Streaming Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition Online
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Streaming Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition Online.
Movie Title: Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition is available for streaming or downloading. Click Here to Stream or Download Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition |
This status is apparently the DVD-only version of the 20th Anniversary status from Yowl Factory. That means that it does not include the tin case, plastic Crow figurine or episode lobby cards. It does bear four sizable episodes of everyone’s well-liked cow-town puppet indicate.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition! Click Here
This residence features one episode with Joel Hodgson as host and three with Mike Nelson hosting. Two episodes are from the Comedy Central years while two are from the Sci-Fi Channel shows.
211- First Spaceship on Venus
Originally called Der Schweigende Stern and made in 1960, this international cast film about the first astronauts to land on Venus is a hoot. Filled with astonishing ideas about international cooperation, yet strangely dated in its science even for when it was made, this movie’s vision of the future is fun, action-filled and nearly breaks the goofy meter! The jokes are endless, non-stop and really helpful from the MST3K crew. “What’s a herring weigh? Oh, about a pound.” “Everything’s better in the crawler copter.” Unbiased the endless jokes about the robot in the film, Omega, will sustain you laughing throughout. The host segments are objective awesomely comic. When the planet has it’s “brown explosion” advance the ruin you’ll be rolling with laughter and the jokes skim really quick at that point. This is a sometimes overlooked, underrated classic that is too comical to represent. I admire it and never regain tired of watching it no matter how many times I sight it.
Buy,Download, Or Stream Mystery Science Theater 3000: 20th Anniversary Edition! Click Here
706- Laserblast
This 1978 feature comprises the final episode from Comedy Central and is an exclusive minute feature that received 2.5 stars from Leonard Maltin, a fact that is the source of endless improbable wisecracks as the credits roll. Hilarious throughout in spite of the fact that everyone working on the prove knew it might be their last one ever. The host segment wrap-up with huge 2001: A Situation Odyssey references is terrific.
904- Werewolf
This 1996 feature with Richard Lynch is even more ridiculous than most stories based on lycanthropy. The goofy meter breaks in the first reel of this film and never gets repaired. An archaeologist gets lop by the skeleton of a werewolf and so, predictably, becomes one. The acting, poor foreign accents, and other low-budget silliness in this film are hammered mercilessly by MST3K. The host segment where Mike and the ‘Bots are a girl group singing a teen tragedy song, a sort of like “Leader of the Pack” type number, is absolutely killer amusing.
1004- Future War
This 1997 video feature is so dreadful it is beyond words. The colossal headed Robert Zdar appears in his second film done on MST3K (the other was Soultaker) and his acting is objective as stiff as in the other movie. The film features dreadful looking rubber dinosaurs, mediocre martial arts-style action sequences, a hackneyed formulaic residence and acting so bland that calling it wooden would be a compliment! Fortunately, it has enough movement and scene changes to at least fuel a barrage of immense jokes from MST3K. It’s fun, but only thanks to the MST3K treatment. By itself, this film would be unwatchable.
The extra features on the DVD discs include the 3-part history of MST3K and a video of the reunion panel from Comic-Con 2008. These are very informative and though-provoking, even for long-time fans. Mountainous stuff all around.
Introduction
As timing would have it, Yowl! Factory’s first release of Mystery Science Theater 3000 DVDs after obtaining the rights away from Rhino Records coincided with the twentieth anniversary of MST3k’s premiere. They decided to pull out several stops for their first release (although they kept the same number — 4 — of staunch episodes per box place as Rhino had) ; besides the episodes themselves, the non-Limited Edition version contains a novel documentary detailing the rise and plunge of MST3k and a recording of the twentieth anniversary reunion of the core cast/crew from the 2008 San Diego Comic-Con.
While extras are always welcome, it’s the episodes that really matter. Here I hold Weep! Factory has done a reliable job. While the split between Joel and Mike hosted episodes is 3 to 1 in favor of Mike, the quality of joke telling is titanic and highlights MST3k at its best.
