Showing posts with label SHE-WOLF OF LONDON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SHE-WOLF OF LONDON. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

1986: BIGGLES MOVIE PROMO STRIP - PART ONE

This is the first (of five) half-page comic strips, published weekly, to promote the upcoming BIGGLES movie.

Despite following the strip at the time (this appeared in EAGLE cover-dated 3 May 1986) I had absolutely no interest in going to see the movie.

Decades later, I suddenly decided I DID want to see it and ordered an el-cheapo copy of the DVD.  It's a weird - but not unlikable - mix of WWI daring-do and - of all things - time travel.  The producers obviously thought that the original stories wouldn't appeal to a contemporary audience (frankly, they were probably right) but decided to go ahead and make the movie anyway.  Maybe they thought BACK TO THE FUTURE had opened-up a whole new market for time travel fare.

It's a well put together distraction and its always good to see Peter Cushing, albeit in his final film role (he died in 1994).  Biggles himself was played by familiar screen face Neil Dickson, so excellent in the underrated (and seldom-seen) SHE-WOLF OF LONDON.

Lensed in the UK, some of the attempts to pass-off London as the States fall spectacularly flat but the flying sequences are well-realised.

ABC Cinemas were a venerable British chain which - in a prescient move - expanded into TV in the fifties by securing an ITV franchise.  Their lasting contribution to geekdom being THE AVENGERS throughout the sixties.  Restructuring shenanigans at the end of the decade saw ABC shoehorned into the new Thames Television operation, serving London during the week and a major supplier of networked fare.  The ABC cinema chain, along with its parent Associated British Picture Corporation and Elstree studios, was sold to EMI in the late sixties.

With the cinema business brought to its knees by the twin attacks of broadcast TV and home video in the early eighties, Thorn-EMI offloaded its screen entertainment business to Cannon (yup, them) and the ABC chain was rebranded first Cannon and, through various takeovers, subsequently MGM, Virgin, UGC and Cineworld.

The brand was briefly revived between 1995 and 2000 when Virgin sold some of the (generally smaller) sites in the ex-MGM portfolio.  I remember going to see a film at the resurrected ABC on London's Tottenham Court Road and - for some reason - they'd not only revived the name but also a very ancient piece of on-screen animation which, when it played, was greeted by howls of laughter by the audience.

- To Be Continued - 

Friday, 15 March 2013

1995: METAMORPH II (Fanzine)

METAMORPH II was the successor to SHADOWSPHERE from the same editor and stable of writers.  Unsurprisingly, in followed pretty much the same formula in terms of subjects covered, writing style and format.

The first issue appeared early in 1995 with subsequent issues appearing roughly quarterly until (at least) Autumn 1997.  The final two issues tampered with the format slightly and appeared as two specials, devoted to women in SF and British telefantasy.

I've posted the covers for each along with the SHE-WOLF OF LONDON (love that show!) episode guide that appeared in the first issue (Shadowsphere and Metamorph II were pretty much the only magazines, amateur or professional, to give the long-forgotten Anglo-American show any serious coverage) as a sampler of the contents.  

ISSUE 1
Winter 1995

ISSUE 2
Spring 1995
ISSUE 3
Summer 1995
ISSUE 4
October 1995
ISSUE 5
Spring 1996
ISSUE 6
Summer 1996
ISSUE 6 SUPPLEMENT
ISSUE 7
Autumn 1996
ISSUE 8 - KINKY BOOTS AND SKIMPY SUITS
Spring 1997
ISSUE 9 - FLYING THE FLAG
Autumn 1997
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