Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- HORSE'S TABLE (17A: Article of furniture on which a plate of oats might be set?) (from "horse stable")
- DRAGON'S LAYER (23A: Thick, spiked outer covering?) (from ... the movie Dragonslayer?)
- PIG'S KIN (37A: Relatives in a sty?) (from "pigskin")
- CAT'S CAN (39A: "Throne" for a lion king?) (from "CAT scan")
- CHICKEN'S TRIP (46A: Walk from one coop to another?) (from "chicken strip")
- TURTLE'S HELL (56A: Being flipped on its back, e.g.?) (from "turtle shell")
Dragonslayer is a 1981 American dark fantasy film directed by Matthew Robbins from a screenplay he co-wrote with Hal Barwood. It stars Peter MacNicol in his feature film debut, Ralph Richardson, John Hallam, and Caitlin Clarke. It was a co-production between Paramount Pictures and Walt Disney Productions, where Paramount handled North American distribution and Disney handled international distribution through Buena Vista International. The story is set in a fictional medieval kingdom where a young wizard encounters challenges as he hunts a dragon, Vermithrax Pejorative.
It is the second joint production between Paramount and Disney, after Popeye (1980), and is more mature than most contemporary Disney films. Because the audience expected the film to be solely children's entertainment, the violence, adult themes and brief nudity were somewhat controversial, though Disney did not hold the North American distribution rights. The film was rated PG in the U.S. Like The Black Hole (1979), the version of the film broadcast on the Disney Channel was edited to remove two scenes.
The special effects were created at Industrial Light and Magic, the first use of ILM outside of a Lucasfilm production. Phil Tippett had co-developed an animation technique there for The Empire Strikes Back (1980) called go motion, a variation on stop motion. This led to the film's nomination for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects, but it lost to Raiders of the Lost Ark, the only other visual effects nominee that year, whose special effects were also provided by ILM. Including the hydraulic 40-foot (12 m) model, the dragon consists of 16 puppets dedicated to flying, crawling, or breathing fire.
The film received generally positive reviews from critics, but it performed poorly at the box office, grossing $14.1 million worldwide against a production budget of $18 million. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score, which went to Chariots of Fire. It was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, again given to Raiders of the Lost Ark. (wikipedia)
Bullets:
- 5A: Monster whose gaze remained lethal after her death (MEDUSA) — I'd forgotten this. That 12yo who played D&D (but failed to see DRAGONSLAYER) probably knew this MEDUSA fact very well. I miss that kid.
- 40A: Arctic fishing shelter (ICE HUT) — that's where I.C.E. should go—to the ICE HUT! And then, you know, stay there. Til summer.
- 2D: Member-owned business (CO-OP) — yeah, I see you trying to make this a non-chicken answer, but this still looks exactly like "COOP," which is in your CHICKEN'S TRIP clue; I'd probably have tried to figure out a way to get rid of it (or, easier, just rewrite that CHICKEN'S TRIP clue (46A: Walk from one coop to another?)—there are way, way funnier ways to go at that one).
- 30A: Casting rod? (WAND) — I'm telling you, 12yo me would've been really into crosswords if he'd known there were MEDUSAs and DRAGONSLAYERs and wizards with WANDs!). Ooh, and Pac-Man!! (6D: Score points in Pac-Man, say). You could've sold me on your adult pastime pretty easy, I think.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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Mostly easy, but I needed trial-and-error in the SE. I didn't catch the double meaning(s) of "Turtle's hell/TURTLESHELL" and the other theme entries, so it became a solve by the crosses throughout. Too early in the morning, maybe.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteEasy-Medium. A little more resistance than our usual Tuesdays (solved without reading the theme clues). Liked it a bit better than @Rex did.
* * * _ _
Overwrites:
I was close at 5A. With no crosses I put in gorgon instead of MEDUSA.
pARk before CART for the food vendor's place at 39D
ScARFS before SNARFS at 44D.
Close again at 60A. tsa before PRE.
Peon before PeEr before PLEB at 54D led to (briefly) keeping eArS on instead of TABS at 65A.
No WOEs.
My nominee for a funnier 46A: "Rhode Island Reds' single in the Top 40"
It's Wednesday, ;-)
DeleteGood morning! Definitely at least medium and maybe medium challenging for me this morning. The western 2/3 fell right in, but the endings and the fill around them just took me much longer to see. Like @REX I was looking for something cat related.... until I saw it, then I was OK. Took me forever to see TURTLESHELL (wanted TURTLESkiLL at first???? what was I thinking?). Liked it a lot more than @REX... 4 stars from me. No need for a revealer, I thought the gag was fun enough. I think it just depends what floats your boat. Great puzzle from my end, Kevin! : )
ReplyDeleteI was so looking forward to 46A being more like "Part of a fight in the coop" being CHICKEN'S HIT, but alas, it was not to be. Otherwise I liked the theme better than @Rex but agree overall. Thought TURTLE'S HELL was the best of them, although CHICKEN'S HIT would have been even better.
