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#Steven grives
vintagewarhol · 2 years
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mariocki · 4 years
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A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989)
"Your birth was a curse on the whole of humanity; I will not allow it to happen again. You've brought me back to give you life, but now I must take yours."
"We'll see, bitch."
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girlsofthemoonblog · 2 years
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Anette, Gareth Hunt, and Steven Grives at a film premiere in early April of 1979 💜
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kwebtv · 6 years
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Alan Parnaby, Steven Grives, Sebastian Abineri and Christine McKenna in “Flambards”. 
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daleisgreat · 4 years
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The Wizard
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Today I am covering a movie I have been itching to write about here for years. It is an admittedly subpar film from 1989, but seeing it then as a six year old videogame kiddo, I absolutely adored it. Yes I am talking about the 1989 Nintendo adver-film, The Wizard (trailer). I have had a nostalgia-driven love/hate/love relationship with The Wizard throughout my life. Absolutely loved it as a kid, when I got around to re-watching it with adult eyes for the first time shortly after its first DVD run in 2006, I realized a lot of it then was hard to watch and thought the film took itself way too seriously. I embedded an old episode of my old podcast I recently un-vaulted at the bottom of this entry where we do a roundtable breakdown of The Wizard right after its first DVD release in 2006. Watching it again in 2020, I kind of came around to digging it again as you will soon read on to see. The Wizard never got a deluxe edition home video treatment until this year. Its DVD release in 2006, and initial 2018 BluRay release saw a basic home video release with no bonus material other than a trailer. After much fan outcry, Universal finally granted access to home video distributor Shout Factory to release a much desired special edition jam packed with extras. It hit BluRay at the beginning of this year, shortly after the film’s 30th anniversary. If you are unfamiliar with Shout Factory, think of them as the equivalent as the Criterion Edition, but for beloved B-movies instead.
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This is a road trip film, where through the magic of Nintendo, a broken family is reunited…..yes I am embellishing, but only ever-so-marginally! After an earlier childhood crisis that is not revealed until late in the movie, nine-year-old Jimmy Woods (Luke Edwards) is left in a quasi-autistic state (his condition is never fully explained). Jimmy consistently runs away from home until his mother decides it is too much and puts him in a permanent childcare facility. Jimmy’s half-brother Corey (Fred Savage) would have none of this treatment to Jimmy and sneaks him out of the facility. Jimmy infamously references ‘California’ throughout, Corey decides to take Jimmy on a road trip to California to see just what Jimmy wants to go over there for. Along the way they meet Hailey (Jenny Lewis), who joins them on the run and helps discover Jimmy’s hidden talents at getting top scores at arcade games. The trio decide to embark to a huge videogame tournament in California they see a flyer for and think that must be what Jimmy is talking about that is awaiting them there. Watching the Wizard now in 2020 compared to the last time I saw it in 2006 what popped out to me was surprisingly the ‘heart’ of the family dilemma the whole film is predicated on. As I stated in my entries here chronicling the seasons of Roseanne, the reason that show is one of my favorite sitcoms is because my family was not too far off from how dysfunctional the Conners were. The Woods family here has their own twisted backstory that gets kind of fleshed out on why the family is split up and struggling to overcome a recent crisis that has had a lasting impact on them. I can relate to that with my various family qualms over the decades, so seeing Corey & Jimmy’s brother, Nick (Christian Slater) and father, Sam (Beau Bridges) go from being on rocky turmoil throughout the film, but managing to put their differences aside to go on the road after them kind of resonated with me a little bit on this viewing.
