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Paul Williams as Jimmy Jordan in Fantasy Island, singing 'I Got The Music in Me'! i'm in the business of archiving some more obscure Paul Williams content right now 🙈 Paul appeared as a few different characters on the 70s TV show Fantasy Island. in 'The Perfect Gentleman' (Season 6, Episode 3), Paul plays a rock star named Jimmy Jordan who escapes to Fantasy Island after accidentally witnessing a mob killing. although he takes on a new identity as Godfrey the Butler, his disguise is almost rumbled by the revelation of his musical abilities, in true Paul Williams guest star fashion! i haven't seen this song available anywhere else, so enjoy 😉
#considering setting up a YouTube channel to store all of this...i'm sure other Paul Williams fans would be interested#paul williams#fantasy island#jimmy jordan#i got the music in me#fantasy island 1977#godfrey the butler#starleskatalks
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"Maybe there is something to this fantasy nonsense." (Comic signed Swenston & Stafford -- presumably Steve Swenston and perhaps Greg Stafford, Dragon magazine #11, December 1977, showing 2 men in traditional business suits behind the Avalon Hill booth at Origins '77, surrounded by fantasy characters)
The first two Origins Game Fairs were held in Baltimore, Maryland, home of board wargame publisher Avalon Hill, which co-ran those early conventions. The "Origins" name paid respect to Avalon Hill as the publisher of the first modern commercial wargames in the 1950s. The third Origins was held in July 1977 in Staten Island, New York, by which time fantasy gaming was becoming a more dominant part of gaming business and culture.
#Dragon magazine#Steve Swenston#gaming humor#Avalon Hill#D&D#TSR#fantasy gaming#fantasy#Swenston#Stafford#1970s#dnd#Dungeons & Dragons
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Laraine Day and Joseph Cotten in “The Wedding,” one of the stories of a S1 episode of “Fantasy Island” in 1977.
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Coming Up/Starting Over
Thinking about the dialogue between Paul and John in McCartney II and Double Fantasy: 'Coming Up' is a song addressed to a friend who wants "a love to last forever" (a reference to Don't Let Me Down) as well as "peace and understanding" (Give Peace a Chance, etc.), in which the speaker is offering reassurance: I am that friend, I want to help, hang in there and things will get better. "Never fade away" could be construed as a Buddy Holly reference (to "Not Fade Away"), and while 'searching' is a common verb, it's also the name of the song Paul always refers to when talking about the Cavern days. There might be other references I'm missing, but it's very much a song about music, which is underlined by the video, in which Paul plays different musicians (including himself as a Beatle), as well as by the extra lyrics in the live version ("I know if we could get together, we'd make music endlessly"), and the fact that Paul talks about 'coming up' as a radio reference ("coming up on the hour" - also in the live version).
Put that together, and I think it's both a friendly message to John - hi, I'm still your friend - and an invitation to make music together again. If you see it as a more romantic relationship, then obviously there could be other subtext there, but the basic idea is the same either way. (Invoking "Don't Let Me Down" to say "actually, ours is the love that lasts forever" ten years later can be seen as both bitchy and wildly romantic in a way I find kind of charming.)
This isn't a new idea, but it's interesting to think about John's songs as a response to that. First, there's "I Don't Wanna Face It", which the Beatles Bible says he started in 1977, but which clearly had a pretty overt musical reference to Coming Up incorporated into it when he reworked it in the summer of 1980. It was apparently the first song he recorded for Double Fantasy, and no matter which way you read it, if Coming Up is a question, I Don't Wanna Face it answers it with either "no" or "no, and fuck you".
But that isn't actually where the conversation ends, because John decided not to put that song on the album. Instead, one of the last songs he wrote for Double Fantasy was "(Just Like) Starting Over". I don't discount the idea that the song reflects his feelings for Yoko, or that he wrote it to better fit the narrative of the album, but I'm always a fan of the idea that a song or a work of art can say more than one thing at a time. I do not think that John, in the late 70s or 1980, would accidentally reference Paul's band and two of his singles in his lyrics without realizing it ("it's time to spread our wings and fly, don't let another day go by, my love"). Also, just as Coming Up is a meta song, so is Starting Over: I see your Buddy Holly, and I raise you an Elvis. And where I Don't Wanna Face It is a 'no', Starting Over feels like a 'yes' - the whole song is him asserting that he doesn't want to give up on a relationship. And maybe the yes has nothing to do with romantic love and everything to do with music - that would certainly make sense, both in relation to the songs themselves and to where John and Paul were musically and personally (both making albums that were, on some level, about recapturing their love of music, and allegedly considering working together on Ringo's album). Or maybe they were having wild sex in motels all over Long Island, idk. But the existence of the dialogue itself interests me, and it's nice to think of it ending on a positive note given what came next.