ReplyDeleteIt's very difficult to square the Peter McNichol in Dragonslayer with the one we get eight years later in Ghostbusters II, but he co-steals the show in each alongside the female lead with Caitlin Clarke in the first (RIP) and Sigourney Weaver in the second. In fact, in the case of the latter, I'd argue that McNichol's increasingly exasperated conversations with the film's primary antagonist-as-frumpy-medieval-tyrant-art saves the otherwise lackluster sequel whose finale, I must note, bears a striking thematic similarity to the conclusion of The Last Jedi, and where the power of NYC/Galactic Love is all ya need.
ReplyDeleteBut I digress. OFL errs. This was a fine puzzle, 3/4 stars on the cinematic Ebert Scale.
Yes, yes, I have heard all dis...
DeleteC'mon, not even a chuckle for TURTLESHELL?
ReplyDeleteLiked the theme answers better than most!
ReplyDeleteI thought the theme was pretty cute, especially PIGSKIN ans CHICKENSTRIP.
ReplyDeleteI’ll formally use the SO LAME descriptor - flat theme and goofy fill. It was on the trickier side midweek so there’s that I guess.
ReplyDeleteVERA
ICE HUT x SHACK is the highlight. The two long downs were throw ins - plenty of real estate but no meat. UNBIND, SNARFS, AD FEES etc just drag the whole grid down.
Madame MEDUSA
I liked the difficulty level - other than that it was a flat Wednesday morning solve.
Sturgill
Absolutely loved DRAGONSLAYER, and I was a fair bit older than Rex's 12. It will not look like much today, but at the time those were cutting edge special effects.
ReplyDeleteVery much enjoyed the S-shifting puzzle. I did not like the clue for SNARFS, as I always hear scarf down and snarf up.
In other news, tomorrow will be my NYT debut puzzle. I hope you enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteWoo hoo! WTG! And a Thursday!
DeleteYay!! Looking forward to it!
DeleteWell done you! Looking forward to it.
DeleteBig congrats, @kitshef!
DeleteI'm jealous! 😁
DeleteCongrats! May the favor of Rex be yours. Har.
Roo
Awesome!!!! Looking forward! Congrats!
DeleteYoohoo! Congratulations!
DeleteWow, congrats! Looking forward to it. I'm curious... how long were the delay from submission to assessment and from assessment to publication? (I'm vaguely aspiring.... but very vaguely!).
DeleteAwesome! Thursdays are my favorite. Looking forward to it!
Delete@Rick Sacra - From submission to assessment expect three months or close to it. For me, assessment to publication will be just over two months, but from what I have heard it can be much longer.
DeleteCongratulations! Can't wait to see it.
DeleteThat's fantastic! Congratulations!
DeleteRoutine Wednesday puzzle, at most Medium in difficulty. It didn't sparkle, but I found the theme mildly amusing and probably would add on an extra half-star to Rex's rating.
ReplyDeleteThis is the first time I've heard of the word LAME being frowned upon. I feel as if I USE that word all the time and nobody's ever SAID anything. I think I'll keep using it. I don't think people use the word LAME much to refer to the physically disabled, not anymore anyway, for this to be an actual issue of concern. For example, Trump and company continue to blame Biden for the current economy, but their blame is lame. I wouldn't bat an eye saying so.
Only yesterday I felt the need to get clear on the distinction between a CAT SCAN (nowadays the preferred term is CT scan) and an MRI. It's a pretty big difference. A CT scan uses X-rays, a fairly strong (i.e. highly energetic) form of electromagnetic radiation, strong enough for genetic mutations to be a risk. An MRI uses magnetic fields and radio waves, which as electromagnetic radiation goes, are far less energetic and far less risky: the photons in that frequency range don't have enough energy to knock electrons out of their shells and thus won't damage DNA molecules. On the other hand, an MRI is a lengthier procedure. And I'm told they can be pretty loud.
In addition to "slink" as an alternative to SKULK, there's also "stalk", which I almost put in.
That'll be all for now. I think the snowfall has ended in my part of Connecticut, for the time being. Hope the weather hasn't been too bad for you, wherever you are.
The other difference is that CT scans only show bones; an MRI can show some soft tissues as well. I've had a couple--the noise isn't THAT loud, but it's irregular and unpredictable, so that I always think the machine has just broken down.
