|  |     
    I saw this movie back around 1977 as half of a double feature with
    Wizards at a theater that showed two movies for $2.  I thought
    Wizards was awesome, but Laserblast (assuming this was the movie
    I think it was) was a waste of time. UGGHH!
    
    I seem to recall the plot was about a UFO that lands, and when it
    leaves, the occupants leave behind (I don't remember why) two things.
    A medallion on a chain, and a funny looking weapon that the hand
    fits into.  These objects are subsequently found by some teenager
    who proceeds to put on the medallion and then play around with the
    other 'thing' until he finds out that it is a powerful weapon. 
    He promptly goes cruising down the highway blowing billboards to
    smithereens.  I vaguely recall he is transformed into a weird
    destruction prone creature because of the medallion  (or maybe the
    aliens came back - I really can't remember).  Whatever happened
    at the end I have forgotten (thankfully).  
    
    Overall the plot was stupid, the acting (what acting?), and I could 
    have done better special effects with a budget of $20 (ok so probably
    $50). This sounds like it was made as a farce (like Attack of the
    Killer Tomatoes), but it was NOT, it was just plain bad.
    
    Rich
 | 
|  |     Only two things of real interest in LASERBLAST. One, the aliens
    were animated models done by Dave Allen, who should be more well
    known than he is (he's *good*). Two, the "star" of the film was
    the guy who played Rocky in RHPS. It's the only other film I know
    of that he's been in.
    
    --- jerry
 | 
|  |     "Laserblast" also featured Roddy McDowell in a cameo appearance
    as a doctor.  Apparently they had just enough money to hire him
    for the one shot, because the would obviously have shot the scene
    over again if they could have afforded it -- the camera boom keeps
    getting into the picture, and when McDowell's patient takes off
    his shirt for the examination, he still has a microphone taped to
    his chest.
    
    Earl Wajenberg
 |