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#tv shows#tv series#polls#fantasy island#ricardo montalban#hervé villechaize#1970s series#us american series#have you seen this series poll
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You're already a fan of the ancient astronaut theory.
Here's a list of books, movies, TV shows, and video games featuring ancient astronauts. (revised)
▪︎Edison's Conquest of Mars (1898)
▪︎The Call of Cthulhu (1926)
▪︎Analog Science Fiction and Fact (1930)
▪︎At the Mountains of Madness (1931)
▪︎Childhood's End (1953)
▪︎Forbidden Planet (1956)
▪︎Quartermass and the Pit (1958)
▪︎The Twilight Zone (1959)
▪︎The Sirens of Titan (1959)
▪︎The Flintstones (1960)
▪︎Doctor Who (1963)
▪︎Hercules Against the Moon Men (1964)
▪︎Known Space (1964)
▪︎Star Trek (1966)
▪︎2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
▪︎Chariots of the Gods (1968)
▪︎The Bible & Flying Saucers (1968)
▪︎Horror Express (1972)
▪︎Rendezvous with Rama (1973)
▪︎Land of the Lost (1974)
▪︎The Spaceships of Ezekiel (1974)
▪︎The Outer Space Connection (1975)
▪︎Space: 1999 (1975)
▪︎The Sirius Mystery (1976)
▪︎The Earth Chronicles (1976)
▪︎Star Wars (1977)
▪︎Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
▪︎The Manna Machine (1978)
▪︎Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
▪︎Battlestar Galactica (1978)
▪︎Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1978)
▪︎Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979)
▪︎Alien (1979)
▪︎Hangar 18 (1980)
▪︎Valis (1981)
▪︎The Thing (1982)
▪︎Xevious (1982)
▪︎Super Dimension Fortress Macross (1982)
▪︎The Transformers (1984)
▪︎Cocoon (1985)
▪︎Bio Booster Armor Guyver (1985)
▪︎The Legend of Zelda (1986)
▪︎Predator (1987)
▪︎Killer Klowns from Outer Space (1988)
▪︎Red Dwarf (1988)
▪︎The Gods of Eden (1989)
▪︎Moontrap (1989)
▪︎Spriggan (1989)
▪︎Total Recall (1990)
▪︎Babylon 5 (1993)
▪︎The X-Files (1993)
▪︎Stargate (1994)
▪︎Neon Genesis Evangelion (1994)
▪︎Fingerprints of the Gods (1995)
▪︎Encounter with Tiber (1996)
▪︎Final Fantasy (1997)
▪︎Earth: Final Conflict (1997)
▪︎The Fifth Element (1997)
▪︎Space Island One (1998)
▪︎Naked Pictures of Famous People (1998)
▪︎Dilbert (1999)
▪︎Futurama (1999)
▪︎Star Ancestors (2000)
▪︎Mission to Mars (2000)
▪︎Halo (2001)
▪︎Ice Age (2002)
▪︎Alien vs. Predator (2004)
▪︎The Orion Zone (2007)
▪︎Mass Effect (2007)
▪︎Assassin's Creed (2007)
▪︎Outlander (2008)
▪︎Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)
▪︎Marvel Cinematic Universe (2008)
▪︎Spore (2008)
▪︎Knowing (2009)
▪︎The Fourth Kind (2009)
▪︎Ancient Aliens (2009)
▪︎Borderlands (2009)
▪︎The Great Airship of 1897 (2010)
▪︎Dark Void (2010)
▪︎The Ancient Alien Question (2011)
▪︎Cowboys and Aliens (2011)
▪︎Battle: Los Angeles (2011)
▪︎Paul (2011)
▪︎John Carter (2012)
▪︎Prometheus (2012)
▪︎Iron Sky (2012)
▪︎Man of Steel (2013)
▪︎Beyond the Sky (2018)
▪︎Resident Alien (2021)
▪︎Moonfall (2022)
▪︎Prey (2022)
▪︎65 (2023)
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<3 your blog! trying to watch more international films and i know there's some classics from Asia. do you have any recs for Asian horror
thank you!!
