This is frighteningly accurate!
Animated by Simon Tofield of Tandem films.
This is frighteningly accurate!
Animated by Simon Tofield of Tandem films.
“A non-horror supernatural comedy-drama (parts of which suggest Back to the Future 3 in setting and tone, though without that film’s budget, dynamism or general panache), The Meeksville Ghost tells a story of past misdeeds, present-day villainy, and the outworkings of a spectral curse.”
Full review here.
The theme of World Fantasy Con this year was Ghosts and Revenants, so maybe it was appropriate that on the night following the last day of WFC, I found myself in the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Broadway in NYC, listening to the revitalised 1980s pop-rock band Duran Duran as Simon Le Bon and the boys premiered their soon-to-be-released new album, Red Carpet Massacre (see tasteful cover below), and then gave us a generous serving of Old Stuff (with a burst of Germanic techno-rock inbetween).
This is the story: we are due to fly straight to London after WFC, but Cat notices that Duran Duran are in NYC for a series of concerts. After consultation we change our flight to allow us an extra day or two so that she can see her fav band perform. I’m no Duran Duran fan, only really knowing their work via hits such as “Girls on Film” and “Hungry Like the Wolf” — and listening to the albums echo through the house when Cat plays them at bath time. But Cat is a big fan and has never seen them live. So I have no objection to going; a rock concert on Broadway sounds fine. Alisa Krasnostein, who is travelling with us, knows even less about the Durans (I’m not sure she was even born when they started out), but says “Why not? Might be fun.”
So we pay the rather large amount for the tickets and in due course enter the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Broadway with the excited crowd. The Barrymore is a beautiful, lush, old-style theatre — relatively small and intimate — but the stage has been re-configured with equipment, rock-style lighting arrays and screens that can be raised and moved about. The fans look like they’re attending a Broadway musical rather that a rock concert, which is sort of nice. But the crowd isn’t just made up of 30/40-something ex-girl-screamers; there’s plenty of blokes, too, and an age-range that doesn’t get too long-in-the-tooth (I’m probably the upper limit) or down to the teenyboppers, but it does have a wider range than I expected. Nevertheless, there’s a definite air of aging 1980s fandom.
So it begins.
The first set is the new album played in full. It’s hard to judge how good it is as an album without further listenings, but I reckon the boys played well and the songs are Duran Duran-ish, one or two offering definite hit possibility, but with a few less pop-oriented ones that I find both lyrically and musically more interesting. Simon no longer sports the svelte figure of his youth and can’t do the “moves” as well as he used to, but his voice is fine. They don’t embarrass themselves, I reckon — apart from those updated faux-80s uniforms (see pic above) and Simon’s initiating comment “We’re grown up now” … followed by songs sporting the usual pop-inane lyrics (though, as I say, there are exceptions). I’ve seen a few old rock outfits performing of late — The Manfreds (sans Manfred Mann), Yes, Queensryche, The Who; of these, Pete Townsend was the best at being in his 50s yet still leaping around as energetically as ever. The rest were more sedate to start with, but in the 2000s they didn’t feel compelled to try and recreate their once youthful demeanour. But their musicianship was as good or better than ever. The Durans, on the other hand, look a little like they’re trying too hard, though the effect is entertaining enough, even for a non-fan like me. Of course, Alisa tells a different story. Despite the noise and excited crowd, she falls asleep! Afterwards she reckons they were cheesy and boring. This is one extreme. The other is that it was an awesome concert. The truth lies somewhere between — and in the eye of the beholder, I guess. Here is Cat’s take. As I say, I’m not a fan, but I thought it was a good concert. Not faultless, but professional and, at its best, full of energy.
Whether right or wrong my impression is that the first set — the new album — had been thoroughly planned and organised by some clueless if enthusiastic marketing/PR dude functioning under the delusion that it’s a good idea for new albums by old rockers to be presented in so glitzy a fashion that the fans’ critical facilities will be blindsided. Each song was choreographed, with different lighting effects, images flashing on different arrangements of screens, big and small, and slightly pretentious patter from Simon. It’s not really necessary. The band members play well, and all the scripting seems merely to restrain them. This was followed by a very odd Kraftwerk-inspired rendition of a couple of their songs — rather tongue-in-cheek, it seems to me. Or not. Whatever. It’s when they get into their old stuff that the Durans suddenly come fully alive — focused and in-the-moment. The crowd ramps up a 100%, too, with audience reaction at a peak. And why not? The Durans must be totally familiar with these songs and can relax into the music itself. They do an intelligent mix of pop hits such as “Planet Earth” and “Girls on Film” and other less well-known, more “serious” songs from later in their career. Cat is ecstatic as these latter are the ones she loves best, even if they are not typical fan favourites. During this final set I look out over the crowd and, apart from one or two indifferent hubbies (and Alisa), everyone is into it, clapping, singing along, unselfconsciously doing a somewhat more mature impersonation of the “screaming fan” than they did 20 years ago.
