Saturday, 5 July 2025
Terranova's 4th July Wheels
Thursday, 24 March 2022
Days of Disaster
Bill Pullman was the president in Independence Day. Me and the Missus are enjoying seeing him again in a TV series called the Sinner, in which he plays a retired detective visiting a remote American island.
I liked his role in Independence Day. The straight presidential arrow at the heart of the crisis. The film caught a moment at the time. A bit like Deep Impact. Impending doom? I'm unsure now what that moment was. I enjoyed the film and always associate it with Deep Impact, Twister and Dante's Peak.
Armageddon is another disaster flick from that era but I prefer ID4 and Deep Impact for some reason.
Do you like those films readers? Did you get any toys or collectables?
Monday, 19 October 2020
ID4 ON THE TELLY
I caught Independence Day on the box again the other night. You know the one: squidgy aliens invade Earth in vast ships that hover over Capitals.
I've seen ID4, as it became affectionately known, so many times that I know the dialogue almost off by heart! "No peace", "I belong in the air", "kick the tyres and light the fires Big Daddy". It's one of those 90's flicks that is full of memorable quotes and like its late-Nineties stablemates Deep Impact, Twister, Lake Placid and Armageddon, it caught the prevailing zeitgeist as the Millennium loomed large, promising carnage and disaster for us all.
Besides the A-listers starring in ID4 like Will Smith - who can forget him seeing the New York spaceship for the first time - and that go-to boffin Jeff Goldblum - a role he mastered earlier as Seth Brundle in the Fly and Ian Malcom in Jurassic Park - there were other less well-known actors who, for me at least, who brought the film alive.
First up was Harry Connick Jnr.
Connick was the young Frank Sinatra of the Nineties, belting out the big ones before Michael Buble started crooning us away. Not your typical actor, his unusual toothy looks were perfect for the incarcerated killer Daryll Lee Cullum, who was obsessed with Sigourney Weaver [who wouldn't be] in Copycat and in ID4 he played the Captain "Reverend" Jimmy Wilder, calming the fighter pilots with his in-flight sermons. Its an eccentric character and I wanted to see more of it. I was sad when he got blown away by a nasty bugface. I have never seen Harry in anything else since ID4, so for me he will always be the Reverend.
The second is Brent Spiner who played the geeky scientist Dr. Brackish Okun. Not an A-list genius like Jeff Goldblum's code-busting nerd guru, Dr. Okun nevertheless had the privelege of performing the gooey alien autopsy at Area 51 and "communicating" with the creature via his tentacled vocal chords.
When I first heard Okun's voice I immediately though of a cartoon character from my childhood, the Hooded Claw. I can't for the life of me recall the cartoon but Okun had the same voice, although he's far too young to have been the Claw. Further confusion came in ID4 for me as Okun looks like the crop-dusting tippler who saves humanity at the end of the film played by Randy Quaid, brother of Dennis.
And yet the real revelation came to me watching the film again last week. I stared at Dr. Okun and thought, I've seen those strange facial looks somewhere else. And bam! it came to me. Dr. Okun is Data from Star Trek the Next Gen! Blimey! Yes!
So yes, ID4 has a warm place in my heart, a tentacled place where giant ships are poised over skyscrapers ready to unleash a city-scorching pulse of blue hell.
Do you like Independence Day readers?
Wednesday, 24 July 2019
INDEPENDENCE DAY RESURGENCE
Twenty years on in both real and film time everything is bigger and brasher yet its lost something in its time away.
The bearded President, the mad scientist, lanky Jeff Goldblum and his worried Dad try their best to recreate the '96 mojo but it doesn't work, even with the constant quotes from the first flick.
There can be no peace.
The new spaceship dogfights seem to be straight out of Star Wars and the Death Star battles.
There's so much going on all the time that nothing sticks. No-one shines and the massive ships descend without anyone standing wide-eyed in the front garden this time round.
I still enjoyed this sequel with its Harvester Queen and table tennis ball enemy but the original was a real watershed moment in the 90's. This isn't.
Am I being too harsh readers?
Saturday, 11 March 2017
id4 supreme alien commander toy tv ad 1996
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CHECKLISTS BY BRAND (FOR COUNTRY BY COUNTRY SEE TOP OF BLOG)
PROJECT SWORD SPACEX TIMELINE
- 1968 SPACEX LT10 CONCEPT
- 1966 SPACE GLIDER REAL THING
- 1969 LUNAR CLIMBER & MOONSHIP
- 1968 PROJECT SWORD ANNUAL
- 1968 TV21 #168 PROJECT SWORD PHASE 2
- 1968 PLEASURE CRUISER CONCEPT
- 1968 CENTURY 21 TOY MANUAL
- 1967 SCOUT 1 CONCEPT
- 1967 NUCLEAR FERRY TOY AD
- 1967 SWORD TOY AD
- 1967 SWORD TOY AD
- 1966 SPACE GLIDER CONCEPT
- 1966 HOVERTANK IN COMIC
- 1966 NUKE PULSE NEEDLEPROBE IN COMIC
- 1966 ZERO X FILM DEBUT
- 1966 MOONBUS IN COMIC
- 1966 SPACE PATROL 1
- 1966 P3 HELICOPTER IN COMIC
- 1966 SAND FLEA AND SNOW TRAIN
- 1966 MOBILE LAUNCH PAD IN COMIC
- 1965 SPACEX MOONBASE CONCEPT
- 1965 APOLLO FIRST UK TOY AD
- 1962 NOVA CONCEPT
- 1962 MOONBUS CONCEPT
- 1961 MOON PROSPECTOR CONCEPT
- 1953 MOLAB CONCEPT