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Nick and Sam playing catch-up on the road is an entertaining B-plot to The Wizard. The father and son team have a comedic foil in one Mr. Putnam (Will Seltzer), a professional tracker of runaway kids who I would imagine would be a realistic good kind of person, but the film portrays Putnam as a ruthless, slimy scumbag in it solely for the money. It is laughable to see Putnam get the villain stereotype checklist treatment. Balding, slicked back hair? Check! Cowboy-collar-string-tie? Check! Always chomping on gum? Check! Weasel-y voice? Double check! During their father-son road trek, Nick introduces his dad to videogames, and soon enough Sam is just as hooked as Nick in trying to conquer the dastardly original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles game on NES. Videogames are featured predominantly throughout The Wizard and goes to show how big arcades were in the late 80s to the point where you can find a stray machine or two at any gas station or restaurant. Watching Hailey and Corey train Jimmy to get as much gaming knowledge in time for the videogame tournament in Los Angeles was a riot. The requisite-training montage scene perfectly encapsulates NES-mania at the peak of its powers in 1989. As you can see in the linked video it has the perfect training material for any grade school game player of that era in the form of arcade game practice sessions, Nintendo Power magazines and calling the Nintendo-endorsed game counselor’s hotline for pro tips! Countless games are shown off throughout. One of the most recognizable scenes of the film is when Jimmy meets his antagonist in the form of pro-gamer, Lucas (Jackey Vinson) who makes his unabashed love of the Power Glove the must-have NES accessory of the ’89 Christmas season.
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Eventually Lucas and Jimmy clash at the ‘Videogame Armageddon’ tournament in LA. They are two of the three finalists and for their final challenge the AWESOME over-the-top host (Steven Grives) bestows upon them a brand new, unreleased game in the form of the madly anticipated Super Mario Bros. 3! The three compete for the next three minutes of film in what is essentially an infomercial for SMB3. Nintendo and Universal timed The Wizard to hit theaters several weeks before the release of the game, which only fueled demand and likely played a factor into SMB3 selling more than 17 million copies worldwide. I vividly remember being on edge in my childhood viewing of that contest finale making SMB3 seem like the coolest game ever, and re-watching it 30 years later the scene still gets me wrapped up all over again! Just click or press here to see it for yourself! Jimmy’s family is so proud of him that the whole family vaguely patches things up in a touching moment at a tourist attraction shortly thereafter to end the film on a feel-good note. As positive as I am on the film so far, it is all in a so-bad-its-good, B-movie way. I could rag on the many imperfections of The Wizard with its out of touch dialogue, overuse of New Kids on the Block in the soundtrack, misrepresentation of some of the videogames and some out of date cultural norms, but as you can tell The Wizard is somewhat of a special film for me so I will leave that to you to scour the Internet for those astutely valid points of criticism.
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As I alluded to above, this Shout Factory edition of the film is loaded with extra features. There is 38 minutes of deleted scenes! Highly recommend checking them out, as the deleted scenes mostly consists of early first act backstory setting up brotherly differences with Corey and Nick, and also a whole abandoned sideplot that sees Corey sneak Jimmy out of the childcare facility multiple times to introduce him to the NES and becoming a pro at videogames. Director Todd Holland has a feature commentary track filled with tons of insightful factoids. Some highlights include regretting how unsafe parts of the production were, justifying why a lot of scenes were cut, pointing out a blink-and-miss-it Toby McGuire cameo, fighting to the bitter end to get his feel-good family reuniting ending and how a throwaway joke panning Universal Studios lead to a last minute final re-cut of the film to omit that line due to peeved Universal executives. There are two Q&A panels included totaling an hour and a half. Both feature Luke Edwards along with original writer, David Chisholm and producer, Ken Topolsky. A lot of good anecdotes and memories from everyone involved, but not necessarily required viewing since a decent amount of their responses are touched on in the last of the bonuses. Rounding off the extras are three more behind-the-scenes bonuses tallying up just under an hour. Critical Analysis of The Wizard is a 12 minute look at Jimmy’s childhood trauma and the psychological effects of his condition. How Can I Help You is a six minute interview with a former Nintendo Game Counselor detailing his work experiences. Road to California is the standout making of feature with it being a 40 minute comprehensive look at how The Wizard came to be with interviews with most of the cast and crew. It dissects the casting, selecting the gameplay footage from Nintendo-provided tapes, explaining the ending, making all the cuts down to a 90 minute film, dealing with the critical fallout and the belated public adoration from fans online who grew up with the film and spread the love once it hit DVD. There are a couple heartfelt fan testimonials it included towards the end with some passionate stories from serious fans of the film!
