Twilight Zone: “A Game of Pool” [Season 3, Episode 5] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “A Game of Pool” [Season 3, Episode 5]
Original Air Date: October 6, 1961

Director: Buzz Kulik

Writer: George Clayton Johnson

Starring: Jack Klugman and Jonathon Winters.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Jesse Cardiff [Klugman] is the greatest pool player alive.  Sadly, no matter who or how many people Jesse beats, he always is told, that the late “Fats” Brown was better.  One night, alone in the pool hall, Jesse says he’d give anything to play “Fats.”

“Fats” appears and accepts the game if Jesse will wager his life.

Be careful what you ask for, because you just may get it all.

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Twilight Zone: “The Passerby” [Season 3, Episode 4] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “The Passerby” [Season 3, Episode 4]
Original Air Date: October 6, 1961

Director: Elliott Silverstein

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: James Gregory, Joanne Linville and Rex Holman.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

The Civil War has ended.  A young Confederate widow sits on her porch and watches a long procession of soldiers [Union and Confederate] slowly march by her house which is on a dark, remote road.  When a soldier asks for water and a chance to rest, she comes to discover that all is not what it seems.

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10 Law-Abiding Facts About “Raising Arizona”

Roger Cormier and Mental_Floss present 10 Law-Abiding Facts About Raising Arizona.  Here are three of my favorites…

3. KEVIN COSTNER AND RICHARD JENKINS AUDITIONED FOR THE FILM.
Kevin Costner auditioned three times to play H.I., only to see Nicolas Cage snag the role. Richard Jenkins had his first of many auditions for the Coens for Raising Arizona. He also (unsuccessfully) auditioned for Miller’s Crossing (1990) and Fargo (1996) before calling it quits with the Coens. In 2001, Joel and Ethan cast Jenkins in The Man Who Wasn’t There, even though he had never auditioned for it.

4. KATE CAPSHAW TURNED DOWN THE LEAD.
Kate Capshaw said no to playing Ed in Raising Arizona—and later regretted the decision. She also notably turned down the role of Diane Chambers on Cheers.

9. THE FILMMAKERS GOT EXPERIMENTAL WITH THEIR CAMERA TECHNIQUES.
Wanting to have as many options as possible in the editing room, the Coens and their cinematographer, Barry Sonnenfeld, decided at one point to have Cage run through the house while holding a camera towards himself. After seeing the results, they was decided it was too weird.

Twilight Zone: “The Shelter” [Season 3, Episode 3] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “The Shelter” [Season 3, Episode 3]
Original Air Date: September 29, 1961

Director: Lamont Johnson

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Larry Gates, Joseph Bernard and Jack Albertson.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…
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Several families from the neighborhood have come together to celebrate a birthday.  Just as toasts are made with everyone expressing their friendship, an emergency warning announcing an imminent nuclear attack is broadcast.

As each family prepares for the incoming bombs, they realize that one of the families has a bomb shelter.  Sadly it is not big enough to hold everyone.

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Brian J. Davis Creates The Composites

The police artist rendering above is of a famous literary figure.

Any idea who?

Before I tell you, let me tell you about the process in making the piece.

Brian J Davis is a filmmaker and digital artist living in Brooklyn.  Using composite sketch software available to police sketch artists, Davis creates the drawings of famous literary characters and posts them on his The Composites website.

There you can find composites of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, Hannibal Lector, Jack Torrance, The Vampire Lestat and others.

Oh, the character above?  Why, that’s Bond. James Bond.

Source: CBR.com.

Twilight Zone: “The Arrival” [Season 3, Episode 2] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Two” [Season 3, Episode 2]
Original Air Date: September 22, 1961

Director: Boris Sagal

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Harold J. Stone, Fredd Wayne and Noah Keen.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…
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When a commercial plane lands at an airport and is found to be empty of passengers and crew, it is up to Federal Aviation Investigator Grant Sheckly to discover what happened.

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16 Earth-Shattering Facts About “Independence Day”

Janet Burns and Mental_Floss present 16 Earth-Shattering Facts About Independence Day.  Here are three of my favorites…

2. THE FILM LOST ITS MILITARY SUPPORT DUE TO ITS AREA 51 REFERENCES.
In its roundup of insights from the Independence Day DVD commentary, Film School Rejectspoints out that the U.S. military had initially agreed to support the film’s production by offering greater access to military facilities and consultation from real-life officers, soldiers, and pilots. However, according to the film’s producer and co-writer Dean Devlin, the military withdrew its support after learning about the script’s multiple references to Area 51 being a hub for extraterrestrial projects.

