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Digital Songs & Albums Individual Tracks (Digital Albums & Singles) Music & Radio Shows Pop, R&B, Soul, & Dance Soundtracks (Digital)

NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN (by Lani Hall & Michel Legrand: Never Say Never Again movie soundtrack)

SUMMARY:                               RUNNING TIME: 3:06 Min.

Off 1983’s Never Say Never Again movie soundtrack, the film’s title tune is performed by vocalist Lani Hall and its composer, Michael Legrand.  The song’s lyrics were co-written by Alan & Marilyn Bergman. 

Though “Never Say Never Again” may be hard to find on vinyl or CD, this track is available digitally.  Also, one can watch online the song’s 1983 music video featuring a black tuxedo-clad Hall.      

REVIEW:

Though the tune is reminiscent of a chintzy ‘80s lounge act, Lani Hall’s slyly effervescent vocals make up the difference.  In that sense, this song works beautifully accompanying Sean Connery’s last on-screen adventure as James Bond. 

Bolstered by Michel Legrand’s jazzy melody, Hall’s effort is catchier than her same year’s James Bond competition: Rita Coolidge’s “All Time High” from Roger Moore’s competing Octopussy.  Though neither tune is a must-have (frankly, they rate about the same), there’s a worthwhile factor to consider.   

While Coolidge conveys a breezy easy listening treat reminiscent of Carly Simon, “All-Time High” is instantly forgettable.  Hall’s playful “Never Say Never Again” pop vocal performance, conversely, merits a chance for re-discovery.     

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                             6 Stars

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Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

SUPERMAN # 680 (2008 DC Comics)

Written by James Robinson.

Art by Renato Guedes; Wilson Magalháes; Hi-Fi; & John J. Hill.

Cover Art by Alex Ross.

SUMMARY:

Released by DC Comics for November 2008, this issue is entitled “The Coming of Atlas, Part 4: Man of Yore, Dog of Tomorrow.”  In downtown Metropolis, amongst hundreds of onlookers (including his wife, Lois Lane), the Man of Steel has been seemingly pummeled into submission by the mystical Atlas. 

Krypto takes desperate measures by attacking Atlas and distracting him to allow a bloodied and bruised Superman a brief escape.  Watching an overmatched Krypto viciously go after Atlas time and again, Lois poignantly realizes that she was wrong about criticizing Krypto’s canine behavior. Meanwhile, a mysterious observer intervenes by secretly dousing Krypto with waves of radiation – to no effect. 

With Zatanna Zatara unavailable, Superman must then gamble upon magical advice from her ultra-conceited teenage cousin, Zachary.  The Man of Steel returns to battle to save a defiant Krypto from Atlas’ furious wrath.  

Note: This issue is also available digitally.

REVIEW:

Though his ‘mysterious observer’ sub-plot isn’t satisfyingly explained, writer James Robinson delivers a knockout (pardon the expression) homage to the Dog of Steel.  Including well-played moments for Lois Lane and Superman (i.e. his mild disgust meeting Zachary Zatara), Robinson’s story ensures that Krypto is its MVP.  Including his plausible thought balloons, Krypto’s heroism gets its just due.  Even more so, the art team’s stellar visuals (including the Alex Ross cover) effectively complete a dynamite Superman # 680

For fans of Krypto, this issue proves a must-have.    

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

DC’s Mike Carlin pens the “DC Nation” column and hypes Trinity # 17.  Thumbnail cover reveals feature the Superman – New Krypton Special # 1; Teen Titans # 63; Reign in Hell # 3; and Ambush Bug: Year None # 3.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                             8 Stars

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Digital Documentaries Digital Movies & TV Fantasy, Horror, & Science Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes)

HAUNTED HISTORY: HAUNTED CARIBBEAN (Season 2: Episode 10)

SUMMARY:                 RUNNING TIME: Approx. 47:00 Min.

As Haunted History’s final U.S. episode, “Haunted Caribbean” first aired on The History Channel on August 11, 2001.  Narrated by actor John Glover, this installment explores reputedly haunted locations in various Caribbean locales.  Included are uncredited reenactments of Caribbean regional history and reported sightings (i.e. interviewees Gerald and Loretta Hausman play themselves reenacting an unsettling incident where a ghost pirate ‘threatens’ a sleeping Gerald).    

