Twilight Zone: “Living Doll” [Season 5, Episode 6] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Living Doll[Season 5, Episode 6]
Original Air Date: November 1, 1963

Director: Richard C. Sarafian
Writer: Charles Beaumont

Starring: Telly Savalas, Mary LaRoche and Tracy Stratford.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Erich Streator [Savalas] becomes concerned when his stepdaughter’s new talking doll repeatedly tells him she plans to kill him.

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10 Things You Might Not Know About John Carpenter’s Cult Classic “They Live”

Cheryl Eddy and io9 present 10 Things You Might Not Know About John Carpenter’s Cult Classic They Live.  Here are three of my favorites…

1) Before they met, Carpenter was a Piper fan, but Piper had never heard of the director, even though his filmography at the time included such high-profile works as Halloween, Escape From New York, The Thing, and Big Trouble in Little China.

2) The greatest fight scene in movie history runs five minutes and 20 seconds long. It took three days to film, but a month and a half of rehearsing in the backyard behind Carpenter’s office in the San Fernando Valley. According to interviews on the They Live Blu-ray, Carpenter drew inspiration for the clash from a similarly memorable brawl in The Quiet Man, a 1952 John Ford film in which John Wayne plays a retired boxer.

10) “Frank Armitage,” credited as They Live’s screenwriter, is actually a Carpenter pseudonym. It’s a shout-out to H.P. Lovecraft creation Henry Armitage; Carpenter would later pay further tribute to the author with the filmIn the Mouth of Madness. (“Frank Armitage” is also the name of David’s character in the film.)

Twilight Zone: “A Kind of Stopwatch” [Season 5, Episode 4] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “A Kind of Stopwatch[Season 5, Episode 4]
Original Air Date: October 18, 1963

Director: John Rich
Writer: Rod Serling from a story by Michael D. Rosenthal

Starring: Richard Erdman, Herbie Faye and Leon Belasco.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

A man gets a stopwatch that freezes time and everyone and everything in the world around him.  He decides to rob a bank by stopping time and just walking away with the money.  What could go wrong?

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Twilight Zone: “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” [Season 5, Episode 3] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet[Season 5, Episode 3]
Original Air Date: October 11, 1963

Director: Richard Donner
Writer: Richard Matheson

Starring: William Shatner, Christine White, and Ed Kemmer.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Bob Wilson [Shatner] and his wife are flying home.  Wilson has just recovered from a nervous breakdown and a storm is making the flight less than comfortable.  Wilson becomes alarmed when he sees a creature on the wing of the plane tearing at wires.  His wife and others think Bob is suffering a relapse but he’s not…

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Twilight Zone: “Steel” [Season 5, Episode 2] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “Steel[Season 5, Episode 2]
Original Air Date: October 4, 1963

Director: Don Weis
Writer: Richard Matheson

Starring: Lee Marvin, Joe Mantell, Chuck Hicks.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Boxing between humans has been outlawed.  Now boxing takes place between robots.  Former boxer Steel Kelly [Marvin] takes his beat-up outdated robot on the boxing circuit.  When Kelly’s robot stops working right before a match, Kelly decides to take the robot’s place in order to get paid.

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Twilight Zone: “In Praise of Pip” [Season 5, Episode 1] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “In Praise of Pip[Season 5, Episode 1]
Original Air Date: September 27, 1963

Director: Joseph M. Newman
Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Jack Klugman, Connie Gilchrist, Bobby Diamond and Bill Mumy.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

A bookie [Klugman] is stabbed protecting a young man.  As the bookie bleeds to death, his only wish is to see his son (who is serving in Viet Nam) one last time.

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14 Epic Facts About “Gangs of New York”

Eric D. Snider and Mental_Floss present 14 Epic Facts About Gangs of New York.  Here are three of my favorites…

1. IT WAS 32 YEARS IN THE MAKING.
Martin Scorsese read Herbert Asbury’s 1928 nonfiction book The Gangs of New York: An Informal History of the Underworld in 1970 and immediately thought it would make a good movie. He didn’t have any money or clout yet though, so he had to wait. He bought the movie rights to the book in 1979, and even got a screenplay written around that time, then spent the next 20 years trying to get the project off the ground before finding a willing financial partner in Harvey Weinstein at Miramax Films.

7. SEVERAL CHARACTERS WERE BASED ON REAL PEOPLE.
Bill the Butcher was real, though Scorsese changed his surname from Poole to Cutting for the movie to reflect a creative liberty he’d taken, i.e., having the character live to see the Civil War (he was actually murdered in 1855). William “Boss” Tweed (Jim Broadbent) was a real politician who controlled the Tammany Hall political machine, as you may recall from your high school U.S. history class. So were the Schermerhorns, the rich people seen taking a tour of the misery and vice of Five Points. (Interesting footnote: Scorsese’s fifth wife, whom he married in 1999, is one Helen Schermerhorn Morris, a descendant of early New York elites.) Perhaps most surprisingly, Hell-Cat Maggie (Cara Seymour)—the vicious female fighter who bites off victims’ ears—was fact-based, being a composite of the real Hell-Cat Maggie (her real name is unknown) and a few other historical lady criminals.

13. THERE WERE LONGER CUTS OF THE MOVIE, BUT YOU WON’T SEE THEM.
The first cut, the throw-in-everything-and-see-what-works version, was three hours and 38 minutes, almost an hour longer than the final cut. Scorsese and his longtime editor, Thelma Schoonmaker, tinkered with it relentlessly, ultimately producing 18 different versions that were screened for various audiences. Weinstein, rightfully nicknamed Harvey Scissorhands for his ruthless trimming of the movies he releases, no doubt urged Scorsese toward a shorter runtime, but Scorsese said he’s happy with the one everybody saw, which is two hours and 47 minutes.

“There’s not one version that I would say, ‘That’s my original version,’” Scorsese said on the DVD commentary. They were more like drafts: “This was all a series of changes and rewrites and restructuring, until finally it comes down to the movie you see in the theater.”

Twilight Zone: “The Bard” [Season 4, Episode 18] / Z-View

Twilight Zone: “The Bard[Season 4, Episode 18]
Original Air Date: May 23, 1963

Director: David Butler
Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: Jack Weston, John McGiver, Doro Merande and Burt Reynolds.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

An untalented television writer [Weston] finds a way to transport William Shakespeare from the past.  Soon the writer is successful thanks to Shakespear ghosting his scripts.  Things go south when Shakespeare shows up on the set.

[Burt Reynolds’ take on Marlon Brando is worth the price of admission.]

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