Movie Review – Explorers

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Explorers (1985)

Written by Eric Luke

Directed by Joe Dante

explorers

Ben is an average kid having extraordinary dreams. In these dreams he is flying in the clouds, looking down on a complex outline of circuitry. These could just be inspired by his late night viewing of classic science fiction films, but he still shares them with his nerdy friend Wolfgang. They discover this information allows them to manifest an anti-gravity field that they can manipulate the size and speed of. With help from their other friend Darren, they use an old Tilt-a-Whirl car to create a ship they can fly across the city with. A variety of complications arise putting the boys’ plans of space exploration and alien contact in jeopardy.

This is not going to be the review you are expecting.

As I have watched this films inspired by the Spielberg sense of wonder starting with E.T. I have noticed something. It came to the forefront when watching Explorers when I saw the female love interest looked familiar. A quick google search and I found her name, Amanda Peterson. You likely remember her from the teen comedy Can’t Buy Me Love where she starred alongside Patrick Dempsey. She had a few more films after that major one but settled into a few television movies, and by 1994 her filmography ends. The next time you probably heard about Amanda was in 2015 when she died.

Amanda Peterson was raped the year after Explorers came out. She was only fifteen at the time, and this story didn’t come out until after her death. Her parents felt that it needed to be told. While her assailant has never been named, we do know he was 27 years older than 15-year-old Amanda. I don’t think it’s too big of a stretch to assume this was someone in the film industry because Amanda insisted to her parents that they don’t go to the police about it. After all, she wanted to be a star and who wouldn’t want to rush past such a traumatic moment in their lives.

Amanda retired from the industry in 1994 and returned home to Colorado, where she had been born. She ended up in two failed marriages and with two children. She started self-medicating with alcohol and an astounding assortment of illegal and prescription medications. Arrests began around 2000, and she ended up in jail for three months at one point over an assault. There were even charges of child abuse around 2012. Her parents claim she was drug-free at the time of her death. The autopsy showed she had pain meds for a recent hysterectomy in her system, on top of illegally obtained morphine, opiates, and marijuana. Doctors say her respiratory system just shut down. Amanda was 43.

In Explorers, Amanda plays Lori the one-dimensional love interest of Ben. We never learn anything much about her, and she spied on by Ben using the anti-gravity technology. His interest is framed with innocence; he wants to be close to her. Darren comments that she isn’t even undressing. Amanda pops back up at the end, seemingly in on the same alien transmission as the other boys. And that is it for her character.

River Phoenix made his film debut in Explorers as the scientifically minded Wolfgang. River would go on to have a short but pretty prolific career. He was transitioning from teen fare into more adult cinema when he died of a heroin overdose at the age of 23. River’s parents joined the Children of God cult in the 1970s, during the height of cults in America. They moved to Venezuela as missionaries. River would talk about his experience in the Children of God cult in interviews and revealed that he lost his virginity at the age of 4 with other children. The Children of God encourage sexual intercourse between minors. River didn’t go into much detail, merely saying “I’ve blocked it out.” The Children of God still exist, having undergone some name changes, they are currently known as The Family International.

These 1980s films that use childlike imagination and wonder as their hook is fine, but we cannot forget they gloss over a dark reality of that time and our own. While these young actors play clean-cut, bright and happy kids, they were being forced into adulthood in the most traumatic and horrific ways. They deserved better than this. And we do them a disservice by flushing these realities from our minds when we view their work. When we watch E.T., we have to acknowledge the turmoil Drew Barrymore was already going through at that point in her life.

It’s not pleasant to make a note of the darkness of reality, but the blatant ignoring of these abuses is one of my most significant problems with modern geek culture. Our fun and enjoyment never come before human decency.

Movie Review – Ex Machina

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Ex Machina (2015)
Written & Directed by Alex Garland

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Caleb Smith is a computer programmer for the search engine Blue Book whose life is changed when he is announced the winner of a week-long retreat with the company’s founder Nathan Bateman. The journey takes Caleb to a remote estate on a vast swath of property. Here Nathan introduces the programmer to Ava, an artificial being he has created. Nathan wants Caleb to run the Turing Test, a thought experiment where you seek to determine if an artificial consciousness is indistinguishable from an organic one. Strange power outages allow Caleb and Ava to communicate briefly without Nathan’s watchful eye. What Ava tells Caleb causes him to question the true nature of why he was brought here and his reality.

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Movie Review – Back to the Future

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Back to the Future (1985)
Written by Bob Gale & Robert Zemeckis
Directed by Robert Zemeckis

back to the future

Marty McFly is your average high school student. He lives in Hill Valley, California. He has a girlfriend. He has lame parents. He’s friends with an elderly disgraced nuclear physicist. You know as regular teenagers do. Things get heavy when Marty meets Doc Brown in a mall parking lot in the middle of the night. Doc shows off his modified Delorean, transformed into a mobile time machine. The experiment is cut short when the Libyan terrorists Doc stole plutonium from show up and kill the elderly scientist. Marty escapes in the Delorean and is tossed back to 1955 without the needed fuel to get time machine running again. To make matters worse, he interrupts his parents’ first meeting so that his future mother is now in love with him! The clock is ticking before Marty destroys his timeline and he needs the Doc Brown of 1955’s help to undo the damage.

