Categories
Chocky Season 3: Chocky's Challenge

Episode 3.2

Chocky's ChallengeChocky’s first appearance before adults on planet Earth doesn’t have the intended effect; at least one professor at Cambridge insists that Albertine is playing some sort of trick on them. A newspaper article on her acceptance brings a flood of other parents to the college, claiming that their children are equally exceptional. Albertine meets other young people whose minds have been touched by Chocky, and all of them are keenly aware when another mind joins them.

written by Anthony Read
based on characters created by John Wyndham
directed by Bob Blagden
music by John Hyde

ChockyCast: Prentis Hancock (Arnold Meyer), Anabel Worrell (Albertine Meyer), James Hazeldine (David Gore), Andrew Ellams (Matthew Gore), Richard Wordsworth (Professor Ferris), Kristine Howarth (Professor Wade), Illona Linthwaite (Dr. Liddle), Roy Boyd (Professor Draycott), Joan Blackham (Mrs. Gibson), Freddie Brooks (Mike), Paul Russell (Paul), Karina Wilsher (Su Lin), Paul Shearer (Reporter), Michael Plaister (Porter), Glynis Brooks (Chocky)

LogBook entry by Earl Green

Categories
Season 3 (1986-1987) Tales From The Darkside

The Geezenstacks

Tales From The DarksideThe Hummels – Sam, his wife Edith, and their daughter Audrey – are visited by Edith’s brother, Richard. He’s brought a gift for Audrey: a large, elaborate dollhouse with four dolls. As Audrey begins playing with the dolls and concoting elaborate stories around their day-to-day lives, Sam is alarmed to notice that the scenarios Audrey imagines for her dolls are playing out in real life as well. Do the Hummels still have free will…or are their lives now at the whim of their daughter’s vivid and sometimes disturbing imagination?

teleplay by Nancy Doyne
based on a story by Frederic Brown
directed by Bill Travis
music by Charlie Morrow

Cast: Craig Wasson (Sam Hummel), Tandy Cronyn (Edith Hummel), Larry Pine (Uncle Richard), Lana Hirsch (Audrey Hummel), Paul Sparer (Narrator)

LogBook entry by Earl Green

Categories
Starman

Secrets

StarmanOn the run after another narrow escape from Agent Fox, Paul and Scott learn from a news report that Jenny Hayden is also in Los Angeles, having escaped from a hospital where she was being treated. A scant trail or clues leads them to a halfway house where they meet a woman named Angela, who claims to have been a friend of Jenny’s. She asks them about Jenny, presumably so she knows Paul and Scott are actually Jenny’s family, while leading them to places she says Jenny used to hang out…but there’s no sign of Scott’s mother anywhere. There are plenty of signs, however, that Agent Fox has planted the story about Jenny to trap his prey…but if that’s the case, then who is Angela, and has she ever met Jenny Hayden?

written by Randall Wallace
directed by Bob Sweeney
music by Dana Kaproff

StarmanCast: Robert Hays (Starman / Paul Forrester), C.B. Barnes (Scott Hayden), Michael Cavanaugh (Agent George Fox), Lisa Blount (Angela), Jonas Marlowe (Bobby), Michael Prince (Dr. Schuyler), Patrick Culliton (Wiley), Mie Hunt (Anne Nishakura), Frank Lugo (Mr. Romero), David Bowman (Sportscaster), Pete Gonneau (Newscaster), Peter Jolly (Orderly), Kim Strauss (Young Man), Sam Temeles (Patient)

LogBook entry by Earl Green

Categories
Ewoks Star Wars

The Season Scepter

EwoksTeebo the Ewok, again practicing magic, seems to change the seasons from summer to winter in the blink of an eye. Racing to seek the advice of Ewok leader Logray, Wicket, Teebo and the other Ewoks find not their chief, but a message from the Leaf Queen relayed by the Sun Star: the Sun King needs Logray’s help urgently. Wicket and his friends answer that call instead – not really the help the Sun King was expecting – but on the way to the Sun King’s palace, they’re attacked by the minions of the Snow King, who has stolen the Season Scepter from his brother and turned summer to winter. Those minions capture Kneesaa, and now Wicket will have to rescue her and steal the Season Scepter back…or it may be winter on Endor forever.

