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03/06/2024
03/06/2024

3rd June 1999. A day destined to be etched in Aussie history.

Maybe you kicked it off watching repeats of Goof Troop, Saban's Masked Rider and Tom and Jerry Kids on the Agro-less Cartoon Connection. Maybe repeats of Inspector Gadget, Men in Black and Biker Mice from Mars on Cheez TV. Maybe you set out to school with TLC's chart topper 'No Scrubs' pouring from your Walkman, eager to chat with friends about Homer and Bart's trucking trials on last night's new Simpsons episode.

Or maybe you wagged school altogether, braving the rain to attend the opening day of Star Wars Episode I. This post's author definitely remembers which one they did. 😜

While the adventures of a certain galaxy far far away have always been popular down under, the road to June 1999 saw Australia once more swept up in Star Wars fever. Characters adorned the covers of Smash Hits, Disney Adventures, Rolling Stone, Australian Playstation, MAD, Premiere, GamePro and Movie magazines. Programs parodied the film from Cheez TV to Hey Hey It's Saturday. Channel 10 aired a one-off 90 minute special on the franchise' history, hosted by Angela Bishop. Dark Horse Comics adaptations and tie-in specials lined newsagent shelves. After scarfing a hearty KFC kid's meal complete with Star Wars action toy, fans snacked on packs of Lay's chips and washed down with Pepsi, swapping each of their included exclusive character cards.

Beginning midnight Friday 14th May, merchandise of every kind emblazoned the film's logo and tagline. A trip to World 4 Kids, Kmart or Toys R Us wasn't complete without stopping by Hasbro's line of Micro Machines Action Fleet, roleplay toys and games. All spearheaded by its flagship 3 3/4 inch figure line, each included a CommTech chip boasting the dubious claim to "imagine yourself in the movie!". A line which initially sold in droves, as did the launch of official Star Wars Lego. Incredibly polarizing within the company back then, now a cherished licensed staple.

And after charity preview screenings held hours earlier in association with Hoyts and Starlight Children's Foundation, the time had come for fans to live the hype themselves. Midnight matinees sold out long in advance. Thousands congregated in full costumes, lightsabers at the ready. Sixteen years of aggravated anticipation to see their favourite franchise back on the big screen melted away over the course of two hours.

Star Wars Episode I marked major (if not overlooked) leaps in cinema. The first movie to use Dolby's Digital Surround EX system. The first digitally screened movie beamed via satellite removing the need for physical prints. Plus the legendary debut of Jar Jar Binks, the first fully CGI movie character brought to life through motion capture. Although leaving critics polarised, audiences lapped it up. It remained in cinemas throughout the year. Hasbro's action figures became the 5th highest selling toy for Christmas 1999, only superseded by Furby, Pokemon and Digimon. And once all that money was counted and adjusted, remains second only to 'A New Hope' as the highest grossing Star Wars film.

Phantom Menace? Oh no, this was a Phantom Phrenzy. A hype Australia, and arguably Star Wars in general, would never see again.

Do you remember Franklins? Or perhaps Jewel or Tuckerbag?
30/05/2024

Do you remember Franklins? Or perhaps Jewel or Tuckerbag?

Can you find the 90s bands in this picture?
29/05/2024

Can you find the 90s bands in this picture?

Can you? 🤔

Was it really that long ago?
25/05/2024

Was it really that long ago?