Starting with Fort San Cristobal in San Juan, Puerto Rico, anthropologist Michael Gleeson and historian Milagros Flores discuss eerie legends associated with the locale.  Among them are reported encounters with an imprisoned Spanish captain, a ghostly Spanish soldier on guard duty, and the infamous Devil’s Sentry Box.  The empty Sentry Box purportedly has a history where numerous overnight guards vanished without a trace.     

For the Jamaica segment, married folklorists and authors Gerald Hausman and Loretta Hausman discuss ghostly sightings at “Blue Harbor” (aka the Noël Coward House) situated on Cabrita Island.  It’s acknowledged that fellow interviewee Gleeson owns Coward’s former estate. 

Next discussed are local legends associated with notorious 17th Century pirate Henry Morgan and those of alluring mermaids killing their male prey.  Another Jamaican locale explored is the reputedly haunted Edinburgh Castle.  Its initial owner, Dr. Lewis Hutchinson, is believed to have been a mass serial killer.  Similarly, the ghost of slave owner Annie Palmer, known as the sadistically evil ‘White Witch of Rose Hall,’ supposedly haunts her former plantation.  It’s acknowledged that both Hutchinson and Palmer subsequently met foul endings through evidently karmic justice in Jamaica.

Moving on to the St. Thomas beach in the U.S. Virgin Island, the initial topic is the presence of ghosts associated with 1853’s cholera plague victims.  Local resident Joseph LaPlace is interviewed, as is historian David Knight.  Also discussed are reputed (and unrelated) hauntings of two private homes at St. Thomas: one dating to the 19th Century and the other on Charlotte Amalie Harbor.  In this segment, local residents Kenneth L. Brick and Kate McDonnell are interviewed, as is author Joan Medicott.  The 19th Century legend of local voodoo enthusiasts attempting to turn a deceased elderly recluse into a zombie is also told.  

Lastly, at St. Croix, the “One North” estate once owned by a Mary Pomeroy is examined.  Including reenactments, the late Pomeroy (portrayed by an uncredited actress) resorted to a Catholic Church-sanctioned exorcism to cleanse her home.  According to a subsequent owner, George Tyler, the recruited priest’s efforts evidently succeeded.

Glover concludes by noting that haunting mysteries abound in the Caribbean, in spite of the region’s popularity with tourists.        

Notes: Including one standalone special (with actor Michael Dorn as the narrator), Glover’s U.S. version produced 26 episodes over two seasons between 1998 and 2001.  Haunted History’s 1998 British version lasted one season consisting of six episodes, which explored more historically-based stories in the United Kingdom, the U.S., and Tasmania.

REVIEW:

Clearly made on the cheap, the episode’s intriguing historical context and vivid tourist advertisement (stock) footage help make this show watchable.  Still, given this show’s low-rent production values (i.e. being filmed on videotape and the dubious reenactments), it’s a stretch taking “Haunted Caribbean” seriously. 

A lack of verifiable historical documentation of these hauntings is a glaring red flag, in spite of some seemingly credible interviewees.  The same applies to an over-generalization of local folklore/superstitions and stereotyping local residents (i.e. the region’s African and Spanish descendants) as being wary, if not fearful, of the supernatural.  One wonders if the lack of native input (at least, on-screen) is coincidental, in terms of the controversial claims Haunted History seeks to push.    

Regarding John Glover’s off-screen presence, it’s a mixed bag.  Hiring him as the series narrator, theoretically, makes good sense.  Viewers could presume that his narrative style meant to convey the same unsettling, almost creepy vibe Paul Winfield’s voice added to City Confidential’s lurid, real-life whodunnits – or perhaps mimic Robert Stack on Unsolved Mysteries.   However, when considering the contentious paranormal subject matter and his obviously scripted comments, let’s just say Glover’s contribution falls short of convincing armchair skeptics.

While “Haunted Caribbean” is instantly forgettable, its tidbits of often sinister historical fact dating back long before Christopher Columbus may still whet one’s curiosity.           

