Thursday, August 22, 2024

16) Starman (1984)


Director
John Carpenter

Cast
Jeff Bridges - Scott Hayden / Star Man
Karen Allen - Jenny Hayden
Charles Martin Smith - Mark Shermin
Richard Jaeckel - George Fox
Robert Phalen - Major Bell
Tony Edwards - Sergeant Lemon
John Walter Davis - Brad Heinmuller
Ted White - Deer Hunter


If our government... heck, if several governments around the world got together and sent a message into the vast spaces of space inviting whomever is out there to come visit Earth, and someone from another planet accepted that invitation and showed up, these governments would probably welcome them with a lot of firepower. If aliens are visiting us, that's probably why they do so cautiously and secretly. Such a global welcome wagon doesn't seem far-fetched and alies are too smart to put it past us.
On a personal note, I've unwittingly focused on sci-fi movies about charming and likeable aliens released during the 1980s in my last few reviews. Maybe I ought to toss in a few movies with hostile aliens trying to take over Earth and ruin everyone's good time. Remember in "Ghostbusters II" when Dr. Venkman (Bill Murray's character) said, "And that is the whole problem with aliens, is you just can't trust them. Occasionally you meet a nice one: Starman, E.T. But usually they turn out to be some kind of big lizard!"
John Carpenter's 1986 sci-fi romance "Starman" is a movie that pops up in conversation from time to time. Not often but comes up.  
In this movie, Marion Ravenwood from "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and...uhh... the last two Indiana Jones movies, "Crystal Skull" and "Dial of...weak characters," hooks up with "the Dude" from "The Big Lebowski" who's actually an alien from Alienland. 
In 1977, in "Starman" time, a space probe is launched carrying a gold LP. That's a record for anyone who has no idea what an LP is. This record has a message inviting any alien civilizations with record players that might exist out there to come visit Earth. 
Well, an alien civilization picks up the invitation and accepts the offer.
Karen Allen and Jeff Bridges in "Starman."
So, they send a scout to Earth to see if it's safe to visit and worth their time, because these aliens aren't stupid. To nobody's surprise, the U.S. Government shoots down the alien scout spacecraft, which was sent to make contact with earthlings. 
The ship crashes somewhere in Wisconsin. 
The alien scout, which looks like a ball of glowing energy, makes its way into the home of Jenny Hayden (Karen Allen). She's a widow living on her own.
While she's asleep, it rummages through some photo albums of her late husband Scott (Jeff Bridges). She keeps a lock of his hair in her album. The alien extracts some of her husband's DNA from that lock of hair, and is able to take his form. 
Jenny witnesses the alien's quick development from baby to grown man right in her own living room. Once the shock where's off, she thinks this thing that looks just like her deceased husband  must be hostile. So, she tries to escape.
The only English this alien knows is what he and his race heard from the message sent by the government. 
He doesn't know how to ask Jenny to drive him from Wisconsin to a rendezvous point in Arizona to meet up with the head ship his people are sending to pick him up. He only has a few days to meet up with them, or they'll ditch him and he'll die. 
Jenny thinks he's kidnapping her and forcing her to drive him to Barringer Crater in Arizona. He finally reveals to Jenny that he means no harm, and is really a friendly entity. He's here to observe.
National Security Agency director George Fox (Richard Jaeckel) is able to determine that the spaceman's ship was initially heading to the Barringer Crater before being shot down. So, he sends scientist Mark Shermin (Charles Martin Smith), who helped develop the original invitation, to find the spaceman and capture him on behalf of the U.S. Government. 
Shermin manages to figure out that the spaceman is disguised as a human, and that he and Jenny are travelling across the U.S. towards Arizona.
Meanwhile, as Jenny and the Starman drive day and night to get to Arizona, the spaceman closely observes how people of Earth behave. He also has special alien powers, like the power of healing and reviving dead things. 
As expected, Jenny falls in love with him, which is understandable considering he's a clone of her deceased husband! The Starman, meanwhile, is a kind-hearted loveable alien who just wants to see how people on Earth behave, and do good things along the way, like revive a dead deer.
I have to take some points off for a weird sex scene that's presented as charming. Since the alien is basically a clone of Scott, he and Jenny have sex on board a box car. And afterwards, he tells her, "I gave you a baby tonight." It's awkward!
Earlier, Jenny told the alien she and Scott had tried to have a baby but couldn't due to medical issues.
So, since he has Scott's DNA, he says the baby is from both himself and from Scott's. The baby will have his huge alien intellect and special alien powers. It's creepy and anything but touching. 
Jeff Bridges doing weird alien things in "Starman."
Anyways, "Starman" is basically E.T. turned science fiction romance. The main character comes to Earth for a visit (like aliens tend to do) and then has to get back home quickly. 
The movie could easily go into the realm of being a silly fish-out-of-water flick, but it doesn't. It narrows things down between two characters and makes them interesting and memorable. It's a more personable and relatable film, with some feel-good elements. I'm not referring to that weird sex scene.  
How Karen Allen could maintain a straight face working alongside Jeff Bridges as he delivers his lines like he's impersonating an dubbed monster movie while moving his head like a timid canary deserves a round of applause. 
Director John Carpenter needs no introduction. He's directed some fantastic and popular movies. Carpenter is a legend in the realm of horror and sci-fi.  
I've mostly seen his horror movies, which is what Carpenter is best known for - "Halloween," "Christine," "In the Mouth of Madness," and "The Fog" to name a few titles, his science fiction movies don't normally go the route of romance. "The Thing," "They Live," and "Village of the Damned" are certainly not light-hearted feel-good sci-fi flicks. 
His 1992 comedy-drama "Memoirs of the Invisible Man" with Chevy Chase and Daryl Hannah, which I watched over 20 years ago, might be considered a bit similar to the kind of story "Starman" is as far as its romance is concerned. Carpenter's style is something I'm eager to dig into and discuss at some point. That'll be another post at another time. 
Until then, there's one or two more friendly alien movies from the 80s I plan to get to. Whether I do them next, or avert my attention to the hostile aliens, I haven't decided yet. 