Meanwhile Cat’s excitement goes on. Tomorrow the album comes out in Australia. I have, of course, put the deluxe CD/DVD edition on pre-order for her.
It was a pun waiting to happen!
Despite its spoofy — and rather clumsy — double-barrel title (which evokes Snakes on a Plane as well as the more relevant influence, Night of the Living Dead), Flight of the Living Dead: Outbreak on a Plane is a suspenseful, gore-splattered rollercoaster ride of a zombie film that takes itself just seriously enough to avoid destroying the effectiveness of its horror elements.
Full review here.
Charles Band has a lot to answer for!
Desperate to fill every gap on the video rental shelves, Full Moon exploitation filmmaker Charles Band clearly decided that he hadn’t done the kaiju genre yet and really should get his act together to do so. So he set up Monster Island Productions and executive produced two rubber-suit monster spectaculars: Zarkorr! The Invader (1996) and Kraa! The Sea Monster. Screenwriter Benjamin Carr was responsible for the scripts of both of them, so maybe we should blame him — because cheapness is no great hindrance to being entertaining and even a modicum of intelligent storyline can make all the difference.
Full review here.
It’s 1967 and South Korea leaps in at the shallow end of the daikaiju pool! The Host is a long way off!
South Korea’s response to the success of the Japanese kaiju eiga craze, at a time when Daiei’s Gamera series was overseeing a juvenilisation of the subgenre, Yongary doesn’t have much going for it.
Full review here.
Review of the 1961 British mad scientist/giant ape fusion, Konga:
This bizarre mix of mad scientist movie and giant ape/King-Kongesque epic starts well enough, full of colourful ’60s clothes, bright photography, stylised English dialogue, rather attractive carnivorous plants and a juicy performance by Michael Gough as a mad scientist.
Full review here.
Brief review of The Gravedancers — one of the 8 Films To Die For featured in the 2006 After Dark Horrorfest and now on DVD:
The initial narrative premise gives this low-budget haunting tale a big boost and luckily the skill of director Mendez, excellent cinematography, decent actors, an effective script and ambitious SFX all come together to create a film full of carefully paced atmosphere creation, shocks and intelligently integrated action set-pieces.
Full review here.
Here are some pictures of the Backbrain with various luminaries at the 2007 World Fantasy Convention (and afterwards). The pictures were (mostly) taken by Cat Sparks, of course.
The Aussie Panel — which was on the topic “Ghosts and Revenants Down Under: Is There an Australian Aesthetic?” — featured (from left) Robert Hood, Deb Biancotti, Jack Dann, Kaaron Warren and Garth Nix.
With Peter Straub in the bar…
Moments after Cat took the previous pic with Peter Straub, Kim Newman innocently wandered by so I grabbed him and made him have his picture taken. Before I could talk to him much, however, a crowd of other vultures descended and whisked him away.
With Jay Lake. I talked to Jay in various places over the weekend, but this pic was taken at the “Aussie authors and friends” reception that took place at the Australian Consulate in NYC before the Con began.
With Aussie publisher Alisa Krasnostein and US fantasy author David Coe. I first got to know David when he and his family were living a few suburbs north of us on the sunny Illawarra coast in Australia. It was great to be able to catch up with him again, on his home soil this time.
Discussing giant monsters with Nick Kaufman at the Orbit party.
Stephen Jones. OK, so I’m not in this one. But it was the first time I’d met Stephen. I was sitting with Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois during the mass signing, my name card dutifully unrecognised in front of me, when Stephen came up and introduced himself. He had published one of my stories once (“Nasty Little Habits” in Dark Voices 3, 1991) and remembered. A nice surprise.
With Kaaron Warren (whose excellent new collection The Glass Woman first made its appearance at the con), Alisa and Cat Sparks, editor and writer extraordinaire.
We next pinned Kim Newman down at the Award Banquet. Again, however, his attention was soon taken by others. It wasn’t until we serendipitously stumbled upon him buying DVDs in the Virgin Megastore in Times Square that we got to talk… brought together by a mutual obsession.
Me and New York: a shot taken from not-quite-at-the-top of the Empire State Building. It confirmed one thing: NYC is VERY BIG.
After WFC, in London now, we had lunch with Pat Cadigan and her husband Chris. After that, our encounters became a lot more familial. Then we flew home.