Mystery Science Theater 3000 and Rifftrax

What is your opinion on MST3k/Rifftrax

  • 1. Love it more than life itself and will sacrifice my first born child to glorify it's name

    Votes: 84 21.8%
  • 2. Love it

    Votes: 224 58.2%
  • 3. Meh

    Votes: 50 13.0%
  • 4. Hate it

    Votes: 9 2.3%
  • 5. What the fuck is a MST3K?!

    Votes: 18 4.7%

  • Total voters
    385
Newest Riff is pretty good. The Phantom Empire is a Fred Olen Ray film, shot after Ray had wrapped shooting another film early so he and his people took most of the same cast and whatever props and sets they had access to and hastily threw this movie together, filming it in like 6 days. Ross Hagen, young Jeffery Combs, Sybil Danning, a somewhat altered Robbie the Robot, all this and less.
 
Newest Riff is pretty good. The Phantom Empire is a Fred Olen Ray film, shot after Ray had wrapped shooting another film early so he and his people took most of the same cast and whatever props and sets they had access to and hastily threw this movie together, filming it in like 6 days. Ross Hagen, young Jeffery Combs, Sybil Danning, a somewhat altered Robbie the Robot, all this and less.
ooh
I watched this some nerd buddies a little while back
iirc it's a nice enough little nothing
and yeah Robbie had some questionable plastic surgery done in his later years, sorta like the Rocky IV robot
 
my dad brought some old junk while visting

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it's not doubleposting, I'm circulating the... posts
yeah

anyways so I was watching The Corpse Vanishes, an S1 joint and Crow a few bits that really stood out to sell that sense of childlike wonder Trace brought to early Crow
yes I know that's pretentious bullshit but he really has a characterization that carried on to a point but was much more pronounced early on
in The Movie it's more "I considered if this was a good idea... and I did it anyway..."
in KTMA when Guiron shows up he's all "IT'S THE BEST ONE YET!!!!"
 
Elsewhere, being a subscriber, on the 372 Pages We'll Never Get Back podcast, Nelson and Lestowka are going to be tackling one of the "great" examples of that wave of "animals on the rampage" horror novels you saw in the 1970s in the US and the UK, Guy N. Smith's Night of the Crabs, which was surprisingly popular and was followed by sequels.


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