Actually, as a teen, I watched a triple bill "The Incredible Two-Headed Transplant", "The Dunwich Horror" and "Destroy All Monsters". Sorry, but they don't come any better than that.
That sounds like a real hoot. I saw Werner Herzog's remake of "Nosferatu" as a double bill with Ralph Bakshi's "Wizards". That caused some stylistic whiplash.
@@ozymandiasnullifidian5590 They're not as prominent as they used to be, but you can still find them here and there. I saw the new Jurassic World movie at a drive in last weekend. It was well attended too.
"Attack of the Crab Monsters" with "The Day the World Ended". Or "The She Creature" with "The Monster of Piedras Blancas". Perhaps "The Manster" with "The Brain that Wouldn't Die". "Planet of the Vampires" with "Black Sabbath". Or maybe "Humanoids from the Deep" with "Galaxy of Terror". Hell, this could go on all night.
The actor who played "Eric" was Queequeg in "Moby Dick" (1956) and a scientist in "The 27th Day." I haven't heard of this movie in decades. Thanks, Robin, for this review.
Victor Jory was a western legend (and Canadian) , and always the villain, often in Randolph Scott or Audie Murphy movies. Paul Cavanagh (Cooper) was a regular in the Basil Rathbone Sherlock Holmes films and served in WW1 and the Canadian Mounted Police.
Here's a couple of good triple bills: Dracula (Lugosi), Frankenstein (Karloff) & the Mummy (also Karloff). The Curse of Frankenstein, Dracula and the Mummy (all Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee) 2 sets of classics!
As a teen with my first car we went to the Candlelight Pix Drive-In and saw, I think, "Scream Devil Scream" and "Attack Of The Creeps" for about $1.50 for the both of us. I think they played the same Hector Heathecoat cartoon before every movie for years. Maybe one of the movies was "Invasion Of The Giant Spiders"? It was a long time ago.
I liked the movie in part because it featured Friedrich Anton Maria Hubertus Bonifacius Graf von Ledebur-Wicheln.... who played Queequeg in Huston's "Moby Dick". Though a fine actor, Friedrich never became a "household name", though perhaps he would have been the longest one if he had been. The wonderfully creepy Victory Jory was born in one of Canada's remote and almost unpopulated arctic territories ---- in Dawson City, Yukon in 1902, shortly after the end of the Klondike Gold Rush, when almost all of the hopeful gold-seekers had gone. The Yukon has produced a number of famous eccentrics, and to this day remains populated almost entirely by eccentrics.
I think an even better pairing might be HOUSE OF USHER and MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH. It's a toss-up between the two as being the single best film in the AIP Poe cycle.
@@ashleys9397 The Haunted Palace was actually based off of an HP Lovecraft story but ends with a quote from a Poe poem from which they got the title, to give the impression that it was another of their Poe movies. I'd have to say that "The Pit and the Pendulum" would be a strong contender for single best though.
My ideal double bill would be "Scream" and "Scream and Scream Again"; mainly for the titles, also for the juxtaposition of their styles, and the amazing cast in "Scream and Scream Again" (Vincent Price, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, and the smouldering Michael Gothard).
Michael Gothard was often one fan--freaking-tastic actor. Undoubtedly his single best role was that of the witch-hunting Father Barre in Ken Russell's THE DEVILS (1971). Yep, the man certainly knew how to smolder---brilliantly. It's a pity that he had to leave us at still such a comparatively young age.
The ultimate double bill would be The Last Man on Earth and Night of the Living Dead. Same idea going in different directions, starting from different ends.
My ideal horror double feature? Man, that's a hard one... The Howling and An American Werewolf in London? I remember my grandmother taking me to the drive-in to see Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter in a double feature.
'most of the inmates are running around free.' looked to me as if they walking gingerly on tiptoe because their new slippers were tight. Not exactly running. My double bill would be Hobgoblins. Then Werewolf. Two classic mst3ks. In a row.
I'd put together a double bill consisting of "The Quatermass X-periment" (aka "The Creeping Uknown") and "X-The Uknown." I've always held a deep appreciation for those two creepy English films.
