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29׉Hhttps://www.filmospheric.comGׁׁrנiS %c܌J ̒9׉Hhttps://www.filmospheric.comGׁׁrנiS %c܌S !̒9ׁHhttp://www.filmospheric.comׁׁЈ׈EiS %c܌<׉E	Volume 1, Issue 2
February 2026
Filmphernalia
Your New Entertainment Bud
From the Editor’s Desk
Lines Immortal
“I've seen things you people
wouldn't believe.”
Blade Runner (1982)
Welcome to the second issue of
Filmphernaila. Hope you are all
alive and kicking. I was hoping
to get this issue out before
Valentine’s Day, so I’m thrilled
to have it out a tad early. Or
maybe I could simply move the
goalposts. :)
Inside this issue:
Screenopticals: Laura and the
Return of Twin Peaks
FilmBuzz — Usual, Unusual, and
Unheard
Scripter’s Haven — Kinolime
Feature Script Competition
Q&A: Mark L. Christensen — Indies
in Brief
2
2
2
The Fabulous
3
Retro Fandom — The Retro Network 3
Film Quiz
3
Been There, Seen It!
4
Over the past two months, I’ve
seen some really great movies
from the yesteryears, making it
a challenge to pick and choose
for creating a short list of the
best ones. It depends on one’s
taste, mood, and other things.
So here are my five picks for
this month.
1. Born to Kill (1947)
2. When Willie Comes Marching
Home (1950)
3. A Fistful of Dollars (1964)
4. Fearless Faith (2020)
5. Confessions: Two Faces of
Evil (1994)
Film Noir
Comedy
Western
Faith/Spiritual
True Crime
January was busy and it was
funny, but no fun, to see yet
another guy posing as a
filmmaker contacting me on
Stage32 and ask for any ideas/
scripts I would like to share for
possible production. I knew
better since I had reported a
few such “producers” to the site
admin for trying to steal my
work. They prey on starving
screenwriters to steal their
intellectual property so they
pose as some filmmaker, using
the filmmaker’s picture off
some online site and list their
IMDb page on the profile. But
they would never list their own
website and always use a
suspicious Gmail address.
Word of caution: on Stage32 or
anywhere else, say Craigslist,
don’t share your stuff with any
random person pretending to
be a filmmaker in need of
scripts.
For Filmospheric, the movie
review count is almost there at
the 100 posts mark. Expect me
to brag about it next month.
While I was able to review just
10 movies over the past month,
some of them were really good.
Find those in the Fabulous 5 list
below. Enjoy the two new
screenopticals and a short Q&A
Ernest Dempsey
February 11, 2026
with actual filmmaker Mark L.
Christensen.
Thank you for your time and
feel free to reach out via the
Contact Form on https://
www.filmospheric.com.
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Filmphernalia
Screenopticals: Laura and the Return ofTwin Peaks
Two news screenopticals have
been posted to Filmospheric
since the inaugural issue of
Filmphernalia came out last
month. Both have one name in
common: Laura.
The first article analyzes Otto
Preminger’s Laura (1944) that
has been widely rated as a
great noir film. As a noir and
mystery fan, I offer my two
cents on the movie as a murder
mystery with noir elements. My
verdict sits on the mystery side
of the movie, and I offer my
reasons in the article.
The second piece is about Twin
Peaks: The Return (2017) by
David Lynch and Mark Frost. It
was evoked by the recent social
media hype about the supposed
third season of Lynch and
Frost’s classic 1990 show Twin
Peaks (my teenage crush). I
contend that The Return is Twin
Peaks in name only. It should
have been called something
else as it is really not the return
to the original show. It was the
return of the now late and ever
great David Lynch, but not close
to the original Twin Peaks.
Read these screenopticals on
Filmospheric site (carousel).
FilmBuzz — Usual, Unusual, and Unheard
Catherine O’Hara
was battling cancer.
She was being treated
since March of last
year.
 Nicole Kidman and Keith
Urban finalize their divorce.
(KYMA, January 7)
 Timothy Busfield Charged
with Child Sex Abuse.
(Consequence, January 9)
 Kiefer Sutherland arrested
over alleged altercation
with rideshare driver. (USA
Today, January 13)
 Larrain brothers launch
transactional platform
pijama for independent,
undistributed films.
(Screen Daily, January 15)
 Award-Winning Actress and
Comedian Catherine
O'Hara Passes Away at 71.
(Broadway World, January
30)
 'Faces of Death' remake
film sets April release date.
(Nerdist, February 5)
Scripter’s Haven — Kinolime Feature Script Competition
Kinolime has opened for its
feature screenplay competition.