here are my favorite Asian horror films (note: a lot of these contain triggering content, so please do research beforehand if that's an issue):
Japan
ゴジラ/Godzilla (1954; creature feature, science fiction): US nuclear testing off the coast of Japan creates a giant lizard creature that rampages through Tokyo
藪の中の黒猫/Kuroneko (1968; ghosts): a woman and her daughter-in-law come back as vengeful spirits after they're murdered by samurai
ハウス/House (1977; horror comedy, ghosts): a group of schoolgirls visit a haunted mansion
天使のたまご/Angel's Egg (1985; dark fantasy, surrealist, animated): in a ruined world, a young girl cares for a giant egg
吸血鬼(バンパイア)ハンターD/Vampire Hunter D (1985; vampires, animated): when a woman is betrothed to a vampire, she hires a vampire hunter in an attempt to escape
アキラ/Akira (1988; science fiction, animated): 31 years after a nuke was dropped on Tokyo, a young man tries to save his friend from government experiments
鉄男/Testuo: The Iron Man (1989; techno horror, body horror): a man finds his flesh is cursed to turn to iron
パーフェクトブルー/Perfect Blue (1997; psychological horror, animated): a pop star is driven mad by a stalker
リング/Ring (1998; techno horror, ghosts): a videotape curses anyone who watches it to die in seven days
オーディション/Audition (1999; psychological thriller): a widower auditioning women to be his new wife makes a deadly choice
バトル・ロワイアル/Battle Royale (2000; science fiction, psychological thriller): a group of students are put on an island and told to slaughter each other
回路/Pulse (2001; techno horror, ghosts): a group of young people in Tokyo discover a website that claims to show you ghosts
殺し屋1/Ichi the Killer (2001; psychological thriller, slasher): a sadomasochistic Yakuza enforcer goes on a rampage
仄暗い水の底から/Dark Water (2002; ghosts): a divorced mother and her young daughter move into a haunted apartment building
ノロイ/Noroi: The Curse (2005; occult, found footage): a paranormal investigator tries to tie together a series of supernatural events
シン・ゴジラ/Shin Godzilla (2016; creature feature, science fiction): a giant lizard kaiju attacks Tokyo
カメラを止めるな!/One Cut of the Dead (2017; horror comedy, zombies): people making a cheap zombie flick find themselves in the middle of a real zombie outbreak
South Korea
올드보이/Oldboy (2003; psychological thriller): after being imprisoned in a room for fifteen years, a man hunts down the ones responsible
괴물/The Host (2006; creature feature, science fiction): a monster made when American chemicals were spilled into the Han River emerges to attack a community
박쥐/Thirst (2009; vampires): a Catholic priest is turned into a vampire by a blood transfusion
악마를 보았다/I Saw the Devil (2010; psychological thriller): a man goes on a brutal revenge mission after the murder of his wife
늑대소년/A Werewolf Boy (2012; werewolves, dark fantasy): a girl moves to a country home, where she befriends a strange, feral boy
부산행/Train to Busan (2016; zombies): a zombie plague breaks out on a train
서울역/Seoul Station (2016; zombies, animated): a zombie plague breaks out at a train station; companion film to Train to Busan
아가씨/The Handmaiden (2016; psychological thriller): a woman hired to be a handmaiden to a Japanese heiress plans to defraud her
곤지암/Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum (2018; ghosts, found footage): a group of influencers livestream themselves exploring a supposedly haunted institution
#살아있다/#Alive (2020; zombies): a young man is trapped in his apartment during a zombie outbreak
Hong Kong
殭屍先生/Mr. Vampire (1985; horror comedy, vampires): a Taoist priest must fight jiangshi that descend upon a village
餃子/Dumplings (2004; psychological thriller): a woman obsessed with staying young eats dumplings stuffed with strange meat
維多利亞壹號/Dream Home (2010; slasher): a woman goes on a killing spree to get her dream apartment
India
Bhoot/Ghost (2003; ghosts): a Mumbai businessman and his wife move into a haunted flat
Ek Thi Daayan/Once There was a Witch (2013; supernatural horror): a magician seeks protection from a witch who has haunted him since childhood
Tumbbad (2018; dark fantasy, occult): a father and son seek treasure in a castle inhabited by an evil god
Bulbbul (2020; dark fantasy): the village of a child bride, now grown, is attacked by a chudail
Indonesia
Pengabdi Setan/Satan's Slaves (2017; occult): a woman returns from the dead to haunt her children (this is a remake of a film from the 80s, which i have not yet seen)
Sebelum Iblis Menjemput/May the Devil Take You (2018; occult): a woman and her step-family visit her sick father's old home in search of what ails him
Iran
دختری در شب تنها به خانه میرود/A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (2014; vampires): a vampire targets a small Iranian town, attacking men who mistreat women (technically an American production)
زیر سایه/Under the Shadow (2016; occult): during the War of the Cities, a woman and her young daughter are haunted by djinns
Thailand
ชัตเตอร์ กดติดวิญญาณ/Shutter (2004; ghosts): a man begins capturing strange figures in his camera
Turkey
Baskin (2015; occult, dark fantasy, surrealist): a group of police officers discover a gateway to hell
Taiwan
哭悲/The Sadness (2021; bio horror): a virus spreads through Taipei, compelling all who are infected to commit the worst crimes they can imagine
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Star Trek, Part 3: The movies I-VI (Thank you, George Lucas!)