DeleteSo yesterday after no foul play I opened my laptop to see a bizarre display on my screen, took it down to the nearby store where I got it, waited for an hour to see the nice man helping people with problems and when I finally reached him he took one look and said, well you screen is cracked. Bought a new one last night and have been installing stuff ever since, it seems like. At least the NYT is in and this site is accessible so I'm happy for now.
ReplyDeletePuzzle played very easy here, the trick revealed itself so no revealer. SNARF vs. SCARF was about it for dilemmas. There are lots of ice fishermen around here but I've never heard one refer to an ICEHUT. "Shanty" seems to be the term of choice. And an outlet is where you access POWER, not where you store it.
OK Wednesdecito, KC, but not much of a challenge. Kinda Cute. Thanks for a medium amount of fun.
And now to figure out how to connect to my printer.
That's me, and now I'm un-anonymous again.
DeleteEveryone knows that a CHICKEN'S TRIP is "crossing the road".
ReplyDeletePower is the rate of doing work. You can’t “store” it. An outlet is a power source.
ReplyDeleteSurprised OFL didn’t blanch pretty hard at MACE today
ReplyDeleteMy experience was contrary to OFL’s. I thought the theme was fun. The answers were discernible (nice on a Wednesday) and for the most part “in the language”.
ReplyDeleteThere were enough trouble spots to keep it interesting as well - the SE corner was being particularly picky, with LOS and PLEB side-by-side making TABS difficult to discern, compounded by the fact that I still don’t understand the clue for UPSHOT. It took a bit of effort there, but I prevailed.
They do get a demerit for cluing the ordinary word GAIN has a brand name, but that’s not enough to drag it down to a grade of D (which would be POOR). Maybe it’s not an A, but I would be comfortable in B+ territory, which definitely merits more than to stars in my book.
An outlet does not store power, it lets you connect to a source of power (e.g., the power company). So the outlet is a power “store”, roughly in the sense that a grocery is a food store.
ReplyDelete[Sire?]
ReplyDeleteDOGSPA
[“Help me, lord, to avoid the other way to interpret this answer”]
ReplyDeleteBUGSPRAYER
And the clue is.... "Dear Lord, deliver me from the evil swatter swinging in my direction! In the name of the great Dragonfly, Amen"
DeleteNice ones!
DeleteI wanted Dragon’s Lair …
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteIguanas, newts and gila monsters?
LIZARDSKIN
Neat idea. Like how two more Themers were snuck in the center row. Would've been spectacular if the two Long Downs were also Themers.
When the flock really listens?
SHEEPSHEARS
SNARFS. Har. In the NYTXW, it's always SNARF for eating, SCARF for a neck wrap. SCARF isn't clued for eating. Future reference.
Wood denizens talking to God?
BEARSPRAY
Enjoyed this puz. The right toughness level for a Wednesday. Fill pretty good, for having to work around all the Theme. Now I need to go to DESPOT and get more coffee. Har.
Have a great Wednesday!
Two F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Much too harsh, Rex ! I enjoyed this !
ReplyDeleteLong time lurker but I just had to agree with you here, especially for the CHICKENSTRIP clue. I mean, ‘when it crossed the road?’ was right there.
ReplyDeleteTesting one two three. New computer.
ReplyDeleteI was hoping you would tell use how the weather was for you.
ReplyDeleteAgree with several of the commenters here. Contrary to Rex's opinion, the theme was clever and fun.
ReplyDeleteA welcome reprieve from the tedious clues of the past few weeks
ReplyDeletecompletely mediocre
ReplyDeleteI find it very irritating when they try to get cute with clueing and end up with something that doesn't make sense. Even when the crosses reveled that POWER was the needed answer for (13D: Outlet store?), I thought, that can't be right. While an outlet is a source of power, no power is ever "stored" in an outlet. That would be a battery.
ReplyDeletePoor sportsmanship asea?
ReplyDeleteHorned and horny?
Bambi spokesman?
Did you know that stadium, sandlot and DIAMOND are all 7 letter baseball venues?
Since this theme was about re-parsing words and phrases to produce arguably funny results, I loved it. This is more or less what I do,not only here, but in the remainder of my so-called life. This likely explains why people cross the street when they see me coming. But I digress. Great puzzle. Fun,fun,fun. Thanks, Kevin Curry.
WHALESPOUT
BUCKSHOT.
DEERSTALKER
Oh, bravo to the mind that came up with this sparkling wordplay. I wouldn’t expect less from Kevin, whose {Pan in the butt] made 2025’s Clues of the Year list (answer in reply). Also, good choice to tighten the theme by limiting it to animals.
ReplyDeleteFreshness in the grid as well, as every theme answer is not only an in-the-language phrase, but a NYT debut.