Here’s how they describe it.
If you’ve been waiting for the
right moment to put your script
in front of a team that actually
wants to make the movie, this
is it.
The story begins here and now...
Submissions open January
23rd and remain open until
March 15th. That window will
close fast, and when it does, so
does your shot this cycle.
This isn’t just about winning. It’s
about finding a script that we
believe in and turning it into a
real, produced feature.
To enter, visit the link
https://www.kinolime.com/.
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Q&A: Mark L. Christensen — Indies in Brief
Architect, screenwriter, and
director Mark L. Christensen –
the talent behind the indie films
Box Head Revolution (BHR),
American Flyer, and North by El
Norte – shares his directorial
playbook.
Do you hold acting auditions?
Yes I do hold auditions.
When directing, what makes
you more self-conscious?
Hmm. It’s how actors treat my
process.
The fleeting atmosphere in BHR
owes to filming or editing?
The visual atmosphere is due to
Home Telicini giving that planet
a unique visual experience.
How valuable is using original
music in your movies?
Original music, has kept the film
in a Holey original universe.
What directors, current or past,
fascinate you most?
Above all, David Lynch and
Stanley Kubrick.
What’s the biggest challenge
for an indie filmmaker in today’s
movie market?
Finding a starting budget .
***
Mark Christensen’s filmmaking
work is showcased at his site
https://findartfoundation.org.
Mark L. Christensen
Retro Fandom — The Retro Network
There’s nothing better than
retro entertainment, except one
thing – stumbling upon a cool
retro resource. The one for this
issue is The Retro Network.
They describe themselves as:
the home of Wax Pack Flashback,
Thrift Store Horde, Jay
Plays, VHS archive, cartoons,
and more retro content! On
their website, you find articles,
podcasts/videos, images, and
more about retro movies, TV,
sports, and even food.
And they are open to possible
collaboration with fans of retro
paraphernalia on submitting
articles or starting a podcast
idea etc. I’m thinking of reaching
out to them already.
So check them out at https://
theretronetwork.com.
Retro is simply
inseparable
from Fandom.
Film Quiz — Can You Name the Beauty?
Okie, so back here at the Quiz
corner let’s see what the previous
quiz was about – a collage
of three images that would create
the movie’s name when put
together in words. It was: 1. An
eye 2. A dent (tooth), and 3.
Spielberg’s celebrated E.T. Put
together, it’s eye-dent-E.T. And
spoken in one breath, Identity. I
meant the 2003 psychological
thriller/slasher directed by
James Mangold.
For this quiz, I simply ask that
you recognize (and name) this
actress from the ‘80s. Tough
one I know. But the real TV and
movie buffs will tell.
Send your answers to:
editor@ernestdempsey.com.
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Twin Paws Productions made some short films and
plans to resume production on small indie projects.
Filmospheric is a manifestation of the same passion for
movies and filmmaking that led to the creation of
Twin Paws Productions. If you are an indie filmmaker
open to collaborating on projects where we won’t
need any real funding, because we can do all the
needed work ourselves, feel free to connect with me
on Stage32. My profile URL on the site is:
https://www.stage32.com/profile/178458/about.
Down the road, this section may be open for any
special messages or advertisements. So keep your
scanners peeled for it!
Visit and bookmark
https://www.filmospheric.com.
Been There, Seen It! — The John Wayne Museum
I didn’t know where the Duke
was born or that his birthplace
had a museum in his honor –
that is until I visited Iowa in
September 2021. My buddy
Josh was showing me around
and asked if I wanted to see the
John Wayne Birthplace Museum
in Winterset, the town where he
was born. I was game!
The small museum matches the
small town look of Winterset. It
is Wayne-themed A to Z and
makes you feel like stepping
inside Duke’s westerns. Posters,
wearables, books, accessories
- all the items sold at the
museum reflect John Wayne’s
unmatched legacy as the
ultimate star in the world of
western movies.
Also included in the ticket to the
museum is a tour inside the
house where the Duke was
born with newspaper clippings
of the time announcing his birth
and pictures of his younger
days adorning the walls. It’s a
lifetime of experience sitting in
the gazebo in the backyard. A
must see for all Duke fans and
lovers of classic Hollywood!
So what’s your favorite location
in connection with movies? How
many times have you visited it?
Want to share your pics and/or
travel tale?
Write to Us
Send us your two cents on
cinema/movies/TV and
Filmphernalia will publish
along with your name and
location (city/state/country).
Write to:
edtor@ernestdempsey.com
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