Pulp Librarian Profile picture
Feb 16, 2022 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Fun fact: in Britain you can enjoy chicken from many different US states.
It may look like you-know-what, but for various reasons of international copyright it isn't!
This was nearly a film with Charlton Heston...
Nobody's ferfect...
Well now I'm confused...
Well that's very British...
Who would win in a fight etc...
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a winner!
(tbh I liked the old Alaska Fried Chicken more. It had character...)
Literally JFC...

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More from @PulpLibrarian

Jan 3
Today in pulp: I try to buy a computer... in 1978!

Let's see how I do. Image
First things first: in 1978 you might never actually see your computer. Many people used dumb terminals linked to a mainframe or minicomputer system somewhere in the office basement. Access was on a timeshare basis, with dozens of users sharing access to the same system. Image
If you did have a microcomputer on your desk you were probably an executive. To be honest many CEOs didn't actually know what a computer was or what it did. Image
Read 6 tweets
Dec 27, 2024
The Playboy bluffer's guide to appearing well read now follows... Image
"Yes, Mary McCarthy is a much neglected novelist now and that's a shame." Image
"Well I don't know if an Oedipal reading of Hamlet really does it justice, but once you see it you kinda can't unsee it." Image
Read 8 tweets
Dec 26, 2024
Today I'm looking at a few books from New York publishing house Grosset & Dunlap... Image
London After Midnight, by Marie Coolidge-Rask. Grosset & Dunlap, 1928.

This is a movie tie-in version, although the last known copy of the film was destroyed in 1965 at a fire at MGM's vaults. It's one of the most sought-after lost silent films now. Image
A Thousand Years A Minute, by Carl H Claudy. Grosset and Dunlap, 1939. Cover by A C Valentine.

Part of the Adventures in the Unknown series, this is a time travel novel sending its heroes back to the prehistoric world. Image
Read 14 tweets
Dec 23, 2024
One of the best #Christmas presents you could ever get was a View-Master! It sold over one billion reels across the world, but it's based on Victorian technology. How did one simple gadget get to be so popular?

Let's take a look at the toy that took over the planet... Image
Stereographs are cards with two nearly identical photographs mounted side by side. Viewed through a binocular device they give an illusion of depth. By 1858 the London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company had published over 100,000 of them. Image
Sawyer's Photo Finishing Service began in 1919 in Portland, Oregon. By 1936 they had teamed up with William Gruber, who had been experimenting with stereoscope photography using the new Kodachrome colour film. Image
Read 18 tweets
Dec 22, 2024
Today in pulp I look back at a few forgotten '80s sci-fi movies and ask: is it time to reappraise them?

Spoilers: not all of these are available on Betamax... Image
There were a huge number of mid and low budget sci-fi movies released throughout the '80s, many of which went straight to video. Today they lurk in the far corners of your streaming service.

Should you watch them? Well let me take you through a few you might be tempted by. Image
Battle Beyond The Stars (1980) was Roger Corman's retelling of Kurosawa's Seven Samurai in space. James Cameron did an impressive job on the SFX with a small budget and the film certainly has a distinctive look. Image
Read 22 tweets
Dec 21, 2024
"A dream to some. A nightmare to others!" As it's Christmas let's look back at a film that I think helped redefine an old genre, captivated the imagination and launched many successful acting careers.

Let's look at John Boorman's Excalibur! Image
For a long time the film industry found the King Arthur story amusing. Camelot (1967) was a musical comedy; Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) was pure comedy. Image
Image
But director John Boorman had been thinking seriously about the Arthurian legend since 1969, particularly Sir Thomas Malory's 1469 telling of the story 'Le Morte d’Arthur'. The mythic theme greatly appealed to him. Image
Read 20 tweets

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