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These last several days have been a ride to say the least while taking in everything this Shout Factory edition had to offer. I knew a part of me enjoyed The Wizard in a guilty pleasure kind of way, but taking it all in again with a 37-year old perspective made the family crisis element of the movie, regardless of how corny it is implemented, somehow make an impact on me and appreciate it in a way I was not expecting. Combine that with it capturing the aura of late-80s NES fever, and seeing all the ubiquitous love from the cast, crew and fans of the movie in the bonus feature interviews and it all adds up to The Wizard going from guilty pleasure to childhood favorite that I did not expect to find myself still a big fan of today.
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If you somehow quench for more Wizard coverage, then check out this episode of my old podcast I recently re-uploaded to my YouTube channel where we reviewed The Wizard right after its first DVD printing way back in 2006.
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Other Random Backlog Movie Blogs 3 12 Angry Men (1957) 12 Rounds 3: Lockdown 21 Jump Street The Accountant Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie Atari: Game Over The Avengers: Age of Ultron The Avengers: Infinity War Batman: The Dark Knight Rises Batman: The Killing Joke Batman: Mask of the Phantasm Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice Bounty Hunters Cabin in the Woods Captain America: Civil War Captain America: The First Avenger Captain America: The Winter Soldier Christmas Eve Clash of the Titans (1981) Clint Eastwood 11-pack Special The Condemned 2 Countdown Creed I & II Deck the Halls Detroit Rock City Die Hard Dredd The Eliminators The Equalizer Dirty Work Faster Fast and Furious I-VIII Field of Dreams Fight Club The Fighter For Love of the Game Good Will Hunting Gravity Grunt: The Wrestling Movie Guardians of the Galaxy Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 Hell Comes to Frogtown Hercules: Reborn Hitman I Like to Hurt People Indiana Jones 1-4 Ink The Interrogation Interstellar Jay and Silent Bob Reboot Jobs Joy Ride 1-3 Last Action Hero Major League Man of Steel Man on the Moon Man vs Snake Marine 3-6 Merry Friggin Christmas Metallica: Some Kind of Monster Mortal Kombat Mortal Kombat Legends: Scorpions Revenge National Treasure National Treasure: Book of Secrets Not for Resale Pulp Fiction The Replacements Reservoir Dogs Rocky I-VIII Running Films Part 1 Running Films Part 2 San Andreas ScoobyDoo Wrestlemania Mystery The Secret Life of Walter Mitty Shoot em Up Slacker Skyscraper Small Town Santa Steve Jobs Source Code Star Trek I-XIII Sully Take Me Home Tonight TMNT The Tooth Fairy 1 & 2 UHF Veronica Mars Vision Quest The War Wild Wonder Woman The Wrestler (2008) X-Men: Apocalypse X-Men: Days of Future Past
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bossygifs · 7 years
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Deleted Scene: Velma’s Song
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gem329 · 5 years
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Why is yellow bubbled?
In my au yellow is one of the most cruelest diamond.
1. She abused pink on purpose
2. She wasn't there for blue well she was griving.
3. She poofed white diamond and put her in a mirror plus took over homeworld.
4. She continued her fusion experiments
5. She even tried to destroy earth
But the worst of all is that she was the one who pulled out Steven's gem. but luckily Steven and purple Steven fused witch caused a exploxson witch poofed her.