As far as double/triple bills, for me personally it was 1978 at the Kenwood Drive-in when they played *Star Wars,* followed by George Pal's *War of the Worlds,* and then another showing of *Star Wars.* That was a good night. And ideal double/triple bill would be *Blood on Satan's Claw, Let's Scare Jessica to Death* and *Full Circle,* or *Bird with the Crystal Plumage, Deep Red* and *Suspiria.*
I'd probably release this with 'Face of Marble'! (See what I did there!?!) But my favorite Double Feature Concept is 'The Lost Continent'... both of them!
That seemed to have a nice example of the coloured make-up and filtered light effect. As seen in the Jekyll and Hyde film and also another film that I seem to recall was called something like the Sea Witch.
So, this stone guy's been around for 200plus years and no one figures it out? I'm guessing this guy must've had an aversion to shaking hands, so no one would guess his secret all that time...
Hell yeah! Dark Corners must definitely mount a Rondo Hatton Retrospective. Rondo was one of the greats---a man who actually did sort of sacrifice himself for his art.
This 1957 film reminded me in several ways of the 1955 "Creature with the Atom Brain"; the atomic-powered zombies in both films are distinguished by "Creature"'s decidedly 40s style script.
THE MAN WHO TURNED TO STONE ... sounds like a great title for a bio pic about the discovery of Viagra. Wonder if those immortals could actually shit a brick? What would make a great pairing? There is no doubt ; SOYLENT GREEN and THE OMEGA MAN.
It was a little shocking to see Moses pick up a porno mag in Omega. Until I learned Heston and the missus were life models for art classes back in their younger days. Which happens to be why Heston never minded the period slave undies and loincloths of his later films.
Have seen this only once. For such a relatively obscure film, it has been released on DVD. Not sure if still available. Just checked. It's still available. Who would have thunk it. Yet the 1965 version of She is only a DVD release and has yet to be upgraded to a blu-ray release.
I actually saw ‘Shivers’ and ‘Rabid’ on a revival double bill around 1980 at the Odeon, Norwich, UK when I was 15 years old. My brother had to get the tickets as he was 18 at the time so he was just old enough! I was nowhere near, of course, and looked about 12!!!
Well hell's bells & holy tarnation! Way back in 1979 I saw DAWN OF THE DEAD double billed with Cronenberg's SHIVERS---which at that the time was titled THEY CAME FROM WITHIN. As I recall 1979 was the very year that DAWN was first released. Seeing these two great horrors on the same bill remains one of my most cherished memories from my many years of moviegoing. Thank you so much for the post.
Well, how about that! My other ‘underage movie achievement’ was seeing Dawn of the Dead around the same time I saw Shivers & Rabid. Except it was called ‘Zombies - Dawn of the Dead’ when it played the ABC on Prince of Wales Road in Norwich. I was still only 15, was five foot nothing & bought the ticket myself! Ah, the ABC such a class establishment! 😂 I spent many happy hours there over the years. One of my favourite cinema memories is watching ‘Blues Brothers 2000’ accompanied by the roadworks outside as the broken fire exit door swung back and forth in the wind…
My ideal double bill would be pairing this with some other movie wherein someone accidentally causes the place to burn down, thus vanquishing evil, lol. Jeez louise, that was hilariously awful! "Um, you dropped your candle. Wow. That went bad _fast"_ made me laugh so hard, not to mention the, "Scientist always goes down with his lab" line. I did not see any of that ending coming.
MARS NEEDS WOMEN and PAJAMA PARTY. Martian Tommy Kirk falls for Yvonne Craig and Martian Tommy Kirk falls for Annette Funicello. One is a comedy, and one is a "bad" movie that's really as TONGUE-IN-CHEEK as it is BAD.
As it dawned on the villains that they'd been foiled by the water valve being turned off, Jess should have had a line like "That's made you stop, cock!"
At the time in the U.S. may women's prisions didn't have fences around them. Maybe double bill this with "Werewolf in a Girl's Dormitory" (1961), yes, the dormitory was a prison.
