Reviews

4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
Lexx (1996–2002)
10/10
Unlike anything you've seen before
19 May 2001
The unlikely paring of Germany and Canada resulted in "Lexx: the dark zone stories" four telemovies which spawned the hit cult TV series simply named "Lexx". The movies themselves remain pinacles of the alternative sci-fi genre. The first episode sees Stanley H Tweedle (A security guard who accidently destroyed 94 reform planets, played to perfection by Brian Downey), Zev Belringer of B3k (A young woman who was transformed into a love slave for

failing to perform her wifely duties, a freak accident occured during her transformation leaving her part Cluster lizard; portrayed in her first incarnation by Eva Habermann), Kai (an emotionless undead assasin, played by Michael McManus) and 790 (the robot who worked on Zev was decapitated and it's head given the "falling-in-love" part of the transformation thus 790 fell madly in love with his subject; voiced to perfection by series writer Jeffery Hirschfield) unite by chance on "The Cluster" the planet ruled by almost eternal His Divine shadow who rules the universe, and accidently steal the LEXX (a 10 kilometre long dragonfly, also the most powerful weapon ever built/grown). After their intial escape from the Orwellin-like rule of His Shadow the "crew" escape into the dark zone, a paraell uinverse of chaos. The show is not only well designed, written and acted it also manages to combine genres such as horror, comedy, sci-fi and fantasy all at once. The regluar cast perform wonderfully in one hell of a love triangle: Stan wants Zev, Zev wants Kai but Kai is dead and wants nothing. While 790 wants to kill Stan (and any other living male Zev comes in contact with) find a body and have Zev all to himself. So if you want some thing a bit diffrent to Star-trek, something a bit more on the edge you'll find it and a whole lot more in Lexx. Check out the series where things become a whole lot more weird!
48 out of 50 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Very, very moving
16 January 2001
I've always loved Peter Jackson's films and this was no exception. Having mastered the horror genre with "Braindead" he proved he could make serious cinema very well. Superbly written and fantastic performances by the leads as well as the supporting cast, "Heavenly creatures" is one of my most favourite films. As for the ending, it never seems to lose it's power to shock.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
NightMan (1997–1999)
Fantastic- a comedy masterpiece
2 August 2000
Well, I tuned in to see something very funny and was not disappointed. I laughed till my cheeks were numb and I nearly went into a catatonic state. Only then did I slowly realise that this was supposed to be a serious sci-fi drama! Silly me! The plot was pathetic but what really made my laugh was the costumes! Why it was ever made is a mystery to me.
4 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Tank Girl (1995)
Not so bad...
13 May 2000
Well, well, well. They had to do it sooner or later didn't they? They just couldn't leave this brilliant comic book masterpiece alone. No, they grabbed it, turned it inside out, stripped it down and slopped it together on film. The amazing thing is- the film isn't that bad. Lets face it, it was never going to live up to the blood soaked comics but it has a lot going for it. Lori Petty stepped in at the last minute after Emily Watson dropped out. Pettys no TANK GIRL! but simply a tank-girl. As the film progresses, you can't help but warm to her as she parades her way through endless costumes and one liners. Alongside Petty is the pretty wonderful Naomi Watts as Jet girl. Watts shines through out the movie. The ripper effects are excellent although, in the comic Tank girl's beau is more like Ice-T's mean "T-saint" than cute-but-dim Booga. And of course we have the lovely Malcolm McDowell unashameadly hamming it up as villian Keslee. McDowell is clearly enjoying himself and you can't help but do the same. Well they've got the performances but what about the plot? The biggest let down really. The real tank-girl would never had put her butt on the line for a little girl no matter how cute; and how Keslee engineered the final battle it a bit unrealistic. But however between the plot holes is some great fun.

Keslee's torture of Tank-girl, the Cole Porter sing-along and the "calender shoot" are all often inspired film making. And just the sight of the most faithful comic book image rolling through the desert on cattapillar treads made me buy the video.
2 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed