Bad 70's tv: Space 1999 with Martin Landau and Barbara Bain

atepointer

Old Salt
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Minuteman
  • Nov 20, 2018
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    I'm not a big tv watcher other than sports, but I'll admit I have watched my fair share of tube recently. I stumbled on to a marathon of Space 1999 a show I thoroughly enjoyed back in the day. How did I not know how bad it was? I mean the plots, the special effects AND the acting were so bad. Whats worse is I watched probably 3 episodes b/f calling it quits.

    I'd still like to take a young Barbara Bain into the MedBay and give her an exam though...
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    Watching it right now...

    Thanks to YouTube, most of these old classics are available to view now. This one is available with every episode up there.

    Actually, not bad for it's time. It has a 1956 Forbidden Planet kind of vibe.

    Ep.1:



    ETA: Compare how big were our dreams back in those days as opposed to now. What's on TV today? Tiger King...
    smiley_freak.gif


    ETA II: Check out the YouTube comments if anyone has time... It's got A LOT of fans who appreciate it, many of them millenials and Gen Z who are lamenting at our current sorry state of affairs where some guy's "right" to cut off his own dick turns into a national fucking debate.
     
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    Don't EVEN mention Space 1999 in the same breath as Forbidden Planet. Forbidden Planet that spawned so many concepts that turned up in later sci/fi.
     
    Don't EVEN mention Space 1999 in the same breath as Forbidden Planet. Forbidden Planet that spawned so many concepts that turned up in later sci/fi.


    There used to be the full version of Forbidden Planet uploaded to YT around 2012 or so, and the uploader purposefully left out the year of it's release in the vid description just to troll the millenials... Guess what? A lot of the commenters thought it was made in the 1990s, until other commenters came on and corrected them. WORD... Da troof, homie...

    The soundtrack from the Krell subterranian machinery complex is STILL being used today in "space trance" music for sci fi MMORPG games.
     
    There used to be the full version of Forbidden Planet uploaded to YT around 2012 or so, and the uploader purposefully left out the year of it's release in the vid description just to troll the millenials... Guess what? A lot of the commenters thought it was made in the 1990s, until other commenters came on and corrected them. WORD... Da troof, homie...

    The soundtrack from the Krell subterranian machinery complex is STILL being used today in "space trance" music for sci fi MMORPG games.


    I must watch Forbidden Planet once a month. I know that's suggestive of not having a life but I just think it's the greatest sci-fi movie of the 50s. And I've got quite a collection.
     
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    I must watch Forbidden Planet once a month. I know that's suggestive of not having a life but I just think it's the greatest sci-fi movie of the 50s. And I've got quite a collection.

    Ain't nothing wrong with being addicted to legends like these. Fuck, I can go some time without drinking, but I cannot do it without a classic western like Open Range or Lonesome Dove playing on the laptop while I am doing something else nearby at least for a while every day. Having to wake up around dawn on days when I do the early shifts and putting on my outdoor wear and gear just as the sky is beginning to light up always makes me feel that I am old Ranger captain Woodrow F. Call in the very beginning of Streets of Laredo right as he is leaving his little cabin to meet up with Charles Goodnight on the neighboring ranch. Doesn't help subtract from that atmosphere when I do use a Coleman propane lantern on a routine basis to flash-warm myself up on those days when it is super cold. All that is missing as I am sitting around the lantern eating the breakfast that my GF made for me last night and looking out into the arriving dawn is the lonely howling of a wolf somewhere and a saddle, riding tack and two .44 rimfire 1860 Henry's loaded on a stool next to me...
     
    Ain't nothing wrong with being addicted to legends like these. Fuck, I can go some time without drinking, but I cannot do it without a classic western like Open Range or Lonesome Dove playing on the laptop while I am doing something else nearby at least for a while every day. Having to wake up around dawn on days when I do the early shifts and putting on my outdoor wear and gear just as the sky is beginning to light up always makes me feel that I am old Ranger captain Woodrow F. Call in the very beginning of Streets of Laredo right as he is leaving his little cabin to meet up with Charles Goodnight on the neighboring ranch. Doesn't help subtract from that atmosphere when I do use a Coleman propane lantern on a routine basis to flash-warm myself up on those days when it is super cold. All that is missing as I am sitting around the lantern eating the breakfast that my GF made for me last night and looking out into the arriving dawn is the lonely howling of a wolf somewhere and a saddle, riding tack and two .44 rimfire 1860 Henry's loaded on a stool next to me...