Hola,hace años vi muchas películas de serie"b" me gustaban las de horror...por eso me gusta tu página,porque has mencionado algunas que cuando era adolescente vi en el cine y después en la t.v....
Wasn't this a song from ELO? 🤔 Either way, this is one of those movies that could use a remake &, as such, could fix some of the problems the original has.
Now now... evil dude wouldn't have dropped his candle if good dude hadn't turned off the utilities. I say he still gets credit for the lamest win ever.
Has anyone heard about the google executive put on paid leave for claiming the company's A1 chatbot is sentient? Hey folks, reality is making B movies obsolete.
@@Nerval-kg9sm "engineer" to be precise, According to this article. "A Google engineer has decided to go public after he was placed on paid leave for breaching confidentiality while insisting that the company's AI chatbot, LaMDA, is sentient. Blake Lemoine, who works for Google's Responsible AI organization, began interacting with LaMDA (Language Model for Dialogue Applications) last fall as part of his job to determine whether artificial intelligence used discriminatory or hate speech (like the notorious Microsoft "Tay" chatbot incident). "If I didn’t know exactly what it was, which is this computer program we built recently, I’d think it was a 7-year-old, 8-year-old kid that happens to know physics," the 41-year-old Lemoine told The Washington Post"
Hmm, Ideal Horror Double Feature? So many options... All these choices are more Sci-fi than Horror, but that's just how I lean, and of course there's always been some overlap between the genres. What about It Came from Outer Space and It Came From Beneath the Sea? Two decent movies that both Came From somewhere. The Thing From Another World and It! The Terror From Beyond Space, as pretty good sci-fi horror flicks that got remade 25ish years later as absolute masterpieces of the sci-fi/horror genre? (The Thing and Alien). It Conquered the World and The Monster that Challenged the World, for the most overblown title. To be fair, the titles are already kinda long, and the more honest titles of It Conquered Some of a Small Isolated Town for a Day Or So At Most, and The Monster that Challenged The Salton Sea Area are just gonna overflow the marquee. Eh, screw it. Dracula and Frankenstein is probably the 'Ideal' Horror Double Feature. Oh! The Omen and Rosemary's Baby is also a good thematic pairing.
This is another cautionary tale for teenage moviegoers. If you act badly, you will be sent to a reformatory where you will be drained of your life by various types of vampires. Be good or else!
Actually, as a teen, I watched a triple bill "The Incredible Two-Headed Transplant", "The Dunwich Horror" and "Destroy All Monsters". Sorry, but they don't come any better than that.
That sounds like a real hoot.
I saw Werner Herzog's remake of "Nosferatu" as a double bill with Ralph Bakshi's "Wizards". That caused some stylistic whiplash.
I saw Destroy All Monsters as a drive-in triple feature with the most recent Godzilla vs Kong film and Godzilla vs Megalon. That was pretty fun.
@@midwestmonster9886 You still have drive-in cinemas? That is something so "Americana"...
@@ozymandiasnullifidian5590 They're not as prominent as they used to be, but you can still find them here and there. I saw the new Jurassic World movie at a drive in last weekend. It was well attended too.
Hold on, wasn't the tub full when Carol was being threatened, then it's empty once the water's turned back on?!?
I guess she swallowed a lot of water during that drowning attempt, poor gal.
He dumps salt in the bath so it's not useable.
A load of good character actors who could elevate bad material - and appreciated a quick buck.
"Attack of the Crab Monsters" with "The Day the World Ended". Or "The She Creature" with "The Monster of Piedras Blancas". Perhaps "The Manster" with "The Brain that Wouldn't Die". "Planet of the Vampires" with "Black Sabbath". Or maybe "Humanoids from the Deep" with "Galaxy of Terror". Hell, this could go on all night.
The actor who played "Eric" was Queequeg in "Moby Dick" (1956) and a scientist in "The 27th Day." I haven't heard of this movie in decades. Thanks, Robin, for this review.
Ideal horror double bill actually existed I believe: Don't Look Now and The Wicker Man.
Victor Jory was a western legend (and Canadian) , and always the villain, often in Randolph Scott or Audie Murphy movies.