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           4 Stars

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Comic Books & Graphic Novels Marvel Comics

AMAZING X-MEN # 7 (2014 MARVEL Comics)

Written by Kathryn Immonen.

Art by Paco Medina; Juan Vlasco; Rachelle Rosenberg; & VC’s Joe Caramagna.

Cover Art by Kris Anka & Chris Sotomayor.

SUMMARY:

Released by Marvel Comics for July 2014, the issue’s title is “No Goats, No Glory.”  For a collegiate football game party at the X-Mansion, Angelica “Firestar” Jones and Bobby “Iceman” Drake are sent to the local grocery store for supplies.  In the parking lot, their subsequent discovery of a mysterious alien infant intersects with Spider-Man’s unexpected arrival. 

As Angelica and Bobby find out, Spider-Man has been in desperate pursuit of the missing infant to arrange a ‘hostage swap’ with an UFO. En route to the Central Park Zoo, Spider-Man explains that Empire University’s goat mascot is being held by bewildered yet well-armed aliens.  It’s now up to the ‘Amazing Spider-Friends’ to safely return the extraterrestrial to his waiting parents in exchange for the captive goat.     

Note: This issue is available digitally. It’s also reprinted in 2015’s Amazing X-Men, Volume 2: World War Wendigo, which is available in both trade paperback and digital formats.

REVIEW:

Writer Kathyn Immonen’s sitcom plot sports plenty of holes, as Spider-Man’s oddball encounter losing the goat to aliens is neither shown nor explained particularly well.   Still, Immonen’s knack for snappy dialogue (i.e. the Spider-Friends’ reliable chemistry; Angelica & Bobby’s scenes) more than makes up the difference. 

Including the art team’s high-caliber visuals, Amazing X-Men # 7 concocts a delightful solo read.  This pre-teens-and-up homage issue is recommended for fans of the 1981-83 Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends animated TV series.   

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

None.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                            8 Stars

Categories
Digital Animated Shorts Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes)

THE JETSONS: SOLAR SNOOPS (Season 2: Episode 3)

SUMMARY:                     RUNNING TIME: 20:00 Min.

First airing on ABC-TV on September 18, 1985, Barry E. Blitzer is credited with penning this episode.  Per the closing credits, the second season’s directors are listed together.  Hence, an individual director for “Solar Snoops” isn’t identified. 

Perpetual business rivals Cosmo S. Spacely (Blanc) and W.C. Cogswell (Butler) are once again one-upping each other in corporate espionage.  Spacely first pilfers Cogswell’s robot guard dog prototype, Sentro, after he is supposedly delivered to the wrong warehouse.  Spacely then disregards George Jetson (O’Hanlon) and his son Elroy’s (Butler) dire warnings that Sentro is really a ‘Trojan dog’ sent to spy on the company. 

Meanwhile, hidden inside Sentro is Cogswell’s spy, Galacta Sneak (Gordon), who then swipes Spacely’s invaluable chocolate chip cookie microchip.  Once realizing Cogswell’s scheme, Spacely seeks revenge by answering his enemy’s advertisement for a gorgeous yet minimally talented secretary.  Sending George in drag undercover as ‘Georgina Jetstream,’ Spacely expects him to con a smitten Cogswell into hiring ‘Georgina.’ 

The plan’s second phase involves ‘Georgina’ seductively retrieving the microchip from an unsuspecting Cogswell.  That night, the Jetson family helps prepare George for his sexy undercover role.  Simultaneously, Sneak extorts double pay from the incensed Cogswell for the stolen microchip.  Romantic dancing during a restaurant lunch date between Cogswell and ‘Georgina’ sets off Cogswell’s furious wife, who unexpectedly arrives on the scene. 

Meanwhile, George & Astro’s fast getaway with the microchip is threatened by Sneak’s tech-powered retaliation.  As for the microchip, Spacely doesn’t mind George’s simple means of concealing it until the inevitable happens.          

