Cinefantastique Spotlight Podcast: Tribute to Richard Matheson

Genre film lost one of its most influential forces last week when author and screenwriter Richard Matheson passed away. Matheson was able to imbue his scripts with a contemporary outlook and an incisive inquest into the human condition that helped define genre film.
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Genre film lost one of its most influential forces last week when author and screenwriter Richard Matheson passed away. Whether writing originally for the screen, as with the Star Trek episode, "The Enemy Within," adapting his own work, which he did for such classic Twilight Zone episodes as "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" and the archetypal 50's horror film The Incredible Shrinking Man, or adapting others, including bringing Fritz Leiber's Conjure Wife to the screen as Burn Witch Burn (a.k.a. Night of the Eagle), Matheson was able to imbue his scripts with a contemporary outlook and an incisive inquest into the human condition that helped define genre film for the latter half of the twentieth century, and on into the twenty-first.

Cinefantastique Online's Steve Biodrowski, Lawrence French, and I sit down to discuss Matheson's contribution to the world of science fiction, fantasy, and horror, weigh his overall influence on popular cinema, and discuss favorite examples of his work. Also in this show: Steve and I discuss the recent limited releases Byzantium and 100 Bloody Acres. Plus: What's coming to theaters next week.

Click on the player button to hear the show, or right-click the title to download.

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