber 9/11, the so-called Zero Day, with a massive slab of US Washington politicking thrown in.
I kinda like all that DC, POTUS, Speaker of the House, Congress and Senate shenanigans!
I never knew that past US Presidents are still referred to as Mr. President when addressing them! I also didn't know that the CIA cannot operate on US soil itself! Every day's a school day!
Not one for the Missus, despite an aging Bob di Niro starring, I was quite taken aback by the ending, which I won't spoil for you.
Zero Day did fit right into another Netflix series we both saw last week called Night Agent, or was it Action?
This one was about the FBI and the CIA and a batphone called Night Action. In fact we watched two whole series over two weeks. POTUS was the word of the show, being used virtually every five minutes. I reminds me of MOTU [Masters of the Universe!]
We both enjoyed Night Agent and look forward to Season 3 next year.
Have you seen Zero Day or Night Agent readers?
What are you watching?
Wednesday, 19 February 2025
What was your favourite TV show?
I've been thinking about this. It's not an easy question. It changes as I consider it, as my memory revs up.
One day it's Thunderbirds and those fabulous vehicles, another it's Scooby Do and those wonderful monsters and another it's Blue Peter, with something new all the time. There are many more contenders too.
Do you have this dilemma readers? What was your favourite kids TV show in your part of the world?
Thursday, 13 February 2025
BILLY BLASTOFF AND LUNAR SCOUT: WHATS ON THEIR TV'S?
Friday, 17 January 2025
LIGHT UP THE CLOWN! WATCHING MY CORGI LINCOLN CONTINENTAL TV
I adored my Corgi Lincoln Continental die-cast as a kid in the 60's.
Everything about it was just the best. The atom symbol on the rear window frames were just fantastic.
The bestest of all though was the TV screen at the back! Yes!
Mine was the clown picture - at least that's the one I remember [I must have had them all though!].
You could illuminate the lenticular picture and I would have loved to have sat in the back and watched it as a little Woodsy!
I liked my own 'clown' TV screen so much that I melded it into a radio story about ten years ago called Sarge, which was brilliantly produced and aired by Bill Everett and Dave Carrington over at Celtica Radio [were you a listener?]
Looking further into that TV screen I thought I'd change channels and see what the six pictures were in the Corgi Continental.
Despite reading they were everywhere on the net, I found finding pictures of the whole lenticular strip of six not easy to find.
Here's what I did find, courtesy of Ebay, Worthpointt, various auctions and Planet Diecast.
Here you can see the uncut strip of five mini TV screens resting on the front blister plinth, with one already in the rear of the car; the boxers.
All six were: clown, racing car, Mexican [or is it a US General?], rocket, galleon and boxers.
Here's a similar strip placed in the screen aperture [Image: Planet Diecast]. Again, the boxer is in the hole.
Here are three of the screens cut from the strip; boxers, rocket and Mexican/ US General.
Wednesday, 15 January 2025
TELLY BOX TALK
Further TV watching this last week:
X-Files: me and Missus are ploughing on with our big watch; all of the X-Files episodes, one or two a night. We started last year and broke for Christmas and New Year, resuming this week .
We skipped the infamously gruesome episode 'Home' about the Peacock 'family', as I knew the Missus would find it a hard and upsetting watch.
Carrying on, We got to Season 4 episode 5 last night - " The Field Where I died". Its about Mulder's previous life in the American Civil War, as well as modern day cult with a member who was also in Mulder's old life. The poem in the field is quite moving.
https://youtu.be/5WsqCuuV_IE?feature=shared
Civil War; I watched this modern American flick late one night on my own. And what a harrowing and wholly depressing carry-on it was too. Parts of the South verses the President's North if I understood it correctly. Kirsten Dunst's dour face said it all - could things really get this bad? It reminded me of the National Guard being mean in Earthquake [1974] but dialled up to Lethal: in the modern movie soldiers were simply killing fellow citizens at random. Could it really get this bad?
