The Enterprise restoration…..!
Sun ,31/01/2016Very cool – It’s the same age as me, it needs that makeover….!
How the Smithsonian is restoring the original USS Enterprise to full 1967 glory
candybowl
Very cool – It’s the same age as me, it needs that makeover….!
How the Smithsonian is restoring the original USS Enterprise to full 1967 glory
candybowl
Was listening to Patton Oswalt on my ipod coming home from a work trip earlier this week – this bit really stood out – hilarious!
candybowl
I love Aunt-Man!
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An alternate take on SkyNet’s rise to awareness?
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hoping to over the christmas break, hoping to also avoid spoilers in the meantime!
candybowl
Wow. I think she’d be more powerful than Charlton Heston and Will Smith combined!
candybowl
Finished the John Scalzi-edited anthology Metatroplis a few days ago. This is an anthology he started by asking the writers to collaborate around a common theme – the future of cities and the dystopian, unusual or unpredictable forms they may take in the coming decades.
This is a great read – all good stories but to me the jewel (acknowledged by editor Scalzi directly in the comments before it) is the final story – ‘To Hie from Far Cilenia‘ by Karl Schroeder– it takes cyberpunk and effectively ‘overlays’ it on the real world we live in – truly an innovative story and i’d be surprised if elements of it aren’t already happening….I will definitely have to seek out some of that guy’s writing!
Anyway, definitely recommended!
candybowl
So for Prisoner fans, there is so much, yet so little. Here we have a great, completely enigmatic series that only lasted one season and was on tv the year I was born(!). So far ahead of its time, yet its prescient story is (literally) ever more real to us today, whether people choose to admit it or not.
But with all good stories, we are left wanting far more, and Patrick McGoohan – now sadly no longer with us – largely clammed up on the topic in his life and career after The Prisoner. And the recent 2009 attempt at an AMC remake of The Prisoner – despite a great Six (Jim Caviezel) and a potentially great Two (Ian McKellen) largely foundered in my view – too many attempts at distracting side plots without the deeper meaning(s) of the original, sadly.
But….in the late 80s, DC Comics published a mini-series that purported to ‘explain’ what happened to Number Six and The Village post-TV series. It was later put into a graphic novel – Shattered Visage – in 2000, which I only recently became aware of – I got a copy and have now read it twice (