[All images are owned by Paramount. Please don’t sue me]
[QUICK NOTE: This is a bare-bones review of the films rather than my usual tongue-in-cheek blow-by-blow review since I’m trying to cover six movies in one review. If you would like to see any of the films reviewed in-depth, please let me know]
After the end of the original series (and the brief flirtation with animation), fans were certain that was the end for Star Trek. There were rumors that a new series was in the works, but most knew they were just rumors.
That all changed in 1977 when a film set a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away hit theaters and changed the landscape. Suddenly, Paramount was VERY interested in a movie based on Star Trek! Fortunately for Paramount, everyone was on board for a motion picture-sized paycheck.
A few years have passed since the end of the series in canon. The entire crew has received at least one promotion.
Since most of the sets, models, and costumes were either destroyed or not suitable for a larger screen, a number of changes had to be made, starting with the uniform.
(Thanks to veniceogar.xyz)
Most fans complained about the new uniforms, saying they looked like sleepwear.
But if they complained about the updated uniforms, there were little objections to the updated Enterprise!
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(Thanks to Paul Scollon)
The ship looked much more futuristic than the series (in canon, following the five-year missions, the surviving Constitution class starships underwent a major overhaul with updated warp drive, updated deflector array, and a larger body. In fact, there were so many changes that the class was re-designated “Constitution Refit”) One interesting cosmetic update: The class lost the “battleship grey” paint job in favor of the metal plates of the hull being visible.
But if the exterior was significant upgrade, wait until you see the interior!
Yes, the controls were still chunky as hell, but at least it didn’t look like the 60's vision of the future (more like the 70’s vision)
There was another major change when the franchise hit the big screen…
The Klingons somehow developed bumps on their forehead. This has been mentioned in canon (over a decade later), but was never explained until over 20 years later!
The film felt like a 2 hour episode of Star Trek (in fact, you could say it was inspired by an episode!)
The film was well-received enough that a second film was green-lit. However, the tone would shift to be a bit more action-oriented as Paramount brought in Harve Bennett as executive producer with little input from Roddenberry.
The sets were a little darker and another uniform change was made that would endure through the next six films (though I'll only be covering the next five in this review. Stay tuned for the sixth in a future review!) and (canonically) the next 70 or so years.
(Thanks to Nerdist)
The second film (considered by many to be the best film of this era, if not the entire franchise)…
…brought back a villain from the episode Space Seed…
Khan Noonian Singh (played by Ricardo Montalban, who was famous for playing Mr. Roarke on Fantasy Island), the result of genetic engineering in the late 20th century (you all remember that, right?) In the episode, Khan was awakened after being asleep for 200 years, attempted to take over the Enterprise and was marooned when he failed. Now he’s back and looking for revenge!
The movie also introduces Carol Marcus, an old flame of Kirk’s who developed a technology known as Genesis that could instantaneously terraform a planet (of course, if there’s already life on said planet, it wouldn’t be there for much longer!) In addition to revenge on Kirk, Khan wants the Genesis technology.
Fans were excited for this new take on Trek, but were up in arms due to a scene near the end…
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(Thanks to TheAmazingSkipper)
It seems that Leonard Nimoy was tired of being associated with Spock over the past 2 decades and wanted out. However, perhaps due to fan backlash, he agreed to return…if he could direct his return!
In the third film, it’s revealed that the planet Genesis (that was created at the end of the second film) has somehow brought Spock back to life. The Enterprise is due to be decommissioned, but in a desperate attempt to save their friend, the command staff of the Enterprise steal the ship to rescue Spock.
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(Thanks to Prometheus of Videos)
…but run afoul of a Klingon Bird of Prey (commanded by Christopher Lloyd of Taxi and Back to the Future fame)
If the fans were happy about the return of Spock, they were horrified about what needed to be done to do so!