Longlegs: the name intrigued me so I thought it might be a sort of slender man horror. No. This wasn't really a horror film, more like a dark thriller in the vein of Se7en or Silence of the Lambs. A socially awkward FBI agent is tasked with finding a cold case killer called Longlegs, who has got up and started stretching his legs again, which is apparently never good for the town. SPOILER ALERT! The killer himself is really odd, a sort of flour-dusted hippy with red lips and a high-pitched voice who loves to sing instead of speak. I found it all a bit slow and boring. He didn't even have long legs!
Have you seen any of these readers? What are you watching?
Tuesday, 14 January 2025
The Airfix High Chaparral Set
Sunday, 29 December 2024
CHRISTMAS TELLY: BAH HUMBUG!
Despite purchasing a Radio Times I've yet to catch-up on Christmas spooks on the wireless, which I'll do in January when everything's calmed down.
I have though been watching TV and keeping an eye on the mainstream scheduling. I have to say its been a bit disappointing so far.
For me and possibly I'm mistaken, the yardstick for top class UK TV listings between Xmas and New Year is a screening of Jason and the Argonauts or at least one of the Harryhausen monster epics.
Nada.
Nichts.
Yes, there's been Alistair Sim's Christmas Carol, Bill Murray's Scrooged and the classic Its a Wonderful Life to jingle our nostalgic bells .... but C'mon!
The high point for the Grandson was the new Aardman Wallace and Gromet movie shown on Christmas Day. Alas, I was close to the soft glow of the Christmas tree on a corner sofa and fell asleep!
I still love 'normal' telly here in Blighty - the Beeb, ITV and the like - but I cant help thinking the glory days of Christmas are over for them.
The glut of cheapo Freeview channels churning out the same stuff they do every day, endless re-runs of Man V. Food, Wives with Knives etc etc - no change for Christmas! - doesn't lift the festive doldrums on the small screen either.
The exceptions are of course those UK freeview channels - Rewind, TalkingPicturesTV - that cater for aging boomer babies like us showing the delights of the Sixties and Seventies like Thriller, Space Patrol, Department S, Stingray and more.
Maybe all of this is academic in the days of streaming, Smart TV's, Sky, Netflix, Prime, Disney+, You Tube and millions of online videos. It must be a worry for 'normal TV' bosses.
Young people probably don't even watch the Beeb, ITV or any of those old dinosaurs. Not just the young either, a not-so-young friend of ours only watches You Tube videos for her entertainment. Nothing else. My 80 year old Sister is transfixed by TikTok, so what do I know!
I wonder what will be left of terrestrial telly in ten years when I'm 74?
What did you watch this holiday readers in your neck of the world? Is online TV taking over? Was Christmas represented on your telly schedules?
Sunday, 22 December 2024
CHRISTMAS TELLY
I've just been browsing the TV listings for Christmas here in the UK. A few of my own personal highlights of what's on are:
- Mighty Joe Young [1949]: the black and white original - I adored the lion cage scene as a kid!
- Inside No.9; Sardines - a re-run of episode 1, which I don't think I've seen
- Clash of the Titans [2010]: I'd prefer the original - but Greek mythology is always good.
- The Haunting - one of the scariest old flicks ever relying almost entirely on sound effects for its shocks.
- Wallace and Gromet Murder Most Fowl - the new one from the Lancastrian superstars
- The Woman of Stone: BBC Ghost Story for Christmas - Mark Gatiss at it again; can't wait!
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind; Speilberg's masterpiece and the he Grandon's favourite!
- Kong; Skull Island; one of the modern King Kongers
- A Christmas Carol [Alistair Sim] - the black and white ghost story that is as much Christmas as Santa himself.
Saturday, 21 December 2024
THE OWL SERVICE
I don't remember Alan Garner's TV series The Owl Service but you may,
Episode 1 shown December 21st 1969.