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TV Review – Utopia Series 2, Episode 6

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Utopia Series 2, Episode 6 (2014)
Written by Dennis Kelly
Directed by Sam Donovan

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The ending is finally here. The story, at least in the U.K. version, doesn’t continue from this point, so we have to examine what we are left with. In many ways, this episode is less the ending of the story than the aftermath of episode five. The core story of Carvel, his children, and Milner is over now and as this last chapter opens they are in a state of shock, the clock still counting down for the release of the Russian flu. In many ways this finale is focused around the idea of what happens with an extreme ideology is carried out to its inevitable ends.

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TV Review – Utopia Series 2, Episode 5

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Utopia Series 2, Episode 5 (2014)
Written by Dennis Kelly
Directed by Sam Donovan

Utopia

We cannot experience the trauma of others, and in turn, they cannot suffer our trauma. Words are never sufficient enough to convey the profound psychological and emotional wounds an especially traumatizing experience can cause. This, in turn, leads to a breakdown in communication, which can begin as minor and eventually escalate into violent conflict. While Utopia is about a vast global conspiracy on its surface, the series is actually exploring ideas associated with multi-generational trauma. In the first episode of this season, Milner makes mention that she has witnessed genocide firsthand. Eventually, we learn Philip Carvel is a survivor of the Nazi Holocaust. The horrific things seen and experienced by these people is what led to the founding of the Network and the development of the Janus virus. But there’s is not the only trauma present in Utopia, and their ignoring of other generation’s traumas has led to the dramatic conflict of the series.

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TV Review – Utopia Series 2, Episode 4

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Utopia Series 2, Episode 4 (2014)
Written by Dennis Kelly & John Donnelly
Directed by Sam Donovan

UTOPIA II

Maybe it has always been there, and it’s merely me become awakened to its presence, but I have noticed a growing digging in of heels in political ideologies. Religious ideologues have always seemed to be a constant nuisance, and history has its fair share of political zealots who are willing to compromise moral integrity for “the cause.” These days I often see YouTube videos displaying members of the traditional Left/Right spectrum being downright criminal in their behavior and exhibiting a sense of glee in their transgressions against their fellow man. As a child, I felt a distance from the fundamentalist Christian upbringing I had, I never really bought the pitch that was being sold to me, so I’ve always felt a sense of disconnect from anyone who is radically attached to an idea. Utopia is a show about following that path of radical ideology and how detrimental it can be no matter “rational” or “reasonable” you believe your set of values are.

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TV Review – Utopia Series 2, Episode 3

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Utopia Series 2, Episode 3 (2014)
Written by Dennis Kelly
Directed by Marc Munden

UTOPIA II

There is a universal human tendency to value the lives of your loved ones over the lives of others, particularly strangers. You’ll commonly hear new parents express that they have a sudden sense that they would die for their newborn children. People will make drastic moves to protect their loved ones even in the face of death. But we don’t see often is what a person will do when it comes to harming another in the name of saving their loved one. Would you be willing to kill to protect the people you love? Not kill someone who intends harm, but someone whose continued life might put your family in jeopardy. This is an innocent, for all intents and purposes, who isn’t an immediate threat, but could become one. Would you kill them?

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TV Review – Utopia Series 2, Episode 2

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Utopia Series 2, Episode 2
Written by Dennis Kelly
Directed by Marc Munden

UTOPIA II

What are you willing to give up for the greater good? What would you sacrifice for the things you believe in? That appears to be the theme of this season of Utopia. It’s highlighted most prominently in a scene between Wilson Wilson and Millner. He questions why she has brought him in as part of The Network, and she reasons that its because they killed his father, tortured him, took his eye and still when the moment came he betrayed his friends for The Network. She states that this level of devotion made him stand out as someone they were looking for. On looking back at episode one, we see that Millner and Carvel both gave up their whole lives, with Carvel being the exception who showed regret. Yet even Millner broke during Carvel’s torture on Three Mile Island.

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Movie Review – E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial

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E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
Written by Melissa Mathison
Directed by Steven Spielberg

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Elliott is a boy living in northern California who doesn’t seem to have any friends. He tries to join in on his older brother’s Dungeons & Dragons game but is seen as too little. One night, Elliott discovers a creature living in the shed in the yard, a small brown alien who has been stranded on Earth. The two create an empathic bond so that they feel each other’s emotions and sensations. This bond allows Elliott to understand that the creature, whom he nicknames E.T., is going to die unless he can contact his people and return to his world. Elliott lets his brother and little sister in on his secret and the trio work to help their new friend. However, in the background government agents are searching the woods after seeing the aliens leave initially. Slowly but surely they are circling closer and closer to Elliott and E.T.

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TV Review – Utopia Series 2, Episode 1

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Utopia Series 2, Episode 1 (2014)
Written & Directed by Dennis Kelly

Utopia Epiosode 1 Year 2

When we last left the world of Utopia, we were merely looking backward at a short-lived British television that deserves a second glance by viewers. In the time since my review of Series 1, big Utopia news has dropped. For some years David Fincher and Gillian Flynn have been working to bring Utopia to the United States but a deal with HBO fell through, and it appeared the prospects of a return were dead. However, in April 2017 it was announced that Amazon was going to work to develop Utopia with Gillian Flynn as showrunner. Flynn has been very public in expressing her love of the original, particularly for its strangeness. She became friends with Dennis Kelly and said she’ll seek his input on the new version of Utopia, release date to be determined but like sometime in 2019. So, as we look back at Series 2, we do so with the notion that a different yet hopefully will be tonally similar show will be coming in the new future.

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