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(Thanks to spartakirk109)
In the end, Kirk and the crew capture the Bird of Prey and seek asylum on Vulcan, which is where we begin with the fourth film (also directed by Nimoy)
In this film the Earth is threatened by a giant vessel looking to talk with whales (which are extinct in the 23rd century), so the crew (finally returning to Earth to face judgement for stealing the Enterprise) goes back in time to the 20th Century to get some, saving the planet.
Starfleet is grateful, but someone needs to be punished for stealing the Enterprise, so they demote Kirk to Captain and ship the crew off to their new assignment.
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(Thanks to April 5, 2063)
Yes, their new assignment is the USS Enterprise NCC-1701-A (AKA the Enterprise-A, but we’ll just keep calling it the Enterprise) In canon, the ship was the USS Yorktown, but is re-commissioned as a thank you to Kirk.
As far as the fifth film…it is considered the worst of the franchise. There are a number of issues, beginning with the film being made in the middle of a strike by the Screen Writers’ Guild (see? It’s not just a modern issue!), meaning no possibility for rewrites (and boy howdy did they need several!). Additionally, the film wanted to work with Industrial Light & Magic (the company responsible for the effects on the Star Wars franchise), but their primary teams weren’t available. Rather than work with one of the secondary teams, the producers went with another company that…well, let’s just say they should’ve gone with the ILM B-Team. Finally, William Shatner made his directorial debut, and let’s just say he should’ve stuck to acting.
The final film of this era of the franchise (released in time for Star Trek’s 25th anniversary), The Undiscovered Country, dealt with a conspiracy to end peace talks between the Federation and the Klingons with the Enterprise stuck in the middle. It also marked the decommissioning of the Enterprise-A after only 3 films (though canonically it's as old as the original Enterprise was when it was destroyed)
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(Thanks to Arrow Of Videos)
Of course, this would not be the end of Star Trek, as a brand new television series debuted shortly after Star Trek IV hit theaters, but that’s a tale for another review.
If you would like to see any of the films reviewed in depth, please let me know!
#star trek#william shatner#leonard nimoy#deforest kelley#james doohan#george takei#nichelle nichols#walter koenig#uss enterprise#fan colored glasses
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Grace Jones
Grace Beverly Jones (born 19 May 1948??) is a model, singer and actress. Born in Jamaica, she and her family moved to Syracuse, New York, when she was a teenager. Jones began her modeling career in New York state, then in Paris, working for fashion houses such as Yves St. Laurent and Kenzo, and appearing on the covers of Elle and Vogue. She notably worked with photographers such as Jean-Paul Goude, Helmut Newton, Guy Bourdin, and Hans Feurer, and became known for her distinctive androgynous appearance and bold features.
Her grandfather, John Williams, was also a musician and played with Nat King Cole. Her father, Bishop Robert Winston Jones, moved the family to CNY and founded the Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ in Syracuse. Jones' brother is megachurch preacher Bishop Noel Jones, who starred on the 2013 reality show Preachers of LA.
Through her relationship with longtime collaborator Jean-Paul Goude, Jones has one son, Paulo. From Paulo, Jones has one granddaughter.
Jones attended Central High School in Syracuse. She claims she doesn't know how old she is. Although some sources say she was born in 1948, Jones says she graduated early from Central High School in Syracuse in 1967; she was around 15 years old, ahead of most of her peers due to more rigorous education at an early age in Jamaica. She also studied theater at Onondaga Community College.
Beginning in 1977, Jones embarked on a music career, securing a record deal with Island Records and initially becoming a high-profile figure of New York City's Studio 54-centered disco scene. In the early 1980s, she moved toward a new wave style that drew on reggae, funk, post-punk, and pop music, frequently collaborating with both the graphic designer Jean-Paul Goude and the musical duo Sly & Robbie. She scored Top 40 entries on the UK Singles Chart with "Private Life", "Pull Up to the Bumper", "I've Seen That Face Before", and "Slave to the Rhythm". In 1982, she released the music video collection A One Man Show, directed by Goude, which earned her a nomination for Best Video Album at the 26th Annual Grammy Awards. Her most popular albums include Warm Leatherette (1980), Nightclubbing (1981), and Slave to the Rhythm (1985).
