Behind the Screams!

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Behind the Screams!

Some fun behind the scenes shots of horror and sci-fi films…

 

Baragon the horny Kaiju

Baragon the horny Kaiju

Robots in Film – A Complete Pictorial History

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Calling All Robots!

Robots in Film – A Complete Pictorial History

*If you want to see my top 10, click here: Top 10 Robots in film and TV

1900 to 1960’s

1960’s to 1980’s:

1980’s to present:

The BIG list of film and TV robots:

(more or less in alphabetical order)

Ash from Alien

Astro Boy (anime – Japan)

The Astro-Creeps (unnamed robot w/Bela Lugosi 1940)

Alfie – Barbarella

Bishop from Aliens

BOX in Logan’s Run

Blade Runner – Roy & Rachel

B9 – Lost in Space – Robot B-9

Cylon from Battlestar Galactica

Chani – in The Devil Girl from Mars

The Colossus of New York

CP3O from some obscure sci-fi film 😉

Data from Star Trek: Next Generation

DV8 – from Crash & Burn

Destroyer from Thor

Ed209 and Robocop from RoboCop I & II

Fembots in Austin Powers and Dr. Goldfoot films &
TV shows The 6 Million Dollar Man and The Bionic Woman

Gog – from Gog

GORT from The Day the Earth Stood Still

Goliath in Virus

Giant Alien Robot in Monsters vs. Aliens

Giant Robo (Japan)

Gigantor (1969 animated – Japan)

The Gunslinger- Westworld

The Golden Army – Hellboy 2

Huey, Dewey, and Louie – Silent Running

The Iron Giant

 Johnny 5 – Short Circuit

John the Robot in the films:

  • Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965)
  • Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968),

Johnny Sokko and Flying Robot (Japan – 1968)

Jet-Jaguar from Godzilla vs. Megalon

Kronos

Mark13 in Hardware

Mogera from the Toho film, The Mysterians

Mecha-Kong

Mechagodzilla

Maria Futura – Metropolis

Maximilian – The Black Hole

Marvin – The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy

Moon Trap – alien robotics

Proteus IV in Demon Seed (1977)

Pacific Rim (2013) various including Gypsy

RoMan from Robot Monster

Robot Boxers in Real Steel

R2D2 from some 70’s flick

Robbie the robot from The Forbidden Planet

Rosey – The Jetsons

Robot in Heavy Metal (1981)

Robot Teachers in Class of 1999 (1990)

Rapist Robots in Flesh Gordon (1974)

Seven of Nine, from Star Trek: Voyager

Sonny from I-Robot

Screamers assorted killer robots

The Sentinels – The Matrix films
Saturn 3 – Robot

Star Crash – assorted Robots

The Shape of Things to Come – various robots

Surrogates – replacement robots

Twiki from Buck Rogers

Target Earth
– Invader robots

Tripods from War of the Worlds (2004)

Terminator Robots:

  • T-800
    T-1000
    Terminatrix – TX
    Harvesters
    Skynet ‘Tank’ Robot
    T-600

Transformers various including Optimus Prime and Bumble Bee

Tobar the Great

Ultraman (Japan)

Wall-E – Wall-E

War Robot – Judge Dread (1995)

Zathbot  – Zathura (2005)

Of course there are a slew of robots in TV and Films such as Dr. Who and the Star Wars saga but I think I’ve mentioned the most memorable and widely known.

If I have missed anybody important, let me know. I will add it to my list!

Precursor: Movies that influenced movies

Precursor: Movies that influenced movies

These are films with striking similarities. In most cases, if you like the blockbuster film, you will like the film that came before it.

There wouldn’t be this, without that…

The Terminator (1984)
This blockbuster movie featured the unstoppable, self-governed, android killing machine. Although it had a relatively small budget sci-fi fans loved its ideas and concepts and helped turn Terminator into a succesful Franchaise. At the time, the film seemed to be a one-of-a-kind look at a possible and dismal future…

however,
11 years prior…

Westworld (1973)
Westworld is a luxury resort for the wealthy, where you could re-enact gunfights and showdowns and live the life of the old west. The reason you are able to shoot the bad guys is they are all actually advanced robot androids. Everything was going well until one android in particular (played by Yul Brenner) was no longer satisfied with constantly losing his gun battles to the inferior humans. He loads his gun with real bullets and becomes… an unstoppable killing machine. Written and directed by Michael Crichton, you can also draw some parallels to Jurassic Park.

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The Matrix (1999)
This mind-bending blockbuster movie melded the real world with the cyber world. It really changed the game for action films and was praised for its modern concepts. It felt like a totally new and unanticipated field in science fiction.

However, It probably would not have been
created if it weren’t for 8 years earlier….

The Lawnmower Man (1992)
Based on a story by Stephen King, a simple-minded landscaper is linked/ interfaced with a computer as a science study for improving intelligence. He becomes a super-genius and within a short time learns how to control aspects of the cyber world with his mind. In the final act of the film, he leaves his physical body and becomes a cyber entity only, as he prepares to take control over all computer systems of the world for his own conquest. The film uses some early CG effects that are not all that impressive by today’s standards but really contrast the advances made in the field within the decade. There is a big nod to The Lawnmower Man at the end of the Matrix, when Neo says, “It will start with a million phone calls…” This line is also the ending of the Lawnmower Man as he tells the scientist how he will connect with all the computers in the world.

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Avatar (2009)
Avatar features a race of different beings that live in a world that honors a sacred tree. The film became a blockbuster hit and won awards for its depiction of this strange new world. The films use of CGI to create a whole new universe of fantasy and sci-fi, is praised by fans and critics…

But six years previous,
a lesser known film…

Kaena – the Prophecy (2003)
A young female rebel wants to know more about her tree bound existence and questions her elders about whether there is something beyond their tree-world. As unseen forces threaten to doom their world it is up to Kaena to discover ancient secrets and save her race from utter annihilation. Decent CGI was praised for creating a convincing and beautiful fantasy and sci-fi world. This film is not nearly as advanced as Avatar but fans of the animation and fantasy/sci-fi genre will enjoy it.

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Alien (1979)
This groundbreaking film brought sci-fi and horror together like no other while overtones of social issues and human conflict highlighted some of the issues of the human condition. The movie featured magnificently filmed spacecraft moving amongst the stars, a small crew in dense confinement that breeds dissention and conflict, and an uninvited visitor that hitches a ride with one of the characters (like a Trojan horse), getting into the secure inner sanctum of the ships confines. Compare that to a film 11 years earlier…

The Green Slime (1968)
It is stunning how the plot points and pacing parallel each other in these films. An unknown life form on a meteor hitches a ride back to the space station on one of the films characters, penetrating the secure inner sanctum of the ship. There is heavy conflict among the two main characters on how best to handle the situation. The alien life form breeds and mutates threatening to take over the whole station. The main concern in the film is to not give this life form a path back to earth where it could breed out of control and threaten mankind’s existence. There are some impressively filmed space craft scenes in this movie for its time. The dialogue is cheesy at times and the acting a bit stiff but those who like B-movies will enjoy this. The aliens are a bit rubbery looking and not all that impressive by today’s measure and seemed more like FX-techniques left over from the 1950’s sci-fi era.

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here are some photos:

more to come….