Has anybody here ever seen the 'Phantasm' films? (user search)
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May 19, 2024, 11:47:47 PM
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  Has anybody here ever seen the 'Phantasm' films? (search mode)
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Author Topic: Has anybody here ever seen the 'Phantasm' films?  (Read 357 times)
Okay, maybe Mike Johnson is a competent parliamentarian.
Nathan
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« on: June 17, 2014, 10:15:56 PM »

Phantasm was a great movie but for some reason I never got around to seeing any of the sequels. Scrimm was fantastic; I didn't know he was still alive and I don't think I've seen him in anything else. Was he in Bubba Ho-Tep? I've seen Bubba Ho-Tep, but it's been ages.
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Okay, maybe Mike Johnson is a competent parliamentarian.
Nathan
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« Reply #1 on: June 17, 2014, 10:35:54 PM »

This is one of the few horror franchises where each film is of about the same quality as the original. The series shifts tonally in the second and third pictures - they're less dreamy than the original and more slapdash black humor ala Evil Dead - but OblIVion is easily the most surreal, and features a lot of cut scenes from the original, used as flashbacks. They're all worth seeing.

That's really good to know. I might seek out the rest of these.

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From what I've heard about John Dies at the End it seems like the sort of movie I'd enjoy. How would you describe its tone by comparison to Bubba Ho-Tep or, say, the original Little Shop of Horrors?
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Okay, maybe Mike Johnson is a competent parliamentarian.
Nathan
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« Reply #2 on: June 17, 2014, 11:47:01 PM »
« Edited: June 21, 2014, 02:55:37 AM by asexual trans victimologist »

I'd actually compare it to a funnier, somewhat less overtly horror-themed Drag Me To Hell - there's quite a bit of overlap between Coscarelli's style and Raimi's generally.

That sounds excellent. I have various crows to pluck with some of Raimi's more recent work but his a lot of his stuff I still enjoy quite a lot.

Also, the weird thing about OblIVion and its flashbcks is that it suggests that even the parts of the film set in the 'present day' of 1998 (parts of the picture involve time travel) happen contemporaneously as the 1979 original.

I recently read a novel involving time travel in which one timeline seemed to be set in multiple different stages of Internet culture's development at the same time--by an author who was clearly familiar with Internet culture--so I'm used that sort of thing at this point. This was a book that was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, incidentally.
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