Paul Cavanagh (Cooper) was a regular in the Basil Rathbone Sherlock Holmes films and served in WW1 and the Canadian Mounted Police.
He also played the Shadow in a 1940 serial of that name.
I'm always looking for a good Western to watch. Got any recommendations starring Jory?
He also played the evil Yankee overseer in Gone With the Wind.
see Victor Jory with Marlon Brando in "The Fugitive Kind"
wasn't he also in Catwomen on the Moon? as a rather boring hero?
Here's a couple of good triple bills:
Dracula (Lugosi), Frankenstein (Karloff) & the Mummy (also Karloff).
The Curse of Frankenstein, Dracula and the Mummy (all Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee)
2 sets of classics!
As a teen with my first car we went to the Candlelight Pix Drive-In and saw, I think, "Scream Devil Scream" and "Attack Of The Creeps" for about $1.50 for the both of us. I think they played the same Hector Heathecoat cartoon before every movie for years. Maybe one of the movies was "Invasion Of The Giant Spiders"? It was a long time ago.
I liked the movie in part because it featured Friedrich Anton Maria Hubertus Bonifacius Graf von Ledebur-Wicheln.... who played Queequeg in Huston's "Moby Dick". Though a fine actor, Friedrich never became a "household name", though perhaps he would have been the longest one if he had been. The wonderfully creepy Victory Jory was born in one of Canada's remote and almost unpopulated arctic territories ---- in Dawson City, Yukon in 1902, shortly after the end of the Klondike Gold Rush, when almost all of the hopeful gold-seekers had gone. The Yukon has produced a number of famous eccentrics, and to this day remains populated almost entirely by eccentrics.
I have to admit the Shawshank letter caught me off guard. I laughed at that bit long enough I actually had to stop and back up the video. Well done!
For me, Fall of the House of Usher and the Haunted Palace. 2 Vincent Price classics!
I think an even better pairing might be HOUSE OF USHER and MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH. It's a toss-up between the two as being the single best film in the AIP Poe cycle.
@@ashleys9397 The Haunted Palace was actually based off of an HP Lovecraft story but ends with a quote from a Poe poem from which they got the title, to give the impression that it was another of their Poe movies. I'd have to say that "The Pit and the Pendulum" would be a strong contender for single best though.
My ideal double bill would be "Scream" and "Scream and Scream Again"; mainly for the titles, also for the juxtaposition of their styles, and the amazing cast in "Scream and Scream Again" (Vincent Price, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, and the smouldering Michael Gothard).
Michael Gothard was often one fan--freaking-tastic actor. Undoubtedly his single best role was that of the witch-hunting Father Barre in Ken Russell's THE DEVILS (1971). Yep, the man certainly knew how to smolder---brilliantly. It's a pity that he had to leave us at still such a comparatively young age.
And then follow it up with "Carry on Screaming" just for the laughs? (Aweful movie. Love it anyway.)
The ultimate double bill would be The Last Man on Earth and Night of the Living Dead.
Same idea going in different directions, starting from different ends.
Nice! *chef's kiss*
I was literally waiting for him to read Andy's letter🤣
I‘m always looking for good bad movies, this one I‘ll watch before I open my next utility bill.
Your editing is Gregory Impeccable.
My ideal horror double feature? Man, that's a hard one... The Howling and An American Werewolf in London?
I remember my grandmother taking me to the drive-in to see Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter in a double feature.
'most of the inmates are running around free.' looked to me as if they walking gingerly on tiptoe because their new slippers were tight. Not exactly running.
My double bill would be Hobgoblins. Then Werewolf. Two classic mst3ks. In a row.
My personal favorite double bill was "The Blob" and "I Married A Monster From Outer Space". Steve McQueen and Tom Tryon. I was probably about 13.
I'd put together a double bill consisting of "The Quatermass X-periment" (aka "The Creeping Uknown") and "X-The Uknown." I've always held a deep appreciation for those two creepy English films.
Very good choices, both fine examples of 1950's science fiction horror; aliens from both outer space and inter Earth.
