A self modulating video synthesizer is demonstrated here.  Lots of pretty, shifting color patterns and an interesting audio soundtrack accompaniment follow.  Maybe best to absorb in small doses?  Noodling can be an intense experience at the time of creation but later playback always begs editing.  Deciding what to cut and what to leave in can be an agonizing experience!
Martin Scorsese’s epic crime movie of The Mob setting up shop in Las Vegas and the rise and fall of a few of the characters involved.  It is hard to believe that this thing is almost three hours long.  Violence, greed, colorful dialogue and equally colorful characters inhabit this desert landscape.  Episodic in nature, the exploits of all the bad guys and their battles for power and control are nicely interwoven and interesting.  Great performances by Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, and Sharon Stone.  This is one of my favorite Scorsese films.
A child is discovered wandering aimlessly in a desert in the Southwestern United States. Trying to locate her parents, a police investigation starts to uncover a series of abandoned and destroyed homesteads in the area. The evidence is confounding but scientists are brought onboard and their discoveries are unsettling. Could it be that an area located near nuclear testing could be harboring mutations created by the bomb blast radiation? Of course it could! This movie was one of many made at the time that posited that giant ants, grasshoppers, humans could be the horrific result of our dabbling with nuclear [More]
Andy Warhol was famously known as a leading practitioner of the Pop Art movement in the 60’s and as a constant admirer and pursuer of Celebrity/celebrities through the course of his life up until his death. Warhol was also interested in all kinds of art, namely, sculpture, painting, filmmaking and music. All of these art forms were utilized by Warhol in an idea he had for a mixed media freakout event. Films would be projected onto walls, dancers and Warhol film actors and pulsating, colored lights and strobes would illuminate a performance space that was sonically assaulted by the cacophonic [More]
Edited NASA CLIPPY 071613 movie Unidentified space junk floating by the space shuttle, the Russian space station Mir, Skylab, Apollo spacecraft and transiting the Moon’s surface.  Who’s to say what these films truly reveal?  Judging by the abundance of activity displayed, space is one crowded place.
I always liked this song by Black Sabbath but being performed here by the essentially the same band with a new moniker, “Heaven and Hell” to avoid infringement with Ozzy over the BS name.  Tony Iommi’s finger picked guitar alternates with a sledge hammer guitar riff.  Very sinewy, melodic bass work by Geezer Butler, too.  And, of course, Iron Lungs Ronnie James Dio, in a performance shortly before his death.  Epic.
“An American Werewolf in London” gets my vote for the best realized hybrid of the horror and comedy movie genres.  But, to be sure, the emphasis is clearly on the horror of the entire situation.  Two young Americans are on a backpacking trek across the lonely expanses of Britain when they encounter the completely unexpected.  Both are savagely attacked by a giant wolf creature.  One is killed but the other unlucky soul lives to experience the nightmare of werewolf transformation.  Humor in the style of “Animal House” and “The Blues Brothers” but what would you expect from the director of all three [More]
We sadly mark the passing of exploitation giant, Roger Corman: a tireless, budget minded producer/director who was creatively involved in some very memorable science fiction, horror, western and action genre pictures. Many of these movies have become classics and provide a blueprint of how to manufacture films quickly and cheaply without sacrificing all quality. I will reference “A Bucket of Blood” (1959) as being one such example of a low budgeted, though engaging story of a homicidal “artist” who finally runs out of luck. A very engaging movie. It was in the 1960’s that Corman turned his attention to adapting [More]
Pretty harrowing moviefare as a man and his son wander a wasteland attempting to survive a post apocalyptic North American landscape.  The cause of the cataclysm is never fully divulged.  We do know that most plant and animal life has been wiped out and resources such as food and water are in short supply.  Based on Cormac McCarthy’s book of the same name.
This may be my favorite episode of Kolchak – The Night Stalker TV series.  Kolchak ends up on an ocean cruise to do a fluff piece on the singles scene.  It ends up being anything but a pleasure cruise for the intrepid reporter.  A series of brutal attacks on the paying customers ensue and Kolchak theorizes that a werewolf may be responsible.  It turns out one of the guests is harboring a dreadful secret that has a nasty habit of getting completely out of control when the full moon rises.  This is a very suspenseful show full of dark shadows, memorable acting [More]
It is with a heavy heart that I comment on the passing of our very dear friend, Leonard Nimoy.  Nimoy proved to be a man of many talents.  Among his accomplishments were successful turns as actor, director, writer, singer, and photographer.  We all best remember him for his iconic portrayal of the Vulcan First Officer aboard the starship Enterprise, Mr. Spock.  The “Star Trek” role endeared him to fans and established his place as one of the most beloved fictional characters in the history of, well, the world!  Nimoy’s work as psychologist Dr. David Kibner in “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” is to me [More]
Very sweet documentary covering people who shape sound in any manner or way they see fit.  Call these noise practitioners, the new Punks.  Some of those shown performing describe what they do as a new form of punk rock, a DIY mindset of artist creation, made with whatever musical instrument, effect pedal, electronic device or mechanical apparatus is at hand. Whatever label you put on these sounds, the end result is a collection of unique individuals who are producing, performing, and espousing noise.  It is all very liberating and refreshing.  Granted the documentary is seven years old by this date [More]
It is the week of the Fourth of July.  Why not round out the week by enjoying some glorious, cinematic firepower brought to you by “Predator” (1987).  This is a favorite scene of mine from this alien on the loose science fiction classic.  Nice gun play and explosions at the expense of the jungle.  The rainforest was never the same after this.
Right on the heals of the Covid pandemic in the United States, we have mobs running riot in the streets. What happened to Social Distancing? How fitting then is this song?