As an actress, Jones appeared in several indie films prior to landing her first mainstream appearance as Zula in the fantasy-action film Conan the Destroyer (1984) alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sarah Douglas, and subsequently appeared in the James Bond movie A View to a Kill (1985) as May Day, and starred as a vampire in Vamp (1986); all of which earned her nominations for the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress. In 1992, Jones acted in the Eddie Murphy film Boomerang, and contributed to the soundtrack. She also appeared alongside Tim Curry in the 2001 film Wolf Girl.
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DOROTHY STRATTEN
DOROTHY STRATTEN
1960-1980
Dorothy Stratten (Hoogstraten) was a Canadian Playboy model (1979-1980) who also dabbled in acting.
Stratten, 20, was murdered by Paul Snider on 14 August 1980. The couple’s relationship came to an end and a divorce was to proceed. Paul lured Dorothy to his home and told her it was so they could ‘discuss their divorce’.
Paul was living with his private investigator Stephen Cushner who wasn’t home at the time of her murder. Stephen came home and found Paul’s bedroom door was closed. Hours later Stephen went into Paul’s room and discovered the bodies of both Paul and Dorothy. Paul had assaulted Dorothy before he took her life and then took his own.
Dorothy met Paul in 1977, Paul, 26 worked at a club and worked as a pimp. Dorothy, 19, was photographed in the buff by Paul who sent her photos to Playboy. In 1978, the couple married in Las Vegas and lived in Los Angeles.
Hugh Hefner encouraged Dorothy to get into acting, she first appeared on the TV series, Fantasy Island. Hefner witnessed Paul’s disturbing behaviour and warned Dorothy that she should break up with him. Paul was toxic so Dorothy broke up with him and started seeing director Peter Bogdanovich, she filed for divorce and moved in with Peter. Paul who was controlling and abusive, had his private investigator follow her.
Peter wrote the memoir Killing of the Unicorn Dorothy Stratten (1984). Hefner accused Peter of preying on Dorothy’s young sister, Louise, 13. Peter denied this even though in 1988, Peter, 49, married Louise, 20 – they divorced in 2001.
Bryan Adams dedicated his song The Best Was Yet to Come (1983) to Dorothy.
#dorothystratten
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Adam Rich (October 12, 1968 – January 7, 2023) Television child actor. He was best known for his portrayal of Nicholas Bradford, the youngest son on the television series Eight Is Enough, which ran for five seasons (1977–1981). A distinctive feature of his appearance during his years as a child actor was his pageboy haircut, which inspired thousands of parents of that era to imitate the look for their young sons. His role on the show led him to be known as "America's little brother.”
Rich won the role of Nicholas at the age of eight. After Eight Is Enough, he had roles in Irwin Allen's short-lived 1981 TV series Code Red on ABC and the 1983 sitcom Gun Shy on CBS.
Rich made guest appearances on television series including The Love Boat, CHiPs, Fantasy Island, The Six Million Dollar Man, St. Elsewhere, and Baywatch. (Wikipedia)
IMDb Listing
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ughgh wrote this at midnight because i couldn't sleep 🫠🫠
#literally no one is in this fandom but whatever#mainly self indulgentttt#fantasy island#ao3#archive of our own#70s tv series#70s tv shows#fanfiction#fanficiton writing#fanfic#fanfic writers#fanfic writing#ao3 writer#ao3 fanfic
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Grace Beverly Jones (born 19 May 1948??) is a model, singer and actress. Born in Jamaica, she and her family moved to Syracuse, New York, when she was a teenager. Jones began her modeling career in New York state, then in Paris, working for fashion houses such as Yves St. Laurent and Kenzo, and appearing on the covers of Elle and Vogue. She notably worked with photographers such as Jean-Paul Goude, Helmut Newton, Guy Bourdin, and Hans Feurer, and became known for her distinctive androgynous appearance and bold features.
Her grandfather, John Williams, was also a musician and played with Nat King Cole. Her father, Bishop Robert Winston Jones, moved the family to CNY and founded the Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ in Syracuse. Jones' brother is megachurch preacher Bishop Noel Jones, who starred on the 2013 reality show Preachers of LA.
Through her relationship with longtime collaborator Jean-Paul Goude, Jones has one son, Paulo. From Paulo, Jones has one granddaughter.
Jones attended Central High School in Syracuse. She claims she doesn't know how old she is. Although some sources say she was born in 1948, Jones says she graduated early from Central High School in Syracuse in 1967; she was around 15 years old, ahead of most of her peers due to more rigorous education at an early age in Jamaica. She also studied theater at Onondaga Community College.