Hers what she looks like
Shes Bigger then white diamond. And she uses yellow pearl for her cap
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Shes Bigger then white diamond and she uses her pearl for her cap
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flambabes · 2 years
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I found some very fun old fan websites based on the series. They’re so nice and funny. I think the one based on Steven Grives even got an interview! Going to try to look at a few more links on the way back machine at some point…
Links:
http://flambards.flyingdreams.org/#about
https://stevengrives.tripod.com/
https://flambardsheaven.tripod.com/
https://lianki.tripod.com/index.htm
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resolutionsolange · 3 years
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BILAN CULTUREL - SEPT./OCT. 2021
Cinéma :
Délicieux - Éric Besnard
Dune - Denis Villeneuve
Mourir peut attendre - Cary Joji Fukunaga
À la vie - Aude Pépin
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Livres & bandes dessinées :
L’Usine - Hiroko Oyamada
The Clan of the Cave Bear - Jean M. Auel
Quatres soeurs, tomes 1 à 4 - Malika Ferdjoukh
Le Consentement - Vanessa Springora
Outresable - Hugh Howey
Révolution, tome 1 - Florent Grouazel, Younn Locard
Tunnels - Rutu Modan
New York Cannibals - Jérôme Charyn, François Boucq
George Sand, ma vie à Nohant - Chantal Van den Heuven, Nina Jacqmin
Préférence Système - Ugo Bienvenu
Le roman des Goscinny - Catel
Gold Star Mothers - Catherine Grive, Fred Bernard
Gombri - Elín Edda
Le manifeste des 343 : histoire d’un combat - Adeline Laffitte, Hélène Strag, Hervé Duphot
Little Tulip - Jérôme Charyn, François Boucq
L’Âge d’or, vol. 2 - Roxanne Moreil, Cyril Pedrosa
Sacrées sorcières - Pénélope Bagieu, d’après Roald Dahl
Woman World - Aminder Dhaliwal
Dans la forêt - Lomig
Facteur pour femmes, livre 2 - Didier Quella-Guyot, Emmanuel Cassier
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Expos :
Vivian Maier - Musée du Luxembourg, Paris
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Jeux vidéo :
Pokémon Épée - Game Freak
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Projections privées :
Peninsula - Yeon Sang-ho
Slalom - Charlène Favier
Le Parapluie bleu (court-métrage) - Saschka Unseld
Rick and Morty, saison 5 - Dan Harmond, Justin Roiland
What We Do In The Shadows, saison 3 - Jemaine Clement
See, saison 2 - Steven Knight
The Handmaid’s Tale, saison 4 - Bruce Miller
En thérapie - Éric Toledano, Olivier Nakache
Luna Park, saison 1 - Isabella Aguilar
Only Murders in the Building, saison 1 - Steve Martin, John Hoffman
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Découvertes musicales récentes :
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( Stranded Horse - Towards A Waning Glow )
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mariocki · 5 years
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Inseminoid (Horror Planet, 1981)
"You can't get away from me, you know. It doesn't matter what you do. You have to come out sometime. There's no other way. So why don't you... all just come out now."
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kwebtv · 6 years
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Danger UXB  - ITV  -  1/8/1979  -  4/2/1979
Period Drama (13 episodes)
Running Time:  60 minutes
Stars:
347 Section, 97 Company
Anthony Andrews as Lieutenant Brian Ash
Maurice Roëves as Sergeant James
Ken Kitson as Corporal Samuel Horrocks
Kenneth Cranham as Lance Corporal Jack Salt
George Innes as Sapper Jim Wilkins
Gordon Kane as Sapper Gordon Mulley
Robert Pugh as Sapper 'Tiny' Powell
Robert Longden as Sapper Copping
David Auker as Sapper Baines
Martin Neil as Private John Brinckley
John Bowler as Sapper Scott
Bryan Burdon as Sapper Binns
97 Company, Royal Engineers
Peter Cartwright as Major Luckhurst
Ken Farrington as Captain 'Fannie' Francis
Royston Tickner as Lieutenant Hamish Leckie
Jeremy Sinden as Lieutenant Ivor Rodgers
Steven Grives as Lieutenant Ken Machin
Osmund Bullock as Lieutenant Alan Pringle
David Shaughnessy as Lieutenant Tim Carter-Brown
Nick Brimble as Lieutenant Gresham
Norman Chappell as Corporal Mould
Others
Iain Cuthbertson as Doctor Gillespie
Judy Geeson as Susan Mount
David Buck as Stephen Mount
Moyra Fraser as Aunt Do-Do
Marjie Lawrence as Mrs. Baker
Deborah Watling as Norma
David Wood as Lieutenant Roger Symes
Christopher Good as Captain West
Nick Tate as Lieutenant Chris Craik
Tim Pigott-Smith as Harry Winthrop
Deborah Grant as Elspeth
Geraldine Gardner as Mickey
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bossygifs · 8 years
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mariocki · 6 years
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The Nearly Man: Reshuffle: June 1975 (1.4, Granada, 1975)
"Any minute now, the sounds of Harold shuffling his pack will be heard. A series of thuds and moans as the various bodies collide, like the blunt instruments they are. All change! To the corridors of impotence!"
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