Ewokswritten by Bob Carrau
directed by Dale Schott
music by Patrick Gleeson

Cast: Denny Delk (Wicket), James Cranna (Teebo), Sue Murphy (Latara), Jeanne Reynolds (Kneesaa / Malani), Rick Cimino (Chief Chirpa / Logray)

LogBook entry by Earl Green

Categories
Real Ghostbusters, The Season 1

When Halloween Was Forever

The Real GhostbustersAs Halloween approaches, the Ghostbusters are overworked – something is rattling the spirit world’s cage, and Egon thinks a seventh-century Irish relic on display at a museum might be to blame. Goblin-like creatures activate the relic in a ritual, releasing the spirit of Samhain, who quickly claims all of the spirits and undead of New York City as his personal minions – including Slimer. Clocks and watches around the world begin to slow, and Egon deduces that Samhain intends to bring time to a stop so that Halloween night – his night – will never end. Worse yet, Egon has a plan that requires him to send Ray, Peter and Winston into harm’s way so that he can shed some light on Samhain’s scheme.

written by J. Michael Straczynski
directed by Richard Raynis
music by Haim Saban and Shuki Levy

The Real GhostbustersCast: Arsenio Hall (Winston Zeddemore), Maurice LaMarche (Dr. Egon Spengler), Lorenzo Music (Peter Venkman), Laura Summer (Janine Melnitz), Frank Welker (Dr. Raymond Stantz / Slimer), Bill Martin (Samhain), Julie Bennett (Cynthia Crawford)

Notes: The episode prominently features the song “Midnight Action”, performed by Tahiti featuring Tyren Perry and Tonya Townsend; the featured songs in the first season all originated from the official soundtrack album for the series. Samhain returns in several later episodes.

LogBook entry by Earl Green

Categories
Classic Season 23 Doctor Who

Terror of the Vervoids (Trial of a Time Lord, parts 9-12)

Doctor WhoThe Doctor finally gets his chance to present his defense in his trial. He presents an adventure from his own future, in which he and new companion Melanie are summoned to a posh space luxury liner by an anonymous distress call. While the ship’s captain – who has met the Doctor on a previous occasion – and the incompetent chief of security initially regard the Doctor and Mel as stowaways, they find themselves with other problems when murders begin to occur aboard the ship, and three scientists are being very secretive about their hydroponics experiment in the ship’s cargo deck. As more passengers die mysteriously, the ship’s captain asks the Doctor to help – but, according to the evidence, the Doctor isn’t really all that helpful…which isn’t how he remembers the story.

Order the DVDwritten by Pip Baker & Jane Baker
directed by Chris Clough
music by Malcolm Clarke

Cast: Colin Baker (The Doctor), Nicola Bryant (Peri), Bonnie Langford (Melanie), Michael Jayston (The Valeyard), Lynda Bellingham (Inquisitor), Honor Blackman (Professor Lasky), Michael Craig (Commodore Travers), Denys Hawthorne (Rudge), Yolande Palfrey (Janet), Tony Scoggo (Enzu/Grenville), Malcolm Tierney (Doland), David Allister (Bruchner), Arthur Hewlett (Kimber), Simon Slaters (Edwardes), Barbara Ward (Mutant), Sam Howard (Atza), Leon Davis (Ortezo), Hugh Beverton (Guard), Mike Mungarvan (Duty Officer), Peppi Borza (First Vervoid), Bob Appleby (Second Vervoid), Barbara Ward (Ruth Baxter)

Broadcast from November 1 through 22, 1986

LogBook entry & review by Earl Green

Categories
Movies Original Series

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

Star Trek MoviesStardate 8390.0: An enormous alien probe on a heading for Earth encounters and completely cripples the USS Saratoga, continuing unchecked toward Earth, where a high-ranking Klingon Ambassador is trying to convince the Federation Council that the Genesis device was, in fact, a weapon designed to eradicate the Klingon species. The Ambassador promises that there will be no peace between the Klingons and Federation while Kirk lives. In the meantime, Kirk and the rest of his crew, excluding Saavik, who stays behind, leave Vulcan in their hijacked Bird of Prey, which McCoy has christened the “Bounty.”

While en route to Earth, they receive an emergency transmission informing them that Earth’s defenses have been neutralized by a huge vessel of unknown origin, and that the alien ship is beginning to destroy the atmosphere and oceans, all the time transmitting indecipherable sounds. Analyzing a recording of the sounds transmitted by the alien ship, Spock determines that the probe can not be responded to because the sounds are apparently analogous to songs sung by humpback whales – extinct in the 23rd century. Kirk decides to risk a slingshot around the sun to send the Bounty into a time warp to Earth of the past and bring back enough whales to repopulate the species and, more importantly, respond to the probe.

The Bounty lands in San Francisco, 1986, and the crew splits into three teams. Kirk and a thinly disguised Spock set out to find the whales, which Kirk decides to take from the Cetacean Institute, a museum devoted to whales. There, Kirk meets Dr. Gillian Taylor as she leads a tour of the Institute, during which she shows off the Institute’s two whales, George and Gracie. Gillian also reveals that the whales will have to be released into the open sea due to the cost of keeping them in captivity. Spock dives into the whale tank and mind-melds with one of the whales, finding that Gracie is pregnant, but Gillian throws them out of the Institute, only to find them walking back to Golden Gate Park and picks them up again.

