Sunday 21 June 2015

Jurassic World (12A)

The opening scenes of this new blockbuster is featured in a house in a snowfilled Midwestern landscape, where a young long-haired boy is looking at pictures of dinosaurs through a Viewmaster Camera.  The room is designed in 1970s décor, and a film camera is featured on a shelf in the background.
However as the movie sails into the next few minutes, the viewer sees the movie is set in the present day, where two young brothers are being prepared by their divorcing parents to visit their aunt, Claire played by Bryce Dallas Howard.  Claire is curator at a theme park called Jurassic World.
‘Jurassic World’ – the movie is set twenty two years after the blockbuster, Stephen Spielberg movie, ‘Jurassic Park’, which sired two further sequels.  In 1993, cinemagoers were fascinated with the lifelike display of the dinosaurs in the original. Today, some of the shows of this latest movie are in 3D, making the subjects more lifelike.
This movie is set twenty two years after ‘Jurassic Park’, and the site is a major and true to life Dinosaur Park.  It is going through its recessionary phase, and fighting to stay in the race, so it must be the best, and gain new and more fantastic dinosaurs.  So a major new animal attraction is planned to attract new viewers.  However the plan backfires, in shades of King Kong the movie.
Action is aplenty in the feature when the new creature is unveiled, and when he acts up.
Meanwhile, when the two boys visit Claire, they get lost on the Jurassic journey, and end up in the forbidden dinosaur habitat land.
The hero of the hour, Owen, who sets out to rescue the boys and many others lost in the clutches of the dinosaurs, is played by Chris Pratt, and the character has a past love/hate relationship of sorts with Claire.
Owen is a type of 1930s movie serial hero, and the movie is a typical blockbuster disaster story, of which were popular in the 1990s.  ‘Jurassic World’ captures a lot of the feeling of that recent time.  However there is not much originality going on here, and everything happens as expected.  But the special effects are better than the previous three films and it’s edge of the seat stuff, and the 3D also doesn’t disappoint.   
David Flynn


Wednesday 10 June 2015

In Memory of Star Trek's Grace Lee Whitney 1930 -2015



Here is an interview with Grace from 2001.   She had just published her autobiography, 'The Longest Trek - My Tour of the Galaxy'. Grace talks about her days on Star Trek, and how she got started in show business, including giving a new perspective on Marilyn Monroe, following working with her on 'Some Like it Hot' in 1959.

She survived through a serious assault, alcoholism, drug abuse and rejection, but what is most inspiring about ‘Star Trek’ star Grace Lee Whitney, is not alone her survival but her consistent determinism to come back and stay successful in a tough profession.

Grace was a blonde actress who appeared in the original ‘Star Trek’ series in 1966 although her character Yeoman Janice Rand was discontinued midway through the first season.

Grace's autobiography, ‘The Longest Trek - My Tour of the Galaxy’ was recently published.  She writes in a very frank and honest way in the book about her life, her dreams, her disappointments and her mistakes.

She also writes about her early career as a singer and musician and the excitement of appearing with Marilyn Monroe in 'Some Like it Hot'.

In the book and in an interview with this writer, Grace sheds new light on the legend of Marilyn, based on working side by side with her and getting to know her on the set of the smash-hit movie.

“She was a wonderful actress and a wonderful comedienne--so funny and so sexy.  And so tragic, too. She drank on the set in order to get loose enough to perform.  She didn’t think she could go in front of the camera without a little “liquid medication.” I didn’t understand alcoholism at the time, because I was too deep in the disease myself, I wasn’t yet in recovery. But now I look back and I see her as a sister in this shared disease of alcoholism," said Grace.

“I remember that Billy Wilder, the director, had her do so many retakes on the dock in the final scene for Some Like It Hot.  He had her running up and down the dock in spike heels, running after Tony Curtis. She kept telling Billy, “I can’t do any more takes!” But he told her he needed the shots, so she did them, even though she was pregnant at the time. Shortly after that, she went into the hospital and miscarried. And I think it hurt her terribly that she lost that baby. The baby was someone she could love, someone who would love her back, simply and unconditionally. And she was so desperate to be loved. Her marriage ended just a couple years after she lost the baby. Then, a year after her divorce, she was dead.

“I identify with her so much. She grew up hungry for love, like I did.  She even converted to Judaism to marry Arthur Miller, just like I did when I married my first husband. 

Grace went on a downward spiral with the help of alcohol and tranquilisers when she was sacked from 'Star Trek'.

“I created the role of Janice Rand with the help of Gene Roddenberry, but he gave me a lot of leeway to create the role and bring the character to life. Leonard Nimoy (Mr. Spock in ‘Star Trek’) was my acting coach, and he also gave me a lot of insight into my character on the show.  I had done so many one-shot roles before on many TV shows, like ‘The Virginian’, ‘Bonanza’ and ‘The Untouchables’, but this was my first continuing role, and I was looking forward to growing and developing that role over a number of episodes. That’s why it hurt so much when my character was written out of the show,” said Grace.

Grace talks of how much she enjoyed working on 'Star Trek' and reveals that she was sexually assaulted, in the offices of Desilu (the production company that made ‘Star Trek’) by a man she only names as ‘The Executive’.

Peculiarly, just a few days after Grace claims the assault took place she received a phone call from her agent, telling her that she had been written out of the series.

