Show #29: Pre-show Discussion

by Summer
March 30, 2007, 1:00 am | In Show Topics |

Show #29, due out mid-April, will be on the 1970 SF film Colossus: The Forbin Project.

For those of you who are curious what our upcoming topics are, and what we’re considering for Ninja topics, don’t forget to check out our Future Topics section! Also, feel free to comment about the upcoming topic here in a private thread, or over on the Ninjas thread at the new FarPoint Forums

2 Comments »

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

  1. I’ll have to borrow it from my Dad.

    Comment by Brian — March 31, 2007 #

  2. Great! I adore that movie, and wish they would release a decent widescreen version of it on DVD. It is replete with the kind of wonderful visual experimentation that late 1960s and early 1970s movies took great advantage of:

    *multiple video sequences simultaneously on-screen
    *on-screen windowing of images
    *the great Colossus POV as it spies on Forbin, especially in the more titillating sections

    and all of that visual flamboyance is coupled with the magnificently chilling audio centerpiece: the Voice of Colossus and its horrifying implacable tone. I’ve never trusted a Vocoder since, and obviously the original audio presentation of the Borg collective and other scifi gestures borrow from this powerful film.

    I especially like Eric Braeden’s performance. Having a lead actor with a foreign accent was an interesting choice that I feel actually helped the film, and Braeden did a great job of portraying a very intelligent man whose intellectual detachment is his undoing. Having the original Rudy from the Six Million Dollar Man as one of the scientists is also a fun bonus.

    Since I loved the movie, I went on to read all three of the Colossus novels. They’ve faded in memory, but I remember liking the first one but finding the others rather weak when D.F. Jones brought in an alien element. I do recall a horrifying part of one of the books where Colossus is destroying great paintings, probably the Mona Lisa is one of them, to observe the emotional impact of that sacrilege on art lovers.

    Anyway, I eagerly look forward to the Ninjas’ analysis of this film, one of my personal favorites.

    Comment by Granger — March 31, 2007 #

Leave a comment

XHTML: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Powered by WordPress.
Entries and comments feeds. Valid XHTML and CSS. ^Top^