Chekov and Uhura find the Navy’s USS Enterprise and sneak in to collect photon spillage from the ship’s nuclear reactor in order to replenish the dilithium crystals on the Bounty for the return trip to the 23rd century, while Scotty, Sulu and McCoy seek out the materials necessary to build a tank for the whales and their water in the Bounty. Scotty’s team visits a plexiglas factory, where he trades the “recipe” for transparent aluminum (common in the 23rd century) in for the necessary materials and the loan of a helicopter to return the tank walls to the Bounty. (Scotty insists no damage is being done to history – perhaps the director of the factory to whom Scotty revealed the “secret” is the inventor!) Uhura and Chekov gather the necessary energy to ready the Bounty for its next time warp, but they are detected on the carrier. Chekov gives Uhura the collection device and has her beamed back to the Bounty, while he is captured and briefly interrogated.

Chekov escapes again, but is seriously wounded and taken to a hospital. Kirk, having befriended Gillian and learned how upset she is that “her” whales are about to be turned loose, gets the frequency to radio tags that the whales will be carrying so scientists can track them, but even Gillian doesn’t know the exact location to which the whales will be taken. Kirk receives the news of Chekov’s injury and, with McCoy, mounts a rescue operation which will require the help of Gillian. They enter the hospital disguised as surgeons, and McCoy performs a quick fix returning Chekov to normal after expressing alarm that 20th century medicine would have called for a hole to be drilled into Chekov’s skull. They “kidnap” Chekov from the hospital and take him back to the Bounty, where Gillian stows away by joining Kirk just as he is beamed aboard.

The Bounty lifts off and reaches the whales’ coordinates in the Pacific, only to find a whaling ship is in hot pursuit of George and Gracie. Kirk orders the Bounty to decloak, which frightens the poachers away while the two whales are beamed aboard. The Bounty makes it back to the 23rd century and crash-lands in San Francisco Bay after being disabled by the probe, and Kirk releases the whales into the ocean. George and Gracie re-establish contact between Earth’s whales and the aliens – a dialogue which had been in progress before man even existed – and Gillian begins her new life as a Federation cetacean biology specialist.

Kirk and the others are exonerated for all charges against them concerning the theft and destruction of the starship Enterprise, except for Kirk, who is demoted to Captain and given command of a new, more advanced vessel: the new Enterprise, NCC-1701-A.

Order this movie on DVDDownload this episode via Amazon's Unboxscreenplay by Steve Meerson & Peter Krikes and Harve Bennett & Nicholas Meyer
story by Leonard Nimoy & Harve Bennett
directed by Leonard Nimoy
music by Leonard Rosenman

Cast: William Shatner (Kirk), Leonard Nimoy (Spock), DeForest Kelley (Dr. McCoy), James Doohan (Scotty), George Takei (Sulu), Walter Koenig (Chekov), Nichelle Nichols (Uhura), Jane Wyatt (Amanda), Catherine Hicks (Dr. Gillian Taylor), Mark Lenard (Sarek), Robin Curtis (Lt. Saavik), Robert Ellenstein (Federation Council President), John Schuck (Klingon Ambassador), Brock Peters (Admiral Cartwright), Michael Snyder (Starfleet Communications Officer), Michael Berryman (Starfleet Display Officer), Mike Brislane (USS Saratoga Science Officer), Grace Lee Whitney (Commander Rand), Vijay Amritraj (Starship Captain), Majel Barrett (Commander Chapel), Nick Ramus (USS Saratoga Helmsman), Thaddeus Golas (Controller #1), Martin Pistone (Controller #2), Scott DeVenney (Bob Briggs), Viola Stimpson (Lady in tour), Phil Rubenstein (Garbageman #1), John Miranda (Garbageman #2), Joe Knowland (Antique Store Owner), Bob Sarlatte (Waiter), Everett Lee (Cafe Owner), Richard Harder (Joe), Alex Henteloff (Nichols), Tony Edwards (Pilot), Eve Smith (Elderly Patient), Tom Mustin (Intern #1), Greg Karas (Intern #2), Raymond Singer (Young Doctor), David Ellenstein (Doctor #1), Judy Levitt (Doctor #2), Teresa E. Victor (Usher), James Menges (Jogger), Kirk Thatcher (Punk on bus), Jeff Lester (FBI Agent), Joe Lando (Shore Patrolman), Newell Tarrant (CDO), Mike Timoney, Jeffrey Martin (Electronic Technicians), 1st Sgt. Joseph Naradzay USMC (Marine Sergeant), 1st Sgt. Donald W. Zautcke USMC (Marine Lieutenant)