5. THE COMPUTER VIRUS THAT SAVES THE DAY IS ALSO A REFERENCE TO THE WAR OF THE WORLDS.
In both the novel and film versions of The War of the Worlds, mankind’s biggest guns fail to take down Martian attackers. Instead, it’s tiny viruses in our atmosphere—mostly harmless to humans, but foreign to Martian immune systems—that finally do the job. In Independence Day, too, Bill Pullman’s presidential order to “nuke the bastards” doesn’t even make a dent in the aliens’ front, but a cunning (if confusing) computer virus manages to destroy the invaders at last.

In the case of Independence Day’s viral “Hail Mary,” fans have raised criticism—and plenty of eyebrows—over the years regarding just how on Earth David Levinson (played by Jeff Goldblum) could have drummed up a computer virus that affects alien technology so quickly. Devlin offered some answers during a 2014 Reddit AMA:

“Okay: what Jeff Goldblum’s character discovered was that the programming structure of the alien ship was a binary code. And as any beginning programmer can tell you, binary code is a series of ones and zeroes. What Goldblum’s character did was turn the ones into zeroes and the zeroes into ones, effectively reversing the code that was sent.”

Cracked notes that there was also a seven-minute scene that would’ve addressed this issue for viewers from the very beginning, and which suggests that modern computers in the Independence Day universe are descended from a reverse-engineered version of recovered alien tech courtesy Area 51. Unfortunately, that scene was cut from the final release of the film, only adding to viewers’ confusion.

 

11. MATTHEW PERRY DROPPED OUT OF THE FILM. BUT HIS DAD HAD A ROLE.
Film School Rejects reports that the role of Captain Jimmy “Raven” Wilder, which was eventually played by Harry Connick Jr., was originally offered to Matthew Perry. He pulled out before shooting began, though, making his father, John Bennett Perry, who played a Secret Service agent, the only Perry in the film.

Twilight Zone: “Two” [Season 3, Episode 1] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Two” [Season 3, Episode 1]
Original Air Date: September 15, 1961

Director: Montgomery Pittman

Writer: Montgomery Pittman

Starring: Charles Bronson and Elizabeth Montgomery.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…
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Bronson and Montgomery play two soldiers who have survived an apocalyptic battle.  Everyone else in the city [maybe the world] is dead.  For five years each of the soldiers has been struggling to survive.  Then they discover each other… and the fact that they from opposing armies.

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30th Anniversary Interview with Frank Miller: The Dark Knight Returns

Although it’s hard to believe, this year marks the 30th Anniversary of Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns.

CBR.com sat down for a short but informative interview with Frank Miller that’s worth a read.  Here are a couple of tidbits…

When did you realize that it really was something that people were going to be talking about for decades to come? Was there a moment where you thought, “We’ve created something bigger than I ever expected”?

It was an ongoing set of surprises. You go up to bat and you take your best shot. This one turned out to be a homer. But I didn’t expect it to keep on rewarding like this. Now, it’s become apparent that it’s going to be something that we can enjoy revisiting again in the future.

 

When you see how influential your original take on Batman was, and the kinds of things that stuck forever: the way you did narrative dialogue captions over thought balloons, a lot of the approaches to the character. And now we’re seeing things like “Batman v Superman,” where we’re seeing a lot of imagery that comes directly from your pencil. What has that come to mean to you over the years? You’ve seen just how much people embraced what you did, sometimes swiped what you did?

I mean, I’ve learned a lot since doing the first “Dark Knight.” I learned a lot about life too. Instead of resenting, as I first did, when they would take some of the stuff in the movies — I resented and I thought, “Oh I’m being ripped off!” — I’ve come to realize that what I did was a piece of an overall collective work that’s evolving and changing as time goes by. I didn’t make up Batman, I just contributed to the myth. And now they’re using some of my stuff to take it in their own direction. God bless them as well.

Twilight Zone: “The Obsolete Man” [Season 2, Episode 29] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “The Obsolete Man” [Season 2, Episode 29]
Original Air Date: June 2, 1961

Director: Elliott Silverstein

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Burgess Meredith, Fritz Weaver and Josip Elic.


The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…
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In a future totalitarian world, the government eliminates those who are no longer useful.  Romeny Wordsworth [Meredith], a librarian is determined to be obsolete and given a date for extermination.  What chance does this meek little man have against the will of the government?

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June Vigants and Jimmy Bobo


June Vigants
created the Sly as James Bonomo aka Jimmy Bobo from Bullet to the Head piece above.  June was doing sketch commissions through the mail and although I’d never met her, I liked June’s art and decided to commission a few pieces.  I wasn’t disappointed.  This is the first with more to be posted!

You can see more of June’s art here and here.