34 years ago today, March 24, 1990. the final episode of Alf aired. It aired on NBC from September 22, 1986 to March 24, 1990. It was the first television series to be presented in Dolby Surround.
The title character is Gordon Shumway, a friendly extraterrestrial nicknamed ALF (an acronym for Alien Life Form), who crash lands in the garage of the suburban middle-class Tanner family. The series stars Max Wright as father Willie Tanner, Anne Schedeen as mother Kate Tanner, and Andrea Elson and Benji Gregory as their children, Lynn and Brian Tanner. ALF was performed by puppeteer/creator Paul Fusco.
Produced by Alien Productions, ALF originally ran for four seasons and produced 99 episodes, including three one-hour episodes which were divided into two parts for syndication totaling 102 episodes.
ALF is an alien from the planet Melmac who follows a ham radio signal to Earth and crash-lands into the garage of the Tanners. The Tanners are a suburban middle-class family in the San Fernando Valley area of California. The family consists of social worker Willie (Max Wright), his wife Kate (Anne Schedeen), their teenage daughter Lynn (Andrea Elson), younger son Brian (Benji Gregory), and their cat Lucky.
Unsure what to do, the Tanners take ALF into their home and hide him from the Alien Task Force (a part of the U.S. military that specializes in aliens) and their nosy neighbors Trevor and Raquel Ochmonek (John LaMotta and Liz Sheridan), until he can repair his spacecraft. He generally hides in the kitchen. It is eventually revealed that ALF's home planet Melmac exploded because of a catastrophe involving a nuclear war. In the Season One episode "Pennsylvania 6-5000", ALF tries to convince the President of the United States to stop the nuclear program, as ALF fears that Earth might suffer a fate similar to Melmac's, though miscalculating his words causes the President and National Security to call the FBI to arrest Willie. ALF was off the planet when it was destroyed because he was part of the Melmac Orbit Guard. ALF (a.k.a. Gordon Shumway) is homeless, but he is not the last survivor of his species. He becomes a permanent member of the family, although his culture shock, survivor guilt, general boredom, despair, and loneliness frequently cause difficulty for the Tanners. Despite the problems and inconveniences his presence brings into their lives, they grow to love him, though some episodes make it clear they are also afraid of how their lives would be turned upside down if word that he has been living with them gets out.
While most of the science fiction of ALF was played for comedic value, there were a few references to actual topics in space exploration; for example, ALF uses a radio signal as a beacon in the pilot episode. In the episode "Weird Science", ALF told Brian, who was building a model of the solar system for his science project, that there were two planets beyond Pluto called "Dave" and "Alvin" (as in David Seville and Alvin from the Alvin and the Chipmunks franchise), which gets Brian in trouble at school. However, after ALF makes a call to an astronomical organization and states that "Dave" is known by the organization, Willie comes to believe that "Dave" could have been the planetoid Chiron, or "Object Kowal", after its discoverer. ALF then shows Willie exactly where "Dave" is on an intergalactic map of the universe.
Each episode dealt with ALF learning about Earth and making new friends both within and outside of the Tanner family, including Willie's brother Neal (Jim J. Bullock), Kate's widowed mother Dorothy (Anne Meara) with whom ALF has a love-hate relationship, her boyfriend (and later husband) Whizzer (Paul Dooley), the Ochmoneks' nephew Jake (Josh Blake), a psychologist named Larry (Bill Daily), and a blind woman named Jody (Andrea Covell) who never figures out that ALF is not human (although she is aware through touch that he is short and hairy).
Changes occur within the Tanner household over the course of the series, including the birth of a new child, Eric (the reason for adding a baby in the series being that Anne Schedeen was pregnant at the time); ALF's move from his initial quarters in the laundry room to the attic, which he and Willie converted into an "apartment", and the death of Lucky the cat in Season Four's "Live and Let Die"; in this instance, ALF finds that despite his occasional attempts to catch Lucky with the intention of making the cat a meal, as cats are the equivalent of cattle on Melmac, he has come to love and respect the family pet too much to do anything untoward with Lucky's remains. When ALF acquires a new cat with the intent of eating it, he actually grows fond of it and allows it to be adopted by the family, although he admits to the Tanners he has become the worst kind of Melmackian, a "cat lover".

Did you have one? I know I did!
25/05/2024

Did you have one? I know I did!

Sadly I actually had one of these left over 80's relic dorky helmets in the 90's. Least I stood out like dog balls.

Sad news.
22/05/2024

Sad news.

‘He was the sweetest guy and what a handsome chap.’

Oh yea I can remember those. Straight from the video shop!
21/05/2024

Oh yea I can remember those. Straight from the video shop!

You older Aussie millennials will get this one

18/05/2024

Just some of the great songs you’ll hear on PHAZE 90's. Download the PHAZE Player app today.

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