As far as double/triple bills, for me personally it was 1978 at the Kenwood Drive-in when they played *Star Wars,* followed by George Pal's *War of the Worlds,* and then another showing of *Star Wars.* That was a good night.
And ideal double/triple bill would be *Blood on Satan's Claw, Let's Scare Jessica to Death* and *Full Circle,* or *Bird with the Crystal Plumage, Deep Red* and *Suspiria.*
Anytime you can see Victor Jory, Paul Cavanaugh, and Ann Doran is a good time.......even in this.
I'd probably release this with 'Face of Marble'! (See what I did there!?!) But my favorite Double Feature Concept is 'The Lost Continent'... both of them!
My double feature would be Horror Express and Devil's Express (*the* number one blaxploitation kung fu horror movie starring Warhawk Tanzania).
Let's go with Fiend without a Face and First Man into Space. They both have Marshall Thompson in uniform. And they rhyme.
Columbia Pictures always made watchable sci-fi movies in the 50's
Horror double bill...
Duel (1971) Steven Spielberg
The Car (1977) Elliott Silverstein
Anyone who's seen both knows why.
That seemed to have a nice example of the coloured make-up and filtered light effect. As seen in the Jekyll and Hyde film and also another film that I seem to recall was called something like the Sea Witch.
Unfortunately in this film there are no special effects. As the effects of the treatment progress the makeup just gets thicker
Dream horror double-bill: Let's Scare Jessica to Death and Messiah of Evil
Double bill: The Night Stalker and The Night Strangler. The latter has a similar plot but done much better.
Those were both by Dan Curtis weren’t they?
@@fredblonder7850 They were.
Love it! 1950s "Atomic Age" horror sci-fi. B movie cult schlock but fun, just go with it! The ultimate double bill...."Alien" & "The Thing".
Agreed on "Alien" & "The Thing".
I think an ideal double bill would be The Zombies of Mora Tau and Lawrence of Arabia. Pretty sure no one's gonna get that, but what the heck...
6:00
I like the old-fashioned faucets easily fixed when leaking.
So, this stone guy's been around for 200plus years and no one figures it out? I'm guessing this guy must've had an aversion to shaking hands, so no one would guess his secret all that time...
Ideal Double Bill: "Night of the Demon" (1958); "The Thing from another World" (1951); "Destroy All Monsters".
Ideal horror double feature (and I am not alone here): "Brief Encounter" with "Bambi Meets Godzilla."
How about "Bambi Meets Godzilla" and "Bambi's Revenge"?
You have to stop messing around with Medusa so that won't happen.
Could you make a video on the short career of Rondo Hatton?
Hell yeah! Dark Corners must definitely mount a Rondo Hatton Retrospective. Rondo was one of the greats---a man who actually did sort of sacrifice himself for his art.
@@ashleys9397 Seconded- Hatton had bit parts in some interesting films before being made a (semi) star.
This 1957 film reminded me in several ways of the 1955 "Creature with the Atom Brain"; the atomic-powered zombies in both films are distinguished by "Creature"'s decidedly 40s style script.
'In The Mouth Of Madness' and 'Event Horizon'
For some mid-90s encroaching otherworldly insanity.
Your tshirt, Robin!!!!!
Night of the living dead paired with Its a wonderful life!
Hmmmm....There are possibly some thematic threads here that I can't even began to untangle & tease out. Like I say---Hmmmmmmmm....
THE MAN WHO TURNED TO STONE ... sounds like a great title for a bio pic about the discovery of Viagra. Wonder if those immortals could actually shit a brick? What would make a great pairing? There is no doubt ; SOYLENT GREEN and THE OMEGA MAN.
Back when I was a teenager, there seemed to be at least one film per week on TV, in which Charlton Heston would end up dying in a crucifixion pose.
It was a little shocking to see Moses pick up a porno mag in Omega. Until I learned Heston and the missus were life models for art classes back in their younger days.
Which happens to be why Heston never minded the period slave undies and loincloths of his later films.
Have seen this only once. For such a relatively obscure film, it has been released on DVD. Not sure if still available. Just checked. It's still available. Who would have thunk it. Yet the 1965 version of She is only a DVD release and has yet to be upgraded to a blu-ray release.
