

"Lifeforce" elevates craziness to an art form. I cannot fully articulate why it is deserving of being one spot ahead of Samuel Fuller's "Pickup on South Street" on my list of favorite films, but I do know that it is. ".it is quite simply THE most audacious, spectacular, hilarious, absurd, insane, riotous, crazy, deliriously demented science fiction film of all time. But also a gorgeous female space vampire (Mathilda May) appears unclothed! And Patrick Stewart is in the film: I was blown away by the basic concept - an alien ship (150 miles long!) with only 3 living(?) occupants in a wide elliptical orbit hidden in the coma of Halley's comet so it nears Earth every 75 years whereupon incredibly bad things happen. Lifeforce, also known as "Space Vampires": It’s a good movie, certainly it shaped my childhood, but aside from the more “meta” mythopoetic elements of deconstructing the hero’s journey, it’s pure escapism and obviously was a huge hit and set the tone for the future.

Honestly I just love all movies but I do think Star Wars ruined it. While heavily inspired by classic games such as Castlevania and Ninja Gaiden, Brave Earth: Prologue strikes its own balance between methodical, high risk gameplay and aggressive, fast-paced action. It’s just such a different situation then like Adam Driver, or Chris Pratt stumbling through being Mr.Likable with a female lead who’s can act but only there because it would be weird if the script didn’t have a romantic arc. Brave Earth: Prologue - Brave Earth: Prologue is a challenging and engaging action platformer, made in the 8-bit style of the NES. The casting was crazy back then to male lead actors like Charlton Heston look haggard and old, and talk a lot, they sometimes just flip out, actresses are on the other hand usually just sexy young starlets who can’t act.
#Sinlen brave earth serial
There’s something about the corniness of these movies that’s very claustrophobic and tense, they are exciting because the movies have a thesis that’s like reading a serial killer’s manifesto, dark.

I cried during Soylent Green and even Rollerball. But I have a real emotional attachment with these movies. The thing is that it’s pretty inexplicable because I can clearly see the flaws of these movies, they look corny, a lot bad dialogue written by nerds. I think the answer is that they are actually science fiction, as opposed to most “sci-fi” films now that are just based in escapism rather than speculation. I was trying to think about why I sought these films out. Was born in 1991 and really had to go out of my way to pirate digital versions of these when I was in college.
