carpenter cuts.
Posted by
Ashton Lamont
at
1:30 AM
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Labels: action, film, John Carpenter, music, scares, sci-fi, sexyness
Screw the whole dang Netflix and chill thang, World War III is incoming so let's spend tonight listening to popular wide-band web receivers instead!
>http://websdr.ewi.utwente.nl:8901/
>http://websdr.k3fef.com:8901/
OR Select one geographically close to you:
>http://rx.linkfanel.net/
INSTRUCTIONS:
>Set Frequency to 4724.00, 8992.00 or 11175.00
>Set Mode to USB
>Tap "Wider" to increase bandwidth (2.7-3.0 kHz)
>Press "Chrome audio start" if necessary
>Listen!
AIR TRAFFIC:
> https://globe.adsbexchange.com/
> https://www.flightradar24.com/
MARITIME TRAFFIC:
> https://www.marinetraffic.com/
> https://www.vesselfinder.com/
LIVE UNIVERSAL AWARENESS MAP:
>https://liveuamap.com/en/
REAL TIME RADIATION WORLD MAP:
>https://www.gmcmap.com/index.asp
Well we're well and truly into the new year here, the kids are back to college tomorrow so we can no longer get completely drunk every night as real-life is about to rear it's ugly head and as expected the weather is absolutely Baltic.
So decided to celebrate the end of the holidays with this classic mainly because:A. It's set in a cold place
and
B. I remembered that this time last year I'd been waxing lyrical about Nigel Kneale in an actual commissioned piece (I get some occasionally) which shows at least someone at some point liked what I write.
Anyway, enjoy.
The Abominable Snowman (AKA The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas, 1957)
Dir: Val Guest.
Cast: Peter Cushing, Maureen Connell, Arnold Marlé, Richard Wattis, Forrest Tucker, Robert Brown and Wolfe Morris.
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| "They killed him. It was the sound of that howling. He couldn't stand it - it drove him mad." |
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| Peter farted....and it was an eggy one. |
She's not the only one set against the idea tho' as the local lama (Marle) would much prefer Rollason to concentrate all his efforts on his studies of the plants too.
You see the lama is totally convinced that there's no such thing as the Yeti, explaining to Rollason the the legends - and noises - are probably just wolves.
Or maybe rats.
Plus winter is coming meaning that the already treacherous mountains will quickly become unclimbable.
A wee bit like your mum.
Or is that unmountable?
Either way neither of those, it seems, are real words according to my spellchecker.
Neither wistful wife nor knowledgeable Nepalese can sway John tho' and he excitedly joins up with Friend’s party - Edward Shelley (latter day Bond boss M, Brown) and Andrew McNee (Brill) as well as a
single native guide Terry Kusang (Morris) - and heads off the very next day.
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| "Scarf on mah neck!" |
Although the group may seem small (as in members wise, Tucker is sporting some mighty manbreasts), Friend has planned it with almost military precision, the previous year he ordered a much larger team into the mountains to prepare their base camps in advance and stock them with such supplies as non-perishable food, rifles, first-aid gear, and radios.
In fact everything a Yeti hunting expedition would ever need including a huge sledge to bring the beast home on.
Sorted.
They've no sooner left the monastery tho' than things start to go awry with Rollason realising that his plan to merely observe the creatures in their natural habitat has been superseded by Friend's plan to shoot one and bring the body back for exhibition.
Which he really should have asked about before they left if I'm honest.
The situation isn't helped by the fact that NcNee has encountered the beast (or at least heard it) before and is slowly losing his mind at the thought of encountering it again.
Typical bloody Scotsman.
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| Maureen Connell: Ask your Granddad. |
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| "I can see your house from here Peter!" |
This it transpires is probably for the best seeing as by now Rollason, Friend and Shelley are currently being harassed by the dead Yeti's pals and as a combination of cabin fever (not the movie tho' thank fuck) and the lack of oxygen begins to take effect the three men must battle against not only their own fears and prejudices but a mysterious species that appears capable of invading their very minds.....
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| "Oh Vic....I've fallen." |
Inspired by the then recent reports concerning the mysterious Yeti, fueled in part by Sir Edmund Hillary’s photographs of large footprints
while ascending Mt. Everest in 1953 as well as the 1954 Snowman Expedition
(sponsored by the Daily Mail of all things), The Abominable Snowman plays against our expectations of a Hammer monster movie by having the titular creature not some blood crazed beast intent on killing everything with a normal shoe size but a creature that is determined to hide from man, waiting patiently to reclaim their world again once the ape-upstarts have destroyed themselves.
Their only acts of aggression against the humans is with a subtle use of telekinesis and telepathy, slowly driving the group mad as broken radios continue to broadcast and dead companions cry from the snowy wastes.
It's themes like this that not only would Kneale revisit but so would Doctor Who especially in its Quatermass inspired series 7, much to the writers mild annoyance.
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| "Brrrraaaa Shuper Ted! Do you require any scissors sonically sharpening?" |
Posted by
Ashton Lamont
at
6:00 PM
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Labels: big animals, film, reviews, teevee, the horror