Thursday, August 1, 2024

15) Flight of the Navigator (1986)

(4.5 's out of 5)


Director
Randal Kleiser

Cast
Joey Cramer - David Freeman
Veronica Cartwright - Helen Freeman
Cliff DeYoung - Bill Freeman
Sarah Jessica Parker - Carolyn McAdams
Matt Adler - Jeff Freeman (16 years old)
Albie Whitaker - Jeff Freeman (8 years old)
Howard Hesseman - Dr. Louis Faraday
Paul Mall (aka Paul Reubens) - voice of Max 


Disney's 1986 sci-fi adventure film, "Flight of the Navigator" is a movie I loved in my youth. 
I had the impression it was a movie not too many people noticed. If that was the case years ago, it seems to have been pulled from the ranks of minor obscurity where a number of Disney movies from the 1980s remain. It is a much appreciated and fondly remembered movie now, looked fondly upon with nostalgia. 
That certainly isn't the case with some of their other movies which Disney probably wants to keep hidden under the secretive Disney vault rug such as "Midnight Madness," and "The Devil and Max Devil" which I've mentioned before. 
The story begins in 1978, in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., as 12-year-old David Freeman (Joey Cramer) and his family are set to celebrate July 4th on their boat out in the water where they'll shoot off some fireworks. 
David has to go fetch his kid brother, Jeff (Albie Whitaker) at his friend's house. 
Walking through a wooded area, Jeff scares him by jumping out of a tree and then runs home. Before going home himself, David peers into a ravine, falls in and is knocked unconscious. 
Joey Cramer as David in "Flight of the Navigator."
When he wakes up and returns home, someone else is living in his house. His own family is nowhere to be found. 
David doesn't know that the year is 1986 and that he has been missing for eight years. 
When police reunite him with his family, he's shocked to find his family has aged, but he's still 12. His younger brother, Jeff, is now older than David. 
Meanwhile, an alien ship crashes into some power lines. NASA confiscates the ship and brings it back to the space center in Florida. 
While in the hospital for observation, doctors notice his brain wave patterns are creating images that match the design of the downed space craft. His brain is also filled with star charts.  
Dr. Louis Faraday (Howard Hesseman) over at NASA is told about the images coming out of David's head. He persuades David's parents to allow their son to spend 48-hours at NASA for observations, promising them he'll get answers as to where David has been the last eight years, and why he hasn't aged a day. 
By examining David's brain waves, Dr. Faraday and other NASA scientists deduce that the boy was taken to the planet Phaelon 560 light years from Earth. 
To get there, the ship travelled faster than the speed of light for over two hours. Time passed slowly on Earth causing everyone to age normally. For David, the trip was only a couple hours causing him to barely age at all. 
Faraday is going to need to break his 48-hour promise and keep David there longer.
The ship starts to telepathically communicate with David. 
He manages to sneak out of his room at NASA, thanks to the help of NASA intern Carolyn McAdams (Sarah Jessica Parker - yeah, she's in this), make his way to the hanger where the ship is being kept, and sneak onboard. 
David meets the ship's robotic commander (voiced by Paul Reubens, aka Pee-Wee Herman, who is credited as Paul Mall), which introduces itself as a Trimaxion Drone Ship. David calls the robot commander "Max" for short. 
And Max makes David the navigator. 
