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Book #40 of 2024:
Alien Terror by Chris Archer (Mindwarp #1)
Another old middle-grade reread for me. As a series launcher, this title has potential, although it remains mostly setup for the future at this point. When wimpy kid Ethan turns 13, he gains super-strength and expert fighting skills during times of stress, but is cryptically warned that he should hide his newfound abilities before they bring on unwanted attention. Sure enough, a shapeshifting enemy is soon stalking him and reveals that the heroās father was an extraterrestrial, though thatās all we really get for now besides a minor arc about standing up to a bully but pulling back from the urge to kill him once heās at his victimās mercy.
This book came out in 1997, and itās fun to spot both the references like Marvel comics and Mortal Kombat that are supposed to establish the protagonistās nerdiness and the clear but unmentioned plot influences of popular genre works of the era like The X-Files and Terminator 2: Judgment Day. The storyline cribs from those a mistrust of authority and hints of a wider conspiracy, although that angle would have to wait for the sequels to develop any real specifics.
I dig the visual aspect of the boyās eyes turning jet-black when his powers activate, the light body horror of the other changes heās feeling inside, and the creepy implication that his adopted parents know more about his situation than theyāre letting on to him. As I sometimes mentioned in my Animorphs reviews, books for this age range often traffic in metaphors for puberty and feelings of teenage alienation, and that element doesnāt get much more literal than this. Itās a solid start for a concept that I remember going in some interesting directions later on.
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BORIS KARLOFF COLLECTION
BORIS KARLOFF COLLECTION REVIEWED
The Boris Karloff Collection brings together four movies that most Karloff fans havenāt seen. It came from near the end of his life, when he was taking anything for work. That means it was mostly Drive-In circuit fare directors by the Latin B-Movie New Wave or Jack Hill. Everything gets a turn at villainy here. You have alien rays, killer toys and LSD zombies.ā¦
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Alien 2: On Earth (1980) is an obviously fake, super low budget and ultra violent sequel to Alien beforeĀ Aliens had come out. Ā A pre cert VHS version was released by VTC under the name Alien Terror.
Alien Terror (1980) aka Alien 2: On Earth aka Alien 2: Sulla Terra
Watching . . .