Wednesday, 18 December 2024
ROOBARB and CUSTARD: ITS CHRISTMAS!
R
emember these guys?
Friday, 22 November 2024
Sixties Sci Fi on TV. Really?
Sunday, 10 November 2024
STUFF I'VE WATCHED
Watched a few things of late. Have you seen any of them?
Impulse: a 1984 eco-shocker about chemical waste entering the water system of a small American town and .... sending the townsfolk barmy and homicidal. A decent attempt at a toxic quarantine along the lines of the Crazies and Andromeda Strain.
Rings of Power: I'm enjoying Prime's super-expensive retelling of Tolkien's early tales and seeing characters like Tom Bombadil brought to life. Just waiting for the next episode now in Season 2.
Werewolf by Night in Colour: I first saw this Marvel mini-film on Disney+ a coupla years ago in monochrome. This time they've added full colour. I really like this Marvel short because it lets one of its less-well known but fabulous characters, the marvellous Man-Thing get an airing. Please give us more Man-Thing Marvel!
The Crazies: the modern remake of the old Romero movie [which I've yet to see] starring Timothy Olyphant. He plays a great sheriff role in a small American town about chemical waste sending the townsfolk barmy and homicidal. Its a lot gorier than Impulse but taps into the same vein of state-run mass experiments on citizens.
Sting: an alien spider film. The first ten minutes were so tedious it was sacked off till a later date.
X-Files The Movie: the first and best of two film spin-offs from the famous and fantastic TV series that kept us glued to the telly in the 1990's. The film's got it all; Mulder, Scully, Cancer Man, the Four Horsemen, aliens, viruses, shadowy figures of power in a global conspiracy and lots of bees. Martin Landau makes a brilliant appearance as Dr. Kurtzweil. Yep, I love the X-Files.
Saturday, 9 November 2024
Your Favorite TV Shows and Movies Go Mini with Basic Fun's Tiny TVs - The Toy Insider
Thursday, 26 September 2024
PENNY DREADFUL: GOTHIC SUPER-TEAM-UP
Along with my older brother, I recently re-watched episodes 1 and 2 of Penny Dreadful, a TV horror series from 2014.
Rated 18, its quite gory, hence the age limit.
Its the story and in particular the characters that have me intrigued. Its like a Universal Studio monster reunion!
There's Mina, a werewolf, vampires, Frankenstein and his monster and a baronial fellow rather like Van Helsing. There's a sharpshooter too.
Set in foggy 19th Century London, the monster action takes place whilst Jack the Ripper is about and a demonical quest is afoot with Eva Green's sensational Mina and one-time James Bond Timothy Dalton's superb aristocrat at the helm. Josh Hartnet is the gunslinger and Billy Piper the tavern moll. Dorian Gray adds further weirdness.
The séance scene alone was astonishing.
This literary mashup reminds me greatly of the 2003 adventure movie The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
Described as a steampunk rendition of a well-known comic series, League was largely panned at the time I for one enjoyed it, largely because it brought together a ragtag of monsters and famous characters. Alan Quartermain, played by James Bond himself, Sean Connery, Tom Sawyer - a Secret Service agent, Captain Nemo, Dr, Jekyll, Dorian Gray and Mina.
These last two characters above all connect this flick to Penny Dreadful. Both are in the public domain as may well be other characters in both.
Many of the characters have literary lives elsewhere. Tom Sawyer featured as a detective in one of Twain's novels in 1897 and Alan Quartermain is the leading man in both King Solomons Mines, 1887, and The Lost City of Gold among others by H. Rider Haggard.
Its worth noting that the Granddaddy of Horror itself, Dracula by Bram Stoker [1897] contained a sort of super league and perhaps the very first one. Besides Count Dracula, theres Jonathan Harker the solicitor, Mina Murray his fiancée, Jack Seward the doctor, Quincey Morris the Texan gunslinger, Arthur Holmwood or Lord Godalming and of course, Professor Abraham Van Helsing, the Dutch vampire-hunter.