Beginning in 1977, Jones embarked on a music career, securing a record deal with Island Records and initially becoming a high-profile figure of New York City's Studio 54-centered disco scene. In the early 1980s, she moved toward a new wave style that drew on reggae, funk, post-punk, and pop music, frequently collaborating with both the graphic designer Jean-Paul Goude and the musical duo Sly & Robbie. She scored Top 40 entries on the UK Singles Chart with "Private Life", "Pull Up to the Bumper", "I've Seen That Face Before", and "Slave to the Rhythm". In 1982, she released the music video collection A One Man Show, directed by Goude, which earned her a nomination for Best Video Album at the 26th Annual Grammy Awards. Her most popular albums include Warm Leatherette (1980), Nightclubbing (1981), and Slave to the Rhythm (1985).
As an actress, Jones appeared in several indie films prior to landing her first mainstream appearance as Zula in the fantasy-action film Conan the Destroyer (1984) alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sarah Douglas, and subsequently appeared in the James Bond movie A View to a Kill (1985) as May Day, and starred as a vampire in Vamp (1986); all of which earned her nominations for the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress. In 1992, Jones acted in the Eddie Murphy film Boomerang, and contributed to the soundtrack. She also appeared alongside Tim Curry in the 2001 film Wolf Girl.
Jones has been cited as an inspiration for multiple artists, including Annie Lennox, Lady Gaga, Rihanna, Solange, Lorde, Róisín Murphy, Brazilian Girls, Nile Rodgers, Santigold, and Basement Jaxx. In 2016, Billboard ranked her as the 40th greatest dance club artist of all time.
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FROM THE B-MOVIE BADLANDS...
...images from the lost continent of cult films, b-movies and celluloid dreamscapes
H G Wells SF/fantasy film adaptations
Are you a Martian, Mr Kipps? A traveller from the past perhaps or some dystopian future? How about a crude amalgamation of man and beast? You certainly aren't of the Invisible variety, are you? What, you're a socialist? My God man, the sheer shame of it all!
Island of Lost Souls (1932)The Invisible Man (1933)Things to Come (1936) The Man Who Could Work Miracles (1937) The War of the Worlds (1953) The Time Machine (1960) First Men in the Moon (1964) The Island of Dr. Moreau (1977)
#from the b-movie badlands#h g wells#sf#sci fi#fantasy#war of the worlds#time machine#invisible man#dr moreau#from the badlands
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Share the 0/10s and 1/10s from the movie ranking masterlist too please
Letterboxd doesn't allow 0/10s, so 1/10 is the lowest it goes. Mine are (in chronological order):
Manos: The Hands of Fate (1966)
Orca (1977)
Jaws: The Revenge (1987)
Poltergeist III (1988)
Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989)
Troll 2 (1990)
Carnosaur (1993)
Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999)
Digimon: The Movie (2000)
Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000)
Hannibal (2001)
The Master of Disguise (2002)
Shark Attack 3: Megalodon (2003)
Darkness Falls (2003)
House of the Dead (2003)
The Room (2003)
Scarecrow Slayer (2003)
Raptor Island (2004)
Alone in the Dark (2005)
Dragon Wars (2007)
Rubber (2010)
Only Lovers Left Alive (2013)
Furry Nights (2016)
Selfie from Hell (2018)
Most of these are not the most controversial choices, and many barely qualify as films. To be a 1 out of 10 you either have to be obviously incompetent in every possible regard (Manos, The Room, most of the other low-budget horror trash here) or else notable and unique in your atrociousness. Digimon: The Movie is a movie that is bad in a way no other movie has ever been; there's almost something admirable in how fundamentally fucked the film is in every conceivable way, especially considering the movie is pieced together from bits of actual movies that are, if not masterpieces, significantly better than this Frankenstein thing. Then there's the class of films that are completely full of themselves despite being pretty terrible (Hannibal, Rubber, Only Lovers Left Alive), where any shred of competent filmmaking is tanked by the complete tonal mismatch.
I have 143 2/10s, so I won't list all of them (many are low-budget and/or straight-to-DVD horror films), but here are a few honorable mentions among movies people may have actually seen or heard of:
Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland (1989)
Super Mario Bros. (1993)
The Flintstones (1994)
The Parent Trap (1998) (This film may not actually be that bad, but I was forced to watch it about 200 times as a child, so I hate it)
What Women Want (2000)
Reign of Fire (2002)
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)
Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children (2005)
Eragon (2006)
Teeth (2007)
Spider-Man 3 (2007)
Transformers (2007)
Jumper (2008)
Burn After Reading (2008)
Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009)
Watchmen (2009) (Still better than the original comic, which I loathe)
Dragonball Evolution (2009)
Land of the Lost (2009)
Public Enemies (2009)
Year One (2009)
Gamer (2009)
Jennifer's Body (2009)
The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009)
Clash of the Titans (2010)
The Last Airbender (2010)
Devil (2010)
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 (2011)
The Hunger Games (2012)
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 (2012)
Sharknado (2013)
Sharknado 2: The Second One (2014)
The Imitation Game (2014)
The Equalizer (2014)
Night Is Short, Walk on Girl (2017)
High Life (2018)
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You're already a fan of the ancient astronaut theory.