                                        Voice Cast:

George Jetson: George O’Hanlon

Judy Jetson: Penny Singleton

Judy Jetson: Janet Waldo 

Elroy Jetson / Mr. W.C. Cogswell: Daws Butler

Astro / presumably Sentro: Don Messick

Cosmo S. Spacely: Mel Blanc

Harlan: Howard Morris

Rosie The Robot: Jean Vander Pyl

Galacta Sneak: Barry Gordon

Mrs. Cogswell: Uncredited

Miss Nova (Mrs. Cogswell’s running robot): Uncredited

Mrs. Cogswell’s luncheon friend: Uncredited

Robot Chauffeur: Uncredited

Fred Asteroid: Uncredited

Venus: Uncredited.

REVIEW:

Given its premise, the sitcom plotting ought to amuse adults.  The same applies to the original voice cast’s charm, along with Hanna-Barbera updating the show’s familiar animation style for the mid-80’s.  Good production values holding up well forty years later, unfortunately, can’t disguise a dubious storyline aimed at the kiddie target audience. 

The script’s illogic might get away with a cross-dressing George Jetson briefly, but not for most of the episode – i.e. why doesn’t Spacely recruit a loyal female employee for his scheme?  Adding to this eye-rolling conundrum is Cogswell’s antics (no surprise) as a philandering husband – who first insults his wife’s weight and then later gets caught trying to cheat on her.  It’s unlikely that parents will want to explain the episode’s sexist humor (including far too much ‘Georgina’) to a confused child – even if the jokes are meant as harmless pap. 

Given the circumstances, “Solar Snoops” (even the ‘solar’ aspect of the title doesn’t make sense) is best left in Hanna-Barbera’s ‘80s animation dustbin.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                               3 Stars

Note: For a more kid-appropriate Jetsons caper, Season 1’s “Astro’s Top Secret” isn’t brilliant, but it has the right idea.

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Digital Animated Shorts Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes)

THE JETSONS: ASTRO’S TOP SECRET (Season 1: Episode 12)

SUMMARY:                 RUNNING TIME: 22:00 Min.

First aired on ABC-TV on December 9, 1962, series co-creators William Hanna and Joseph Barbera directed this Tony Benedict-written episode. 

Business rivals and golfing partners Spacely (Blanc) and Cogswell (Butler) incessantly egg each other on at the floating golf course.  A fed-up Spacely then insists that he will soon put his frenemy out of business.  Cogswell worriedly sends his jetpack-wearing henchman, Harlan (Morris), to spy on Spacely Sprockets. 

With Spacely delegating his scheme to an incredulous George Jetson (O’Hanlon), results are expected first thing the next morning.  Harlan’s further covert surveillance of the Jetson family home convinces him (and then Cogswell) that a luckless George has somehow invented an anti-gravity device allowing flight.  What they don’t realize is that the family dog, Astro (Messick), can now fly upon accidently swallowing Elroy’s (Butler) remote control flying car. 

Still, Cogswell is desperate enough to abduct a befuddled Astro to get some fast answers. 

                                      Voice Cast:

George Jetson: George O’Hanlon

Judy Jetson: Penny Singleton

Judy Jetson: Janet Waldo (Note: Judy doesn’t appear in this episode)

Elroy Jetson / Mr. Cogswell: Daws Butler

Astro / Computer: Don Messick

Cosmo S. Spacely: Mel Blanc

Harlan: Howard Morris.

REVIEW:

Loaded with typically tame Hanna-Barbera sitcom humor, this episode is a delight in parodying corporate espionage.  Not only does the low-key animation still hold up, but the voice acting is also terrific.  Case in point: the sequence where a clueless Astro is being interrogated, enemy spy-style, delivers the episode’s best clichéd joke.

Even if “Astro’s Top Secret” isn’t memorable, it pitches a welcome bone for the futuristic canine’s fans. For the eight-year-old residing in all of us, this cartoon is amusing.       

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                           6½ Stars

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Music & Radio Shows Records/LP's Rock, R&B, Pop, Soul, & Metal/Symphonic

ROADHOUSE (by John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band)

SUMMARY:              RUNNING TIME: Approx. 57:00 Min.

Released by Scotti Brothers through CBS Records in 1988, Roadhouse is John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band’s self-produced follow-up to their 1985 Tough All Over debut album.  Including 1983’s Eddie and The Cruisers film soundtrack (their big break after eleven years together), Roadhouse is the band’s third studio project. 