Ideal Horror double bill - James Whales' Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein.
“Beast from 20,000 fathoms” and “Godzilla King of the Monsters” (1956 version)
4:16
Edward Scissorhands !
ELO was on the sound track
Turn to Stone
Journey was in the end credits with Stone in love.
0:12 Lurch lurched out
I think Killer Shrews and Grizzly II: Revenge would work. Both used puppets to replace the actual creatures at several points.
Dawn of the dead. 1978
And shivers or rabid
I actually saw ‘Shivers’ and ‘Rabid’ on a revival double bill around 1980 at the Odeon, Norwich, UK when I was 15 years old. My brother had to get the tickets as he was 18 at the time so he was just old enough! I was nowhere near, of course, and looked about 12!!!
Well hell's bells & holy tarnation! Way back in 1979 I saw DAWN OF THE DEAD double billed with Cronenberg's SHIVERS---which at that the time was titled THEY CAME FROM WITHIN. As I recall 1979 was the very year that DAWN was first released. Seeing these two great horrors on the same bill remains one of my most cherished memories from my many years of moviegoing. Thank you so much for the post.
Well, how about that! My other ‘underage movie achievement’ was seeing Dawn of the Dead around the same time I saw Shivers & Rabid. Except it was called ‘Zombies - Dawn of the Dead’ when it played the ABC on Prince of Wales Road in Norwich. I was still only 15, was five foot nothing & bought the ticket myself! Ah, the ABC such a class establishment! 😂 I spent many happy hours there over the years. One of my favourite cinema memories is watching ‘Blues Brothers 2000’ accompanied by the roadworks outside as the broken fire exit door swung back and forth in the wind…
Many years back "Shivers" was one of those movies we always followed up by watching "Lifeforce".
Anyone else worried about that "petrified sheath" ?
"The inmates are loose!" Which is a terrible way to describe teenaged girls. THANK YOU!
I'm always getting the actor who plays the hero in this and the one that plays the sleazy doctor in The Brain That Wouldn't Die mixed up.
CURSE OF THE FACELESS MAN would be great with this.
The man who turned to stone was married for a while, but was recently divorced, i guess his marriage hit the rocks, oh well....
Booooooooooooo
Oh GROOOOAN....
@@ashleys9397 i guess you liked my comment...
@@TomFrichek so, you love my comment...
@@moepanetta9028 top tier dad joke, my friend.
My ideal double bill would be pairing this with some other movie wherein someone accidentally causes the place to burn down, thus vanquishing evil, lol. Jeez louise, that was hilariously awful! "Um, you dropped your candle. Wow. That went bad _fast"_ made me laugh so hard, not to mention the, "Scientist always goes down with his lab" line. I did not see any of that ending coming.
It truly was a Shawshank redemption.
MARS NEEDS WOMEN and PAJAMA PARTY.
Martian Tommy Kirk falls for Yvonne Craig and Martian Tommy Kirk falls for Annette Funicello.
One is a comedy, and one is a "bad" movie that's really as TONGUE-IN-CHEEK as it is BAD.
Great choice!!!!
I thought I recognized that creepy Psychiatrist from somewhere!
Evil Dead 2 and Army of Darkness
Frankenstein's bloody terror and the mummy's revenge both with paul naschy
As it dawned on the villains that they'd been foiled by the water valve being turned off, Jess should have had a line like "That's made you stop, cock!"
At the time in the U.S. may women's prisions didn't have fences around them. Maybe double bill this with "Werewolf in a Girl's Dormitory" (1961), yes, the dormitory was a prison.
The first film we ever reviewed! ruclips.net/video/_VZubwsDIGk/видео.html
Thank you for this channel.still being arounf
I rather liked this one when I stumbled on it here on youtube a few weeks ago. Really is pretty entertaining for what it is and when it was made.
I've never even heard of this movie before. Looks interesting.
Hola,hace años vi muchas películas de serie"b" me gustaban las de horror...por eso me gusta tu página,porque has mencionado algunas que cuando era adolescente vi en el cine y después en la t.v....
