Google apps
Main menu

"Pyramids of Mars"

9 Comments -

1 – 9 of 9
Blogger Mike Taylor said...

"In music hall, the straight man often commanded a higher fee than the comedian."

Is this really true? Your rationale makes sense, but I don't think that's the way the world works. Isn't it all about recognisable stars?

Wednesday, 25 March, 2020

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

I have read that it is true. I believe Nicholas Parsons said so. (Although that was more "variety" than "music hall"). The straight man was often an employee of the theater, and the comedian was on a one week contract.

Wednesday, 25 March, 2020

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

Wikipedia agrees with me...

Wednesday, 25 March, 2020

Blogger Mike Taylor said...

Well, that is genuinely fascinating!!

Wednesday, 25 March, 2020

Blogger postodave said...

Interviewer: what would you and Ernie have been if you hadn't been comedians
Eric: Mike and Bernie Winters
One of my favourite comedy moments in this is Liz and Tom doing the Marx Brothers. According to the commentary they were told not to but did it anyway.

Wednesday, 25 March, 2020

Blogger Tom R said...

"... Chariots of the Gods came as recently as 1969..."

I remember the Ancient Astronauts trope being huge in the mid- to late Seventies. Most of "Battlestar Galactica's" appeal, beyond mimicking "Star Wars", came from its Von Däniken vibe: pyramids, cubits, vipers, Egyptian and Graeco-Roman gods... (Mixed in, perhaps confusingly, with a Hebraic exodus of "Twelve Tribes"). One of my beloved Micronauts™ [*] action figures was a "Pharoid With Time Chamber": the Micronauts™ toys came with no canonical back story, but Bill Mantlo's Marvel Comics adaptation established him "Prince Pharoid of Aegyptia", a desert world within the Microverse, and the Time Chamber was basically a sarcophagus.

[* Not to be confused with Gordon "Straw Dogs" Williams' Micronauts novels. There must have been a copyright lawsuit over that clash but I can’t find it on Google..]

Could also include TOS Trek's "Who Mourns For Adonais [sic]". The last swansong of Von Dänikenism in SF I can think of was "Stargate", starting 1994.

A closely related Seventies trend was the zodiac. Not only did this give "BSG" the names of the Twelve Worlds/ twelve tribes (hence an entire spinoff series titled "Caprica"), it also provided the future calendar in "Logan's Run". Plus, "Capricorn One", and I suppose "Scorpio" in "Blake's Seven". But then, star signs were big outside SF too... "Age of Aquarius", "Capricorn Dancer", the Scorpio killer in "Dirty Harry", etc.

"Pyramids of Mars" fit wonderfully within this whole trend.

Saturday, 28 March, 2020

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

I'd forgotten "Who Mourns For Adonais." That was the first episode of Star Trek I ever watched. (Although I enjoyed the idea of the giant hand grabbing the Enterprise more than all the melodrama down on the planet.)

Does the aliens/gods connection have an earlier source than Lovecraft, I wonder?

Saturday, 28 March, 2020

Anonymous Tom R said...

After seeing CGI Sutekh - fewer than ten standard parsecs removed from Marvel's CGI Khonshu, Taweret and Ammit - we should include 'MOON KNIGHT'. The comic debuted in 1975, so it fits my hypothesis nicely...

Wednesday, 19 June, 2024

Anonymous Tom R said...

After seeing CGI Sutekh - fewer than ten standard parsecs removed from Marvel's CGI Khonshu, Taweret and Ammit - we should include 'MOON KNIGHT'. The comic debuted in 1975, so it fits my hypothesis nicely...

Wednesday, 19 June, 2024