    I like some of the old western 1/2 hour shows. Ran into one I have never seen before and I think it is pretty great. It is called Tombstone Territory. Always a good episode
     
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    I used to like Space 1999...it was a nice change from Star Trek although not in the same league. It was kind of campy which I liked...
    Space 1999 was one of my favorite shows growing up. Tried to watch it again a few weeks ago and couldn't get through an entire episode. Even tried a later version...nope. Some shows hold my attention later in life. Sadly, this one didn't.
     
    UFO was good; it used to be on every Saturday night around 7pm as I recall. Maybe 8pm.

    I was watching 1999 on Pluto TV and aside from the red-haired shape shifting chick I just didn't like it as much as I used to.

    As far as Dr. Who is concerned, I'm strictly a Tom Baker Dr. Who. All the rest just...didn't make it.
     
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    UFO was good; it used to be on every Saturday night around 7pm as I recall. Maybe 8pm.

    I was watching 1999 on Pluto TV and aside from the red-haired shape shifting chick I just didn't like it as much as I used to.

    As far as Dr. Who is concerned, I'm strictly a Tom Baker Dr. Who. All the rest just...didn't make it.


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    I was watching 1999 on Pluto TV and aside from the red-haired shape shifting chick I just didn't like it as much as I used to.
    ----------


    Ah, you are talking about Maya (Catherine Schell), Mentor (Brian Blessed) 's innocent and naive daughter from Season 2, EP 1 "The Metamorph". The screenwriters HAD to have been heavily influenced by Forbidden Planet in this episode, as the plot of the scheming father/ruler with hidden intentions and his naive daughter who is unaware of what he is capable of is very reminiscent of Dr. Edward Morbius and Altaira. I did not know that Space 1999 was actually an international collaboration between the USA, UK and Italy. Brian Blessed played his quintessential bad guy role in "The Metamorph". First realized who he was when he played an excellent role in the 1995 Scottish movie The Bruce as the English tyrant Edward I "Longshanks" whose actions led to the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314...
     
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    I just finished watching the entire Space 1999 series this week. I was actually HOOKED... The reviews on Youtube are also OVERWHELMINGLY positive, with a lot of younger fans. I am especially glad they had snagged Barbara Bain to be one of the top stars in the show. She is the exemplar of beautiful combined with class, professionalism, and culture.

    Some people may say that this show is cheesy, but let's look at contributing factors like available budget or time frame allotted for production. This one made up for any cheesy sets or special effects with a superb cast and awesome acting. Some people also say that China and Korea makes awesome war movies... Which is true somewhat half the time... Other times we get stuff like THIS:



    ...Which is cruising at the edge of B-grade space. This is actually based on a popular folktale from the Shanxi region about a group of hunters and local villagers who successfully driven back the Japanese invasion force from Shanxi in 1938, fighting alongside the 8th Route Army. I had been intimately familiar with this tale since I was 6 years old and this had the potential to be made into something far more spectacular, but production went to a local company with extremely limited budget. You can see a lot of effort being used here, especially in the "gun kata" sequence between the 8th Route Army captain and the Japanese captain while they were assaulting the base after neutralizing the minefield. The other fight scenes are also well choreographed, but it just did not come out in the caliber that it should have. BUT, as a movie whose primary intended audience are 7-12 year old boys, it does it's purpose.
     
    I just finished watching the entire Space 1999 series this week. I was actually HOOKED... The reviews on Youtube are also OVERWHELMINGLY positive, with a lot of younger fans. I am especially glad they had snagged Barbara Bain to be one of the top stars in the show. She is the exemplar of beautiful combined with class, professionalism, and culture.

    Some people may say that this show is cheesy, but let's look at contributing factors like available budget or time frame allotted for production. This one made up for any cheesy sets or special effects with a superb cast and awesome acting. Some people also say that China and Korea makes awesome war movies... Which is true somewhat half the time... Other times we get stuff like THIS:



    ...Which is cruising at the edge of B-grade space. This is actually based on a popular folktale from the Shanxi region about a group of hunters and local villagers who successfully driven back the Japanese invasion force from Shanxi in 1938, fighting alongside the 8th Route Army. I had been intimately familiar with this tale since I was 6 years old and this had the potential to be made into something far more spectacular, but production went to a local company with extremely limited budget. You can see a lot of effort being used here, especially in the "gun kata" sequence between the 8th Route Army captain and the Japanese captain while they were assaulting the base after neutralizing the minefield. The other fight scenes are also well choreographed, but it just did not come out in the caliber that it should have. BUT, as a movie whose primary intended audience are 7-12 year old boys, it does it's purpose.

    I really liked the first season of 1999 but the second season seemed a little "forced" or they were trying to hard to come up with decent story lines.
     
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