Consisting of twelve tracks, this album’s songs are:

SIDE A:

  1. Bound for Glory                      (4:41)
  2. Victory Dance                        (3:51)
  3. Song & Dance                       (4:35)
  4. Killin’ Time                          (4:30)
  5. Wheel Of Fortune                   (5:12)
  6. Burn The Roadhouse Down     (3:35)

SIDE B:

  1. Penetration                           (4:46)
  2. Wishing Well                       (4:55)
  3. Customary Thing                  (4:24)
  4. Hard Way To Go                 (3:59)
  5. Higher Ground                     (5:37)
  6. Road I’m Running                (6:44)

In terms of Roadhouse’s radio play for the time, Track # 3: only “Song & Dance” (possibly, the album’s sole single) charted the Top 50.   

Notes: This title’s formats also include: CD, cassette tape, and digitally.  Following Roadhouse’s release, the band’s next album would be 1989’s Eddie and The Cruisers II: Eddie Lives! movie soundtrack released through the same label.   

REVIEW:

Unlike the modestly successful Tough All Over, which included “Voice of America’s Sons” (prominently featured in the 1986 Sylvester Stallone action film, Cobra) and “C-I-T-Y,” Roadhouse doesn’t sport any familiar radio hits.  Still, the album’s high-energy opener (“Bound for Glory”) sounds like a precursor to the group’s subsequent Eddie and The Cruisers II project.     

Taken as a whole, Roadhouse is a playful sidestep away from 1983’s “On The Dark Side,” despite the song’s legacy as the band’s signature radio tune. One can readily surmise that this album represented something of an artistic escape from Hollywood’s shadow – and, by extension, the fictitious ‘Eddie Wilson’ and his ‘Cruisers.’  Hence, John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band had good reason seeking to expand their mainstream audience beyond one cult film.       

Note: Beaver Brown’s saxophone player, Michael “Tunes” Antunes, portrayed the Cruisers’ ‘Wendell Newton’ onscreen in both Eddie films.  Noticeably, in neither film, does Antunes have any dialogue.   

Through Roadhouse, John Cafferty’s Rhode Island-based group resumes its rollicking, All-American brand of rock and, with it, a sporadic country-western tinge. Still, given their basic musical similarities (and the exact overlap between the bands’ now half-century careers), it’s too easy to presume that Cafferty and Beaver Brown are essentially Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band copycats.

That’s a misnomer, as Cafferty’s gravelly musical vibe doesn’t ruminate on American heartland issues or present social commentaries like Springsteen (and, to a degree, John Mellencamp) regularly does. Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band instead delivers straight-up entertainment without pitching deep thoughts. Roadhouse epitomizes this low-key yet hard-work attitude.

Case in point: tracks such as “Killin’ Time,” “Wheel of Fortune,” and “Road I’m Running,” might superficially resemble Springsteen-style tunes, but that’s as far as they go — these deliberately vague tunes concoct easy-to-grasp rock as is. For that matter, take the good-natured “Victory Dance, as the best example. Its most sentimental analogy is baseball, in terms of seeking a fun reason to celebrate/patting yourself on the back.

Fans, in that sense, can appreciate Cafferty’s group delivering their authentic bar band tunes.  The flip side is that the energetic Roadhouse falls short on mixing up its variety, as, tone-wise, the tracks blend together.  It’s surely the prime reason (aside from insufficient publicity) that this album isn’t all that memorable and has remained stuck in Late 80’s obscurity.    

Still, John Cafferty and The Beaver Brown Band’s everyman appeal readily surpasses Roadhouse’s lackluster sales.  Hence, these guys neither coast nor do they skimp on their all-original material.  For nearly an hour, it’s a blue-collar, rock ‘n’ roll time machine that listeners ought to enjoy revisiting.  Give one of Roadhouse’s formats sufficient time (i.e. on a road trip), and the album will likely grow on you. 