I like the PuzzPair©️ of RELAY RACES and WAND, the lovely answers SKULK and UPSHOT, the rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap (LOOTS), and how IT’S ODD contradicts its clue number. I also like the unintended airport code (ORD) sharing the box with the intended one (LAS).
But mostly I like the play of words in the theme, a “Hah!”-heavy solve for me, the loudest coming at TURTLESHELL.
Your mood elevator was greatly appreciated, Kevin. Thank you!
GOAT
DeleteThe clue and answer combo for Turtle's Hell is really depressing. What horrible monster would do that to a turtle. I don't need that image during my morning coffee and word games.
ReplyDeleteAnother day without a Star Wars clue!
ReplyDeletePretty much concur with Rex, though maybe a bit less about DRAGONSLAYER; to each their own.
ReplyDelete22 three-letter answers; I've got to develop a baseline for what's normal, though not trying to invade Gary's turf. 22 isn't a MIL, but it's more than a TAD.
Rex, back from a two-day weather-induced? hiatus, rates consecutive puzzles at two stars. Sunday's write-up was far more caustic, versus today's more, in his words, "just blah". Which reinforces my Sunday comment that it perhaps should have gotten one star (the inaugural such award).
When we finish each puzzle, I give it a review then immediately (obsessively?) check out the rating, then the write-up. To date, I believe Rex's 5-point system is actually 2 - 2.5 - 3 - 3.5 - 4, which begs the question "why not 1 through 5 with no halvsies?" I remain intrigued but quite entertained.
MEDUSA is my health insurance plan.
ReplyDeleteLiked the puzzle. Struggled more than usual in the NE for some reason as I had trouble getting the rather obvious Dragon Slayler DRAGONS LAYER
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed it. Fun theme.
ReplyDeleteI groaned me when I finally understood CATSCAN; it took me a moment to equate can with throne. But I agree with Rex that taking that answer out of the animal realm seemed odd. And it just felt as though, given the theme, the puzzle should have been more fun than it was. The cluing was lackluster.
ReplyDeleteAnyone else feeling as though every other puzzle seems to have AD FEES in it? Who'd have thought that would be such a common entry.
Hands up for baseball STADIUM before DIAMOND.
ReplyDeleteAs an animal lover, I certainly liked the subject matter. Very cute theme answers too, although I cringed a bit at the poor TURTLE’S predicament. I’m sure I did that as a child without realizing how cruel it must’ve been. We also would put them in cardboard boxes, which must’ve been terrifying for them. These days, I’m much more likely to stop on the road and move them out of harm’s way.
ReplyDeleteI liked the puzzle more than RP did but have to agree a revealer would’ve polished it up some. SHIFT S maybe? But I’m not sure how to clue it. Windows/command? Anyhoo, for a Wednesday, it was just fine without it.
Easy-medium. No WOEs and EvaDE before ELUDE was it for costly erasures.
ReplyDeleteMildly wacky, mildly liked it.
I can see Rex's points, but there were some good things here. First off, six theme answers! We don't see that often. And definite articles in Spanish. We had THE clued as a partial the other day, as is LOS here, but LAS is more creative--and pairs up nicely with ORD. If you have to do it, then overdo it, I say.
ReplyDeleteIt took me too long to see the theme, mainly because of PIGlets, which seemed confirmed by crosses. Then once I got it, I could see SHACK crossing HUT. Like Pablo, I only knew about shanties, which people keep in their yards and then tow out onto the ice once it is thick enough. But an ICE HUT is apparently a pop-up cube that will hold 3 or 4 people and is light enough that you can carry it out yourself. I've never seen one in action.
I too think of SNARFS up, though the web tells me it can also be down. But that for me made two cases where the clue said down and the answer said up --see also 45-D , UPSHOT, a very nice touch.
DRAGON SLAYER is a category, not just a specific movie-- St. George was a DRAGON SLAYER.
The best thing, in the end, is the mental image of the HORSE eating its oats off a plate on the table.
Fun puztheme with nice extra themers from @egs & @roo & others.
ReplyDeleteM&A has gotta chip in:
Jungle cat's stash?
LEOPARDSPOT
staff weeject pick: ORD. Usually clued as an airport code. Interestin flight divergence to a whole different abbreve clue, today. Like.
some other faves today: DIAMOND. SOLAME. UPSHOT [weak puztheme material, here]. SNARFS. SKULK. HUT/SHACK [Eliminatin ICE, of course]. POWER clue. RELAYRACES & their clue.
Thanx for the funs, Mr. Curry dude. 'Twas a puztheme that keeps on givin, I'll betcha.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
p.s.
The final runt puzzle(s):
**gruntz**
:(
M&A