Here's a list of books, movies, TV shows, and video games featuring ancient astronauts. (revised)
▪︎Edison's Conquest of Mars (1898)
▪︎The Call of Cthulhu (1926)
▪︎Analog Science Fiction and Fact (1930)
▪︎At the Mountains of Madness (1931)
▪︎Childhood's End (1953)
▪︎Forbidden Planet (1956)
▪︎Quartermass and the Pit (1958)
▪︎The Twilight Zone (1959)
▪︎The Sirens of Titan (1959)
▪︎The Flintstones (1960)
▪︎Doctor Who (1963)
▪︎Hercules Against the Moon Men (1964)
▪︎Known Space (1964)
▪︎Star Trek (1966)
▪︎2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
▪︎Chariots of the Gods (1968)
▪︎The Bible & Flying Saucers (1968)
▪︎Horror Express (1972)
▪︎Rendezvous with Rama (1973)
▪︎Land of the Lost (1974)
▪︎The Spaceships of Ezekiel (1974)
▪︎The Outer Space Connection (1975)
▪︎Space: 1999 (1975)
▪︎The Sirius Mystery (1976)
▪︎The Earth Chronicles (1976)
▪︎Star Wars (1977)
▪︎Mysteries of the Gods (1977)
▪︎Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
▪︎The Manna Machine (1978)
▪︎Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
▪︎Battlestar Galactica (1978)
▪︎Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1978)
▪︎Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979)
▪︎Alien (1979)
▪︎Hangar 18 (1980)
▪︎Valis (1981)
▪︎The Thing (1982)
▪︎Xevious (1982)
▪︎Super Dimension Fortress Macross (1982)
▪︎The Transformers (1984)
▪︎Cocoon (1985)
▪︎Bio Booster Armor Guyver (1985)
▪︎The Legend of Zelda (1986)
▪︎Predator (1987)
▪︎Killer Klowns from Outer Space (1988)
▪︎Red Dwarf (1988)
▪︎The Gods of Eden (1989)
▪︎Moontrap (1989)
▪︎Spriggan (1989)
▪︎Total Recall (1990)
▪︎Babylon 5 (1993)
▪︎The X-Files (1993)
▪︎Stargate (1994)
▪︎Neon Genesis Evangelion (1994)
▪︎Fingerprints of the Gods (1995)
▪︎Encounter with Tiber (1996)
▪︎Final Fantasy (1997)
▪︎Earth: Final Conflict (1997)
▪︎The Fifth Element (1997)
▪︎Space Island One (1998)
▪︎Naked Pictures of Famous People (1998)
▪︎Dilbert (1999)
▪︎Futurama (1999)
▪︎Star Ancestors (2000)
▪︎Mission to Mars (2000)
▪︎Halo (2001)
▪︎Ice Age (2002)
▪︎Alien vs. Predator (2004)
▪︎The Orion Zone (2007)
▪︎Mass Effect (2007)
▪︎Assassin's Creed (2007)
▪︎Outlander (2008)
▪︎Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)
▪︎Marvel Cinematic Universe (2008)
▪︎Spore (2008)
▪︎Knowing (2009)
▪︎The Fourth Kind (2009)
▪︎Ancient Aliens (2009)
▪︎Borderlands (2009)
▪︎The Great Airship of 1897 (2010)
▪︎Dark Void (2010)
▪︎The Ancient Alien Question (2011)
▪︎Cowboys and Aliens (2011)
▪︎Battle: Los Angeles (2011)
▪︎Paul (2011)
▪︎John Carter (2012)
▪︎Prometheus (2012)
▪︎Iron Sky (2012)
▪︎DC Extended Universe (2013)
▪︎Jupiter Ascending (2015)
▪︎The Great Wall (2016)
▪︎Life (2017)
▪︎Beyond the Sky (2018)
▪︎Resident Alien (2021)
▪︎Moonfall (2022)
▪︎Prey (2022)
▪︎65 (2023)
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