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The Martian Drive-In Podcast
Summary: The Martian Drive In is a fortnightly podcast which looks at two obscure science fiction, fantasy or horror films.
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- Artist: Terry Frost
- Copyright: Copyright 2018 Terry Frost. All rights reserved.
Podcasts:
This time it's worlds run by women. First the 2015 Belgian magic realism comedy Le Tout Nouvelle Testament where God's daughter saves the World from God and then an alternate universe where men are a dying breed. Support the podcat via Patreon
This time around, I'm looking at short science fiction and horror films that are free to stream from youtube. There are some great small films, imaginative and at times heart-warming. I also talk about Michael Winterbottom's 2003 science fiction movie Code 46 starring Tim Robbins and Samantha Morton. Support the podcast via Patreon.
This time around, I'm looking at short science fiction and horror films that are free to stream from youtube. There are some great small films, imaginative and at times heart-warming. I also talk about Michael Winterbottom's 2003 science fiction movie Code 46 starring Tim Robbins and Samantha Morton. Support the podcast via Patreon.
For this one, I take a look at Nigel Kneale's scientist hero Bernard Quatermass and more interestingly, the harsh, Darwinian cosmology of the Quatermass Universe. Support the Podcast via Patreon
For this one, I take a look at Nigel Kneale's scientist hero Bernard Quatermass and more interestingly, the harsh, Darwinian cosmology of the Quatermass Universe. Support the Podcast via Patreon
This time around, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Star Trek, I look at 1979's Star Trek: The Motion Picture and 1982's Star Trek 2: The Wrath Of Khan. Utopian science fiction, constantly evolving as time and society changes, Star Trek is an example of a durable, adaptable genre franchise. Support the podcast via Patreon.
This time around, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Star Trek, I look at 1979's Star Trek: The Motion Picture and 1982's Star Trek 2: The Wrath Of Khan. Utopian science fiction, constantly evolving as time and society changes, Star Trek is an example of a durable, adaptable genre franchise. Support the podcast via Patreon.
This time the theme is weird kids with extraordinary powers. To start, I look at the 2016 film Midnight Special starring Michael Shannon and Joel Edgerton and then we head back in time to 2012 for Rian Johnson's Looper starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Bruce Willis. Two films that take different viewpoints on science fiction. Plus, there's feedback. Support the podcast via Patreon
This time the theme is weird kids with extraordinary powers. To start, I look at the 2016 film Midnight Special starring Michael Shannon and Joel Edgerton and then we head back in time to 2012 for Rian Johnson's Looper starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Bruce Willis. Two films that take different viewpoints on science fiction. Plus, there's feedback. Support the podcast via Patreon
This time around, it's Christmas cheer, feral gingerbread men and a Jack-In-The-Box that looks like a human centipede in 2015's Christmas horror comedy Krampus starring Adam Scott and Toni Colette, then back to 1971 for Harry Kumel's lesbian vampire horror film Daughters of Darkness starring Delphine Seyrig, John Karlen and Andrea Rau. Support the podcast via Patreon or Krampus will get you.
This time around, it's Christmas cheer, feral gingerbread men and a Jack-In-The-Box that looks like a human centipede in 2015's Christmas horror comedy Krampus starring Adam Scott and Toni Colette, then back to 1971 for Harry Kumel's lesbian vampire horror film Daughters of Darkness starring Delphine Seyrig, John Karlen and Andrea Rau. Support the podcast via Patreon or Krampus will get you.
Who would have thought that genre films could be controversial and generate vicious personal attacks on the people acting in them? This time I look at two of them from 2016 that got knifed by MRAs and sundry other internet trolls: Star Trek Beyond, starring Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto, and Ghostbusters starring Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon and Lesley Jones. Fanboys really need to get their shit together. Support the podcast via Patreon
Who would have thought that genre films could be controversial and generate vicious personal attacks on the people acting in them? This time I look at two of them from 2016 that got knifed by MRAs and sundry other internet trolls: Star Trek Beyond, starring Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto, and Ghostbusters starring Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon and Lesley Jones. Fanboys really need to get their shit together. Support the podcast via Patreon
This time it's two movies written by the same man and produced by a different same man. Spaceflight IC-1 and The Earth Dies Screaming, one of which has a great title. Support the podcast via Patreon.
This time it's two movies written by the same man and produced by a different same man. Spaceflight IC-1 and The Earth Dies Screaming, one of which has a great title. Support the podcast via Patreon.