PACKAGING:

It’s standard issue, including individual photos identifying the six band members.  All twelve tracks are listed, but their running times aren’t provided.  The record’s sleeve features Roadhouse’s credits on one side; the other side consists of a collage of small black-and-white photos of the band. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        7 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels Fantasy, Horror, & Science Fiction

(DEAN KOONTZ’S) FRANKENSTEIN, BOOK 4: LOST SOULS

Written by Dean Koontz

SUMMARY:

Released through Random House Publishing Group, this 350-page fourth installment in Dean Koontz’s Frankenstein saga was released in 2010.  In the two years since the seemingly immortal Victor Helios’ (aka Dr. Victor Frankenstein) death, five survivors of his diabolical wrath have scattered and moved on with their own lives. 

Deucalion (aka Frankenstein’s Monster) is hiding in a secluded California monastery where his intuition ominously senses that his insidious creator is somehow still alive.  Ex-New Orleans police detective partners Carson O’Connor and Michael Maddison have since married and are raising an infant daughter in San Francisco.  Unable to completely settle down, the duo partakes in dangerous assignments working in tandem as private investigators. 

Lastly, Victor’s last cloned wife, Erika Five, has assumed a new surname and has quietly relocated to rural Rainbow Falls, Montana, where she is eccentric Jocko’s surrogate mother. Her financial means stems from a hidden cache of money and jewels that she stole from Victor before fleeing New Orleans.

Meanwhile, the unsuspecting residents of Rainbow Falls are being systematically abducted, assimilated, and replaced by identical cyborg replicas intent on ultimately destroying the human race in favor of their own kind.  These helpless small-town victims, upon becoming expendable fodder, will face horrific fates from the ‘Builders’ in this cult dubbed ‘The Community.’  

Too few locals are able to elude these monstrous killers: among these ‘fugitives’ are jail escapees Mr. Lyss and mentally challenged ‘Nummy, along with hospital patient Bryce Walker. Unaware of the cult’s insidious scheme, Erika is mortified to observe that a fellow town motorist is Victor himself – somehow alive and intact (now referring to himself as ‘Victor Immaculate’). She soon realizes that one of Victor’s vile contingency plans has been initiated.

At Erika’s conscientious behest, Deucalion, along with Carson and Michael, descends upon Rainbow Falls to find and destroy this new Victor.  Yet, as even more of the townspeople are captured and replaced, Victor’s five enemies find that there may be no escape this time being both vastly outnumbered and outgunned.  More so, the town’s own bewildered resistance may come too little too late.           

Notes: This title’s other formats are paperback, audiobook, and digitally.  The novel’s immediate sequel, Dead Town, was released in 2011.

REVIEW:

Including some sporadically icky details, this next horror-fantasy thriller in the Dean Koontz’s Frankenstein franchise is likely for the established fanbase only.  While Koontz’s experienced writing style is easy to grasp, one may be skeptical of how necessary this contrived sequel is … when it amounts to ‘Frankenstein’s Monster Vs. The Body Snatchers, Part I.’ 

Readers might like Carson and Michael’s hard-nosed yet now-married repartee, as well as the presence of Deucalion and Erika. Unfortunately, other characters definitely diminish one’s reading enjoyment.  Let’s just say a little ‘Jocko’ goes a long way, and really the less said the better about the majority of Mr. Nyss & Nummy’s scenes – especially, in the town jail’s basement. As for other Rainbow Falls stock characters, Koontz’s writing conveys many of them with just enough depth, but their general expendability prevents readers from connecting with them.       

A fresh relocation in scenery to Montana and briefly San Francisco from New Orleans, if anything, is welcome progress.  Still, this asset doesn’t mask how the new storyline’s collection of tropes becomes too derivative of other ‘body snatcher’ genre capers.  Hence, readers are expected to rely upon the franchise’s core characters to escape the sci-fi/horror cliché-fest substituting for Koontz’s lack of originality.    

As a supplemental observation, growing suspicions of Koontz’s leisurely pace are confirmed at the novel’s end.   It’s then no surprise that Lost Souls is merely the first installment of this ‘stay tuned’ storyline, as opposed to acknowledging this helpful tidbit on the front cover.  Given a likelihood of skipping scenes (as the short chapters rotate among characters), Dean Koontz’s lukewarm Frankenstein, Book 4: Lost Souls is probably best perused as a library rental option first.        

