The movie Robinson Crusoe on Mars will be released in September by The Criterion Collection. If you’re not sure how much interest you have in it, and would like to see a preview, here’s a thumbnail-sized view.
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Movies/Wordpress/RCOM/rcom1.flv 400 175]
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Movies/Wordpress/RCOM/RCOM2.flv 400 175]
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Movies/Wordpress/RCOM/RCOM3.flv 400 175]
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/MAR07/RCOM4.flv 400 175]
Category: Sci-Fi
Eric Reviews Transformers: The Movie
It’s been four long, impatient months since the spectacle of Ghost Rider, but at last there’s finally a movie that can match it. Transformers: The Movie! Here’s Eric’s review.
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Eric’s Anime Pick — Kurau
Kurau Phantom Memory is about a girl with extraordinary powers who’s a secret agent; but not for the government, which is out to get her. At least that’s what’s happening in the story as far as we’ve seen it. Kurau has a kid sister named Christmas to protect, who is actually a younger version of herself. Where this is heading, I don’t know!
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/JUN07/Kurau.flv 400 300]
The video has the “clean” (captionless) versions of the opening and closing to Kurau, along with a clip from episode 6.
Popeye’s Alien Abduction
There was a major Sci-Fi craze during the 1950’s, helped along by the UFO sightings that began after WW2. Another 50’s fad, a brief one, was 3-D movies. The 1953 cartoon “Popeye, The Ace of Space” was released in 3-D. Keep that in mind while watching the video.
This cartoon contains a couple scenes of “alien experimentation” that upset me greatly as a child, despite Popeye escaping unharmed (thanks to spinach, of course). Scanning through some of the later Popeye cartoons released by Paramount, it seems that someone at the Famous studio had a real sadistic streak that crossed the line from cartoon mayhem into something darker and more disturbing.
Him Johnny, Her Maureen
This 1934 New Yorker cartoon appeared shortly before the release of the movie Tarzan And His Mate, the second in the series with Johnny Weissmuller and Mia Farrow’s mother, Maureen O’Sullivan.
William Crawford Galbraith, The New Yorker, 3/3/1934

Tarzan And His Mate caused quite a stir, and it contributed to the Hays Office enforcing the Production Code that it had written in 1930. What, exactly, was objectionable? For starters, although Jane taught Tarzan to call her his wife, they weren’t actually married. The video player has eight minutes of the movie that I’ve spliced together.
[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/APR07/TarzanMate.flv 400 300]
The nude swim had been censored from prints of this movie for nearly 60 years. Weissmuller was an undefeated Olympic gold medal swimmer, so he did his own swimming for this scene. The woman with him underwater was another Olympic swimmer, Josephine McKim.
Yet another Olympic swimmer, Buster Crabbe, played Tarzan in a 1933 serial, between Weissmuller’s first and second Tarzan movies. I don’t know why swimmers, rather than gymnasts, were favored to play the Ape Man.
Synthetic Sir George


I’ve been trying to find a copy of a 1962 single of partially electronic music, Time Beat b/w Waltz in Time, by Ray Cathode. I’ve placed bids, and lost, for the single on eBay, but fortunately I found these MP3’s on WFMU’s Beware of the Blog. [Link] Here are the tracks.
Ray Cathode – Beat Time
[audio:http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/DG/time_beat.mp3]
Ray Cathode – Waltz in Orbit
[audio:http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/DG/waltz_in_orbit.mp3]
Ray Cathode was a pseudonym for a collaboration between BBC technician-producer Maddalena Fagandini and George Martin, who would sign the Beatles to Parlophone Records just a couple of months later. The recording was made for the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, which was set up to create atmospheric music and effects for radio and TV. The 1963 production by Delia Derbyshire of Ron Grainer’s theme for Doctor Who is undoubtedly the workshop’s most familiar work.
[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/APR07/DoctorWho.mp3]