Ideal?! Hmm.....How about Frankenstein meets the Wolf Man and House of Frankenstein?!!!
3:15
Surely & fortunately not "The Rock" because it's empty of everything except void.
Wasn't this a song from ELO? 🤔
Either way, this is one of those movies that could use a remake &, as such, could fix some of the problems the original has.
Always nice to see a new one
A favorite film of Karl Schwab, Henry Kissinger, Lord Rothchild and Queen Elizabeth.
Now now... evil dude wouldn't have dropped his candle if good dude hadn't turned off the utilities. I say he still gets credit for the lamest win ever.
Has anyone heard about the google executive put on paid leave for claiming the company's A1 chatbot is sentient? Hey folks, reality is making B movies obsolete.
He's not an executive, just an individual contributor.
@@Nerval-kg9sm "engineer" to be precise, According to this article. "A Google engineer has decided to go public after he was placed on paid leave for breaching confidentiality while insisting that the company's AI chatbot, LaMDA, is sentient.
Blake Lemoine, who works for Google's Responsible AI organization, began interacting with LaMDA (Language Model for Dialogue Applications) last fall as part of his job to determine whether artificial intelligence used discriminatory or hate speech (like the notorious Microsoft "Tay" chatbot incident).
"If I didn’t know exactly what it was, which is this computer program we built recently, I’d think it was a 7-year-old, 8-year-old kid that happens to know physics," the 41-year-old Lemoine told The Washington Post"
In reality, he was born in the highlands of Scotland and chased out of his village when he first revived.
0:25
OF COURSE ! It's the 50s, not the netfilthlix of the 2,000s
So this is where Star Trek Beyond got the idea from
Hmm, Ideal Horror Double Feature? So many options...
All these choices are more Sci-fi than Horror, but that's just how I lean, and of course there's always been some overlap between the genres. What about It Came from Outer Space and It Came From Beneath the Sea? Two decent movies that both Came From somewhere.
The Thing From Another World and It! The Terror From Beyond Space, as pretty good sci-fi horror flicks that got remade 25ish years later as absolute masterpieces of the sci-fi/horror genre? (The Thing and Alien).
It Conquered the World and The Monster that Challenged the World, for the most overblown title. To be fair, the titles are already kinda long, and the more honest titles of It Conquered Some of a Small Isolated Town for a Day Or So At Most, and The Monster that Challenged The Salton Sea Area are just gonna overflow the marquee.
Eh, screw it. Dracula and Frankenstein is probably the 'Ideal' Horror Double Feature. Oh! The Omen and Rosemary's Baby is also a good thematic pairing.
Where does Robin get all his great shirts?
Tough broads and torpedo bras got them in the seats in 50's America......The good old days.
Great review! I enjoyed the movie but it had a horrible ending. Can you please do a review on Atom Age Vampire?
That man looks exactly how I feel.
The man who turned to stone among the captive women in the ultra stiff bullet bras. Someone in the production must have owned a riding crop.
Q The Winged Serpent and Lair of the White Worm or Horror Express and Island of Terror.
The Tingler and Alien
I love your T shirt.
I wonder what the channel’s science expert would say about stealing life essence? 🤔
This is another cautionary tale for teenage moviegoers. If you act badly, you will be sent to a reformatory where you will be drained of your life by various types of vampires. Be good or else!
This would pair nicely with THE FOUR SKULLS OF JONATHAN DRAKE. Won't you PLEASE review that one.
I like this one. It's a little known classic but hasn't aged well in a few areas
The real hero of this movie is a candle. Weird.
HIM: "Half the women here are running around loose".
ME: "HAMMINA! HAMMINA! HAMMINA! DING! DING! DING! DONG!"
I say, what an absolute shower.
...and not chaste
This film is definitely the better movie of the double feature, Zombies of Mora Tau being soo boring.
An entertaining 8-minute video that felt like only 4.
Is it just me, or does Eric look a bit like Peter Capaldi?
(1:00) Seems like he was getting a bit handsy there, yuck.
Robin, you've convinced me to try many films over the years, but this one looks lousy!
Sounds interesting.
Wich rock..Ooo..that rock..:)