Notes: Often, the version of the “past” presented in Star Trek in the 1960s dealt with events still in the future, such as the Star Trek IVEugenics Wars mentioned in Space Seed, supposedly in the late 1990s. Happily enough, such events have not taken place, and a similar inaccuracy, though it didn’t exist when the movie was first released, now occurs in Star Trek IV. Though in 1986, while the story was being written and filmed, there was still a Leningrad and still a Soviet Union, those officially ceased to exist in 1991 with the advent of the Commonwealth of Independent States, and the city of Leningrad was promptly restored to its original name – St. Petersburg. Early drafts of the story split Dr. Gillian Taylor into two characters – the marine biologist we saw in the movie, and an idealistic schoolteacher, a character written for comedian Eddie Murphy. The two characters were combined in later drafts of the screenplay, and in any case, Murphy was busy with another Paramount film at the time, The Golden Child.

LogBook entry by Earl Green

Categories
Classic Season 23 Doctor Who

The Ultimate Foe (Trial Of A Time Lord, Parts 13-14)

Doctor WhoThe Doctor is still on trial for his life, facing a new charge – genocide – levelled at him by the prosecuting Valeyard. The Doctor counters that the Valeyard has tampered with the evidence through the immense Gallifreyan information storage system known as the Matrix – but a Time Lord whose job is to tend the Matrix refutes this charge. Then, mysterious things begin happening. Two friendly witnesses arrive in the form of criminal Sabalon Glitz and future companion Melanie – with whom the Doctor has yet to travel at this point in his history. And then the Master appears from within the Matrix, admitting to providing these witnesses as part of his plan to help the Doctor and topple the High Council of the Time Lords at the same time. The Master also reveals that the Valeyard is, in fact, a future incarnation of the Doctor – a future incarnation gone mad and turned to evil. With this revelation the Doctor and the Valeyard plunge into the Matrix, aided and abetted by Glitz, Mel, and the Master, ready to fight the most dangerous battle between good and evil that any Time Lord has ever fought, where his mortal adversary is himself.

Order the DVDpart 13 written by Robert Holmes
part 14 written by Pip Baker & Jane Baker
directed by Chris Clough
music by Dominic Glynn

Cast: Colin Baker (The Doctor), Nicola Bryant (Peri), Bonnie Langford (Melanie), Michael Jayston (The Valeyard), Lynda Bellingham (Inquisitor), Anthony Ainley (The Master), Tony Selby (Glitz), Geoffrey Hughes (Mr. Popplewick), James Bree (Keeper of the Matrix)

Broadcast from November 29 through December 6, 1986

LogBook entry & review by Earl Green

Categories
Max Headroom Series 2 (UK)

Max Headroom’s Giant Christmas Turkey

Max Headroom's Giant Christmas TurkeyMax dreams of hosting his own opulent Christmas special, complete with a Dickensian carriage ride with his face on a TV in the middle, and then awakens so he can host a far more traditional studio-bound Christmas special. Dave Edmunds and Bob Geldof drop by to visit, and Max comments on how amazing it is that none of the “snow” blowing in from “outside” is melting. Max and Bob improvise a short ditty called “Merry Christmas, Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy).” Max meditates on the nature of Christmas and is then joined by Robin Williams to discuss the holiday’s commercial potential. Tina Turner bursts into the studio to bring Max a new set of golf clubs. Max then sings a full version of the song he and Geldof came up with, reminding viewers to contemplate the sacrifices of Santa Claus, who apparently receives no Christmas gifts himself.

The Max Headroom Showscript & songs by David Hansen & Paul Owen
with additional material by Matt Frewer
directed by David G. Hillier
music not credited

Cast: Matt Frewer (Max Headroom), Dave Edmunds (himself), Bob Geldof (himself), Tina Turner (herself), Robin Williams (himself), The Southwark Cathedral Choir (themselves)

Videos: “Run Run Rudolph” (Dave Edmunds)

Notes: The second season of The Max Talking Headroom Show – as it was originally called in the UK – aired first on the American The Max Headroom Showpay cable channel Cinemax, with a delayed broadcast several months later on Channel 4 in the UK (which had the effect of making the second season seem more dated than New Coke); it also had the effect of placing this special between the first and second seasons for the British viewing audience. In America, this was – barring any advertisements for the aforementioned failed soft drink – the last Max Headroom project to appear prior to the American-made series on ABC. The song “Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy)” was actually released as a single, but Max failed to join the hit list of perennial Christmas classics.

LogBook entry by Earl Green