Monday, August 26, 2024

Musical Monday with the Spotnicks

The Spotnick

 

The trailblazing Swedish guitar band the Spotnicks didn't rock, they rocketed! Here they are in 1962!


Monday, August 19, 2024

The Liberation of Paris

 Eighty years ago today, the German troops occupying the French capital of Paris surrendered and it was the Allies' turn to march down the boulevard toward the Arc de Triomphe.

Katie Boren photographed by Dane Shitagi

 

Sunday, August 18, 2024

BEACHED by Peter van Straaten

 

BEACHED by Peter van Straaten
(Translated into English by Steve Miller)

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Monday, August 12, 2024

Musical Monday with Danny Brown

Danny Brown in "Lost" (2016)

"Nightmarish" might be overused when it comes to describing art and films, but I can't think of a better work to describe the video for Danny Brown's "Lost". I can't understand more than every third or fourth word of the lyrics that Briton Brown is rapping, but the video tells the story of a drug-dealer who... well, anything else I say will ruin the experience so why don't you just click below and sit back?


Lost (2016)
Starring: Danny Brown and Leteshia Wilson
Director: Matilda Finn
Rating: Seven of Ten Stars

Thursday, August 1, 2024

Welcome to August!

 August here, and we welcome it with another old ad that is similar to what I would commision if I have trying to sell booze to old-school D&D/fantasy gamers!

By Arpad Schmidhammer


Go One Step Beyond for International Clown Week!

International Clown Week (August 1 - 8) kicks off today. We're going to observe this annual recognition of clowns with a few clown-related posts. Up first, we have a review of "The Clown", one of the spookier episodes of television series "One Step Beyond". (And if you don't feel like reading, you can skip to the bottom of the post and watch the episode by clicking on the embedded video.)


The Clown (1960)
Starring: Mickey Shaunessy, Christopher Dark, and Yvette Mimieux
Director:  John Newland
Rating: Eight of Ten Stars

A murderer (Dark) thinks he is being stalked by the vengeful clown (Shaunessy) who witnessed the crime.

One Step Beyond: The Clown

"The Clown" is one of the most intense episodes of the classic television series. With just a couple minor changes, it would even feel like something you might see on network television or some streaming service today.

The characters featured, and the actors portraying them, are what makes this episode so great. They.are ones that you love to hate, or which you just love. There's a possessive, abusive, cradle-robbing husband (played in a perfectly vile fashion by Christopher Dark) who moreso than most villains I wanted to see get what was coming to him; there's his young wife (played with believable innocence and self-unawareness by the underappreciated actress Yvette Mimieux in her second major role) who is old enough to recognize that she's beautiful but not mature enough to not delight in every bit of attention she can get; and Pippo the Clown (Mickey Shaunessy, in a performance that's gentle and completely sympathetic) who ends up paying dearly for his attempt to make the young woman happy. But not as dearly as she does...

When this episode was produced in 1960, the rules for what could and couldn't be shown on television were far more stringent than they are now. Because of restrictions on showing blood and violence, the murder that puts the story on track toward its climax is a little less horrific than it could have been, and even a little confusing. And that is the only thing that keeps this episode from getting a Nine of Ten Stars.

But don't just take my word for it. Click below... and take One Step Beyond!



For your information:
"One Step Beyond" was a television series that was hosted and primarily directed by John Newland. It was similar to "The Twilight Zone" in content, but generally more lowkey and supposedly featured stories inspired by real-world paranormal experiences. Original episodes aired on ABC from 1959 - 1961, which were then later widely syndicated during the next two decades.