Max says that since humans use only 10 percent of their brains, he took David aboard to keep additional information needed for an experimental project inside his brain. Max has been travelling the spans of the galaxy to collect specimens from other planets. 
David agrees to undergo a mind transfer so Max can collect the information in his head. This introduces Max to human emotion and behavior. 
The two travel around the world, and out into space, as David tries to get back to his family.  
He wants to return to his own time when he was picked up. But Max thinks going back into time could prove deadly. 
"Flight of the Navigator" starts off on a serious, dramatic tone and then shifts into an adventure. 
It glides along the realm of goofiness, especially when Max transfers information from David's mind and starts speaking like Pee-Wee Herman. 
David also adopts one of the alien species called a Pukemaron collected on board the ship as his own personal pet/ sidekick. There's also a music sequence with "I Get Around" by the Beach Boys which might have been hip, or rad, or cool back in the 1980s. It's a sequence that didn't age well. Cheesy! But I'm happy to look past all that.
Thankfully, the silliness knows when to say when. In other words, the silly factor doesn't overstay its welcome. It entertains the kids in the audience for as long as it needs to, and then jumps back into the serious mode it needs. 
Joey Cramer gives a respectable performance. This works especially when his world is changed drastically completely at random, and he cannot wrap his head around why his life has changed. 
He makes David a sympathetic, memorable and very likeable character. It doesn't surprise me that fans of the movie have flocked to him at conventions and appearances all these years later.  
It's a well-performed fun family movie with decent special effects and a tight theme on the importance of family.
I don't know if "Flight of the Navigator" was an obscure sci-fi movie. Like a lot of movies from the same decade, it has since had a resurgence among nostalgic fans thanks to its inclusion on the streaming app, Disney+ as well as the 2020 documentary, "Life After the Navigator."
The "Trimaxion Drone" ship from "Flight of the Navigator" on
display at Hollywood Studios in Walt Disney World.
photo by Mike Sellman
Joey Cramer had a fall from grace after various arrests including one in 2016 in connection with a bank robbery up in Canada. But it looks as though he has amended his rough past and embraced the joy and thrill the now 38-year-old movie continues to give audiences. Kudos to Joey Cramer!
It's an innocent movie with a captivating plot. It's likeable. And like most off-the-radar movies, especially from Disney, "Flight of the Navigator" has its cult following. This following is well deserved.
Randal Kleiser has directed some favorited movies - "Grease," "The Blue Lagoon." "White Fang." and "Honey, I Blew Up the Kid." Not great films but enjoyed never-the-less. 
I give "Flight of the Navigator" a high rating due to its enjoyability, emotion, innocence, complexity alongside its simplicity, warmth, respectable special effects, and depictions of the importance of family. 
I recall seeing the Trimaxion Drone ship from "Flight of the Navigator" on the backlot tour at Disney World's Hollywood Studios back in 2014. I wondered if I was the only person on that tram who recognized it and knew where it was from. I'm sure I wasn't but I like to think I was. 
There has been chatter online about a reboot. Selfishly, I want "Flight of the Navigator" to remain that smaller innocent film I enjoyed time and time again so many years ago. 

18) End of the World (1977)

(1 out of 5) " Unfortunately, there is no more time! " Director John Hayes Cast Christopher Lee - Fr. Pergado Kirk Scott - Prof. A...