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The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
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A couple of friends, one of whom happens to
be in his dressing gown and slippers, leave the earth
suddenly. They manage to do this just seconds before the
earth is demolished to make way for an inter-galactic
super highway. They team up with a depressed robot, a
leggy blond spacecraft pilot and a chap with two heads.
This DVD of the BBC television series, will be enjoyed by
people who can enjoy humor that is not necessarily slapstick in nature. If you don't understand what's going on,
go down to your local pet shop, or mobile phone provider
and get yourself a Babel fish. Once you insert that in
your ear - all will become clear. |
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UFO
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Commander Ed Straker is tough and he is
cool. That's just as well since aliens are plotting to
invade the earth and he is responsible for stopping them.
In a secret establishment under a film studio he and his
team monitor alien approaches and take appropriate
action. Ladies with purple hair (including the stunning Gabrielle Drake) man Straker's secret
moonbase, which provides an early defence against alien
approaches. This is the next step on from Thunderbirds
(also by Gerry Anderson) and uses people instead of puppets. A very enjoyable made
for TV series which looked very futuristic in it's day. |
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Buck Rogers in the 25th Century |
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Buck Rogers leaves earth in 1987. Due to a mysterious time warp in
space, he returns more than 500 years later, in 2491. His adventures in
the future are graced by the sexy Wilma Deering, and a fantastic biped
robot called Twiki, whose strangely shaped head and classic one line
robotic utterances, set this show apart from others of the genre. My
favourite Twiki phrase, which is usually used when they get hit by enemy
fire, is "What a bummer Buck". |
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Star Wars
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All the Star Wars movies excel at
entertaining. Which you prefer will probably depend on how old you are.
Having been easily old enough to be stunned by the effects of the first
Star Wars movie to appear in the theatres, my preference is for the
older ones (although they are not the first ones chronologically in the
saga). When those movies were made CGI was in it's infancy, so physical
models tended to be used, rather than virtual models which exist only in
the digital realm inside computers. |
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Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
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This movie released in 2004, is unusual among the hero genre, in
that it really gives the feeling of taking you back to the late 1930s, while
showing you machines, which would be futuristic by today's standards let
alone those of that era, but which retain distinctly 1930s thinking and
design elements. Although much of the action takes place on the streets
of New York, Sky Captain (Jude Law) and his aircraft are very British, as
is Franky (Angelina Jolie refining her English Lara Croft accent even
more). Polly Perkins (Gwyneth Paltrow) a reporter is definitely American
and is to Sky Captain, rather what Lois Lane is to Superman and Vicky
Vale is to Batman. |
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