Here's the male cast from the 1992 Bram Stoker's Dracula.
With all this extraordinariness in mind, I'm looking forward to the rest of Season 1 of Penny Dreadful.
Have you seen it readers?
Thursday, 19 September 2024
WHAT'S ON TELLY?
A few things have passed across the Moonbase screens this week. Mostly Marvel films, namely the Fantastic Four movies. I like the Fantastics a lot but I still think there's room for a gritty remake like DC did with Batman films.
I wonder if the Fantastic 4 ever crossed over with the Avengers? I'd love to see a Thing Hulk stand-off! [just realised that the 2027 Secret Wars movie will bring some FF and Avengers together!]
Dr. Doom is an interesting character and reminds me of when I used to collect Secret Wars action figures, snapping them up loose wherever I found them. Very occasionally I got one of those flicker shields they came with too.
Alas, I've sold all my Secret Wars ages ago, but I sill like those smooth figure lines.
Here's one I saw online on Ebay.
Monday, 16 September 2024
Did you Fall Asleep During Night sleeper?
Me and the Missus are watching the Beeb's new train drama, Night sleeper. It's a hack-jacking, a new word on me.
It reminded me of other train dramas, always a difficult job to pull off for any TV or film maker I bet.
There's Speed of course, the runaway train starring Tom Cruise Control. Or is it Keanu Neo Reeves? I forget. It went too fast.
Then there are things I've not seen like the zombie ride Train to Busan and the sci-fier Snowpiercer.
My favourite train-based efforts are all horror flicks: Death Line, set in the London Tube; Creep,not dissimilar to Death Line and my number one, Horror Express, with Kojak himself, Telly Savalas. A great film about a regenerating monster aboard a trans-Siberian express.
An honorable mention has to go to Quatermass and the Pit too, set as it is on the London Underground.
And so to Night Sleeper. Episode 1 wasn't great to be honest. It seemed as if adults were talking and behaving like teenagers. It felt juvenile, clunky and probably worst of all for a disaster film, tensionless. Did you see it?
What's your favourite - or worst - train related TV or movie readers?
Saturday, 14 September 2024
The Secret Saturdays Anyone?
Sunday, 8 September 2024
ANDY PANDY PONDER
This Andy Pandy saucer came my way a few weeks back when I took Moonbase Junior to a local car boot sale. He was looking for Pokemon cards. I got Andy.
Andy Pandy was part of my early childhood, as he was I'm sure part of many MB readers'.
The saucer's cute picture shows Andy, Louby Lou and an unnamed teddy. I don't recall the teddy. Was the ted a regular?
Andy's show is a bit murky in my memory now. I'm pretty sure it was part of the black and white TV programme Watch with Mother. But what else was in the programme? Was Andy it?
For some reason I get Bill and Ben skipping into my Pandy memories too. Did Andy and the Flowerpot Men team up? Louby Lou and Weed?
I could Google all this but I'll ask you, the real experts! You were there too!
Saturday, 7 September 2024
THOSE SPECIAL THINGS IN THE THUNDERBIRDS OPENING
I was watching a modern Thunderbirds Are Go episode with my Grandson Junior and Granddaughter Miss the other day and they were both excited and laughing about something that would happen in the opening.
Turns out it was the flying back of the sunloungers round the pool as TB1 ascends! They were howling when it happened.
Here are those sliding sunloungers so you can see for yourselves! It is quite funny!
It reminded me completely of how I always waited with baited breath for something similar when I was a kid watching the original Thunderbirds opening and looking out for a particular .... flame!
Its the single final lick of flame at the end that more or less erupts from the letter A in Supermarionation. Once I'd seen it I could relax into the programme proper!
Did you have any special moments in Thunderbirds or indeed any other TV show readers?
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PROJECT SWORD SPACEX TIMELINE
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