FIRST SPACESHIP ON VENUS
After the discovery of a message from the inhabitants of the second planet in our solar system, an international group of astronauts is sent to Venus to choose if intellectual life has evolved. In typical 1960s sci-fi movie fashion, mighty time is spent showing the viewer how the situation program of the future works and how location move really would seem to the astronauts. This makes the middle third of the movie extremely arduous as we are treated to long sequences of weightless (with the succor of harnesses) people and elderly scientists playing chess against robots.
I’d never seen this episode before, but I had seen the current film (although I’m not determined I was ever able to quit awake during the whole thing) . I found the joking from Joel and the bots to be average at best. One factor which started to annoy me after some time was a sub-plot wherein Servo’s sarcasm sequencer was location to a higher level causing him to obtain increasingly repetitive sarcastic remarks about the film. I found this to be a rare mis-fire from the Best Brains.
LASERBLAST
This is the narrative of a young man so extreme on the social ladder that he is actually the recipient of Eddie Deezen’s bullying. However, something working in his favor is that he stumbled upon a dapper portion of alien technology which attaches to his arm and allows him to fire lasers at his tormentors. On the downside, the claymation dinosaur aliens are now hunting him to retrieve their lost ray gun.
LASERBLAST was the final episode made for Comedy Central, and while the crew had hopes of the display being picked up by another channel (it eventually was) they were aware that this was potentially the last movie they would have the dubious pleasure of mocking. It seems appropriate therefore that there is a greater than average number of hilarious call-back jokes to earlier experiments. The fact that there are a attractive number of recognizable faces in the cast (Eddie Deezen, Roddy McDowell, Keenan Wynn) gives the crew many additional avenues for jokes, which they duly capitalize on.
WEREWOLF
Joe “younger brother of Martin Sheen” Estevez is infected by an unknown werewolf virus. The screenplay initially makes a tremendous deal that this is not the standard werewolf legend of legend; transformations can occur between any two species. The film promptly turns into the classic cliché of actors getting fur glued to their faces and then having them howl for hours at the moon.
This film (along with FUTURE WAR) is one of the most new films that MST3k tackled and there are several very 1990s directorial touches. It’s not the worst movie ever, but it is comic, goofy and totally illogical (thus becoming an instant classic episode) . The crew gets a lot of amusement over the fact that the plump moon appears to last for a week, and the abominable guy infects people with the werewolf virus for no reason other than that he is Horrible.
FUTURE WAR
This was an episode that I hadn’t watched — despite having a VHS recording of it — since its novel broadcast on the Sci-Fi Channel. The reason for avoidance was my memory of the film was so dire that I simply couldn’t handle another viewing. My sole memory was a scene of the Jean-Claude Van Damme looking guy kickboxing Robert Z’Dar in a warehouse of empty cardboard boxes.
So watching this episode brought me two surprises. One, the riffing from the crew was distinguished better than I had remembered (my theory is that in the ensuing years I’ve become considerable more strengthened against unpleasant films and am therefore now able to pay more attention to the jokes) . Two, the only memory I had of the film was bad, because that scene never occurs in quite that plot I had recalled.
I had completely forgotten about the unpleasant special enact dinosaurs, the mini-skirted nun, and the two spacious guys in the halfway house. You can really smell the 1990s odor coming off of this one, suitable down to its flannel. Another case where a movie pitches up softballs to the crew and they hit home speed after home speed.
Extras
The fresh documentary is an piquant peruse at the history of the note, although I doubt there is too powerful modern information that devoted fans don’t already know. However, I did gain it informative in its telling of the program’s very early days at KTMA.
The panel from the San Diego Comic-Con was hosted by Patton Oswalt (for what reason, I am not privy) and I found it to be slightly disappointing in that the moderator talks too worthy and the sound quality is not always mountainous. Quiet, its nice to look them all together again and I really got a kick out of Frank Conniff asking whether the urban tale about Joe Don Baker wanting to beat up the writers of MST3k was actually factual.
Stinger
So I would think Sob! Factory’s first release as a success. Even ignoring the extras, they’ve given us one solid and three mountainous episodes. They’ve already announced the next release and I can’t wait.
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