“It was a horrible shock, like losing my entire family," said Grace.   “I have always felt that there was a definite link between the sexual assault and my being written out of the show.”

"One of the ironies of that whole experience was that I was told I was off the show just days before Star Trek premiered on NBC.” said Grace.  “When the first episode aired, I was already gone, my name had already been painted off my parking place on the studio lot, and I was history. Then, after the show premiered, I started getting fan mail--the fans had no idea I was already written out!

In the intervening years after leaving ‘Star Trek’, Grace found it hard to come to terms with the assault and being sacked.  She remains tight-lipped about ‘The Executive’s’ identity.

‘Star Trek’ has reached such cult proportions among science fiction fans, that it has led to the cast from the original series and from its offshoots to tour the world and make appearances at ‘Star Trek Conventions’. 

Grace is a favourite at the conventions and it was through these that she got back to the world of Star Trek in the late 70’s in the first ‘Star Trek’ feature film. 

In the intermediary years she was heavily addicted to drugs and alcohol.  Happily after a time, Grace did become sober.

“I believe alcoholism is a disease I was born with. I took my first drink when I was 13 years old. Then, years later, after I was sexually assaulted and lost the role on ‘Star Trek’, I went into a tailspin of drinking and drug abuse. But while I was actually on the show, I never took a drink on the set. If anything, I was more of a pill head at that time.  I was taking diet pills that were prescribed for me by a "Dr. Feel-Good,".

“It was a commonly prescribed diet pill in those days, especially in Hollywood.  I was very hyper and energetic most of the day, and after work I couldn't come down, so I took a few drinks and sometimes I would drink too much.

“I went to the bars with the best of them. Jimmy Doohan (Scotty) and I closed many a pub on the weekend.”

She did a few television comebacks after Star Trek such as a two part ‘Batman’ in 1967, ‘The Virginian’ and ‘The Big Valley’ in 1968, ‘Cannon’ in 1974 and ‘Barney Miller’ in 1975.

She has appeared on four of the big screen movies and in a popular guest role on 'Star Trek - Voyager'.

“William Shatner is a hunk! He’s a very handsome, attractive man, and very charming and charismatic. As I have been watching Star Trek again on the Sci-Fi Channel, I've been thinking, "No wonder I was so crazy about this man!" He was a dashing, bold, larger-than-life starship captain--the perfect choice for the role of Captain James T. Kirk.  I really respect William Shatner as an actor.  I think he made Star Trek what it was.

“As an actress, I was often attracted to my leading men, but Bill and I were never romantically involved.

 And he gave me a wonderful endorsement for my book--so I love him for that!”

In the early years of her career she was a singer and opened clubs for the likes of Billie Holiday and Buddy Rich.

She made her Broadway debut in ‘Top Banana’ with Phil Silvers (‘Sgt. Bilko’).

She went to Hollywood to take part in the film version of ‘Top Banana’ and later continued fronting her own band, before she starred in ‘Some Like It Hot’.  She did many other television roles in series such as 'Gunsmoke before winning the plum role of Yeoman Rand in 'Star Trek'.

Grace talks deeply in her book about finding God and about how her religion helped her battle her drink and drugs problem.

“In life, you have to deal the cards that are dealt you. I think I've made the most of a fairly bad hand. If I dwell on the unfairness of having been written out before the full potential of my character was realised, I suppose I could be angry and bitter about it. But I'm not bitter. I try not to dwell on what might have been. I try to dwell on what is and what is yet to be.” said Grace.

Grace has been married twice, over a period of thirty years, and she is a mother of two.
She says she has been on a spiritual journey since becoming sober and that now she has taken on “the Lord as a lover.”

She is still friends with many of the ‘Star Trek’ people such as Leonard Nimoy who she calls her best friend, and the one who saved her life in the days following her dismissal from the show. 

She is also friends with George Takei (Mr. Sulu).  Both of them did a ‘Star Trek: Voyager’ special in 1996.

She is also close to Star Trek stalwarts Jimmy Doohan, Walter Koenig (Chekov), Marina Sirtis (Troi) and Denise Crosby (Tasha Yar).

She recently did an episode of ‘Diagnosis Murder’ with Takei, Koenig and Majel Barrett Roddenberry.

“I don't see Nichelle Nichols (Uhura) or DeForest Kelly (McCoy) very much anymore, which is sad because they've both been so kind to me over the years. De actually brought me into the Star Trek world again after I had been away for ten years--he was the one who told me about this new phenomenon called Star Trek conventions!” said Grace.

The strange thing about Grace’s sudden departure from ‘Star Trek’ was the fact that several scripts, which had yet to be filmed, had already been written around her.

The role of Yeoman Rand was beefed up for ‘City on the Edge of Forever’, in which Joan Collins guest starred.  This is considered the most popular and most critically acclaimed of all the ‘Star Trek’ shows.   Grace’s role was also expanded for ‘The Trouble with Tribles’ and ‘Dagger of the Mind’.  After her departure, Yeoman Rand’s dialogue was given to other actresses.

She is a supreme positive thinker, who has definitely triumphed over adversity.  It is also interesting to note how she feels no bitterness against whomever or whatever caused her to be written out of the show.

Grace Lee Whitney died of natural causes on May 1st, 2015.  She was 85 years old.