We’ve come to the end of the line for this ‘ol blogathon
folks, but not before we’ve been attacked by all varieties of creatures great and
small, and felt the angry, unforgiving wrath of Mother Nature at her most
petulant.
It’s been a great honor to host the Nature’s Fury Blogathon,
and get the chance to read so many terrific articles by a bunch of amazingly
talented people. I can’t thank everyone enough for taking the time from their
busy schedules to make this happen. Hopefully, it won’t be another two years
before I muster up the initiative to host another such event, but until that nebulous
day, let’s take a look at the last (but certainly not least) batch of posts…
Animal Attacks:
Kerry from Prowler Needs a Jump tells us what happens
when an elephant and some angry ants walk into a bar (not really) in her
comparison of Elephant Walk (1954) and The Naked Jungle (1954)
Dan Lashley (with special guest) of Wide Weird World of
Cult Films grins and bears Grizzly
(1976)
Sarah Jane (look her up on Letterboxd.com) sinks her
fangs into the aptly named killer snake film, Sssssss (1973)
http://letterboxd.com/fookthis/film/sssssss/1/
Chad Denton from Trash Culture pecks away at Birds of Prey (aka: Beaks: The Movie) (1987)
Aurora from Citizen Screen reviews the greatest giant bug
movie ever made (that’s a compliment), Them! (1954)
https://aurorasginjoint.com/2016/06/21/them-1954/
I Fought Nature, and Nature Won:
Debra Vega from Moon in Gemini takes a stand regarding
Stephen Kings’s The Stand (1994)
Amanda by Night from Made for TV Mayhem takes a look at
the forgotten TV movie Ants (aka: It Happened at Lakewood Manor) (1977)
Emma Wallace from Emma K. Wall Explains it All spends some
quality time on a ski lift in Frozen
(2010) (Nope, not the Disney one!)
Kristina from Speakeasy gets out her umbrella for The Rains Came (1939)
Crystal from In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood
shows how Bogie, Bacall and Robinson upstage a hurricane in Key Largo (1948)
https://crystalkalyana.wordpress.com/2016/06/20/key-largo-1948/
Thomas Lalli Foster chills out with Robert Altman’s Quintet (1979)
Wendell Ottley from Dell on Movies feels the freeze with The Ice Harvest (2005)
Robin Pruter from Pop Culture Reverie examines the drama
and devastation of San Francisco (1936)
https://popculturereverie.wordpress.com/2016/06/20/san-francisco-review-by-robin-franson-pruter/
Beth from Mildred’s Fatburgers reminds us Tom Joad will
be there, in The Grapes of Wrath
(1940)
http://www.mildredsfatburgers.com/the-blog/natures-fury-dust-is-nothing-to-sneeze-at Thomas Lalli Foster chills out with Robert Altman’s Quintet (1979)
I finished my entry.
ReplyDeletehttps://popculturereverie.wordpress.com/2016/06/20/san-francisco-review-by-robin-franson-pruter/
Thanks for participating, Robin. I will update today's recap.
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