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

There is a list of selected Koontz novels and an ultra-brief author biographical paragraph.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   4½ Stars

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Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes) WWF/WWE (Pro Wrestling)

RICKY “THE DRAGON” STEAMBOAT & STING vs. “STUNNING” STEVE AUSTIN & “NATURE BOY” RIC FLAIR, with “SENSUOUS” SHERRI (WCW Saturday Night: Televised: 7-30-1994)

SUMMARY:                   RUNNING TIME: Approx. 29:00 Min.

For the July 30, 1994, edition of WCW Saturday Night, the main event would pit Sting and Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat (both former WCW World Champions) vs. the arrogant WCW U.S. Champion “Stunning” Steve Austin and “The Nature Boy” Ric Flair, accompanied by ‘Sensuous’ Sherri Martel.  The bout was presumably filmed at WCW Saturday Night’s studio: the Center Stage Theater in Atlanta, Georgia.  The announcers are Tony Schiavone and Bobby “The Brain” Heenan. 

Notably, the bout was televised (but not necessarily filmed) days after WCW Bash at The Beach where Flair had dropped the WCW World Heavyweight Championship to Hulk Hogan. 

REVIEW:

Both duos are in excellent form, as Steamboat’s on-screen chemistry with Flair and Austin demonstrates why they were undoubtedly his best WCW adversaries (along with Rick Rude).  More so, Austin and Flair’s heel teamwork is impressive. 

Given that Steamboat’s active in-ring career ended only months later (due to an injury), fans shouldn’t mind seeing that he gets more screen time than Sting.  Eerily, it’s like a premonition that Schiavone and Heenan comment that some think that an aging Steamboat’s abilities had somewhat declined.  That may have been accurate, but, even in his early forties, Steamboat still nimbly holds his own against Austin (a decade younger) and a timeless, 44-year-old Flair.  What can else be said of a mid-thirties Sting, other than he delivers exactly what it is required of him.        

The bout’s only stale component is “Sensuous” Sherri Martel’s participation.  Her villainous antics come off as a tired cliché (after three productive years performing the same function in the WWF for Randy Savage, Ted DiBiase, and finally Shawn Michaels).  Still, she is a welcome upgrade over Flair’s dubious former valet/maid, ‘Fifi,’ who “The Nature Boy” would marry in real life decades later.      

Though this tag bout’s action is formulaic and becomes somewhat monotonous (presumably, to fill at least thirty minutes of airtime), neither the participants nor the announcers let viewers down.  That includes a somewhat unexpected finish, in terms of which tandem scores a decisive win.    

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   7 Stars

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Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes) WWF/WWE (Pro Wrestling)

STING, “NATURE BOY” RIC FLAIR, & THE BOSS (RAY TRAYLOR), with ICE TRAIN VS. “RAVISHING” RICK RUDE, RON SIMMONS, & “STUNNING” STEVE AUSTIN, with COL. ROBERT PARKER (WCW Saturday Night: Televised 1-22-1994)

SUMMARY:                            RUNNING TIME: 11:33 Min.

Televised on January 22, 1994, this WCW Saturday Night six-man main event was filmed at WCW’s Atlanta, GA studio: the Center Stage Theater.  On one side stands Sting, The Boss (Ray Traylor – formerly the WWF’s Big Boss Man and the UWF’s Big Bubba Rogers), and, in the aftermath of Starrcade 1993, the newly crowned WCW World Champion, “Nature Boy” Ric Flair.  Accompanying this trio to ringside is fellow wrestler, Ice Train. 

Opposing them are WCW International World Champion “Ravishing” Rick Rude, WCW U.S. Champion “Stunning” Steve Austin, and a supposedly resentful ex-WCW World Champion, Ron Simmons.  Accompanying them is Austin’s manager, Col. Robert Parker.     

The announcers are Tony Schiavone & Jesse “The Body” Ventura.

REVIEW:

Given the considerable star power involved, one would expect in-ring fireworks.  While waiting for some burst of welcome chaos, viewers instead get formulaic tag action.  Hence, this average TV six-man showdown is enjoyably watchable (including Ventura & Schiavone’s repartee) for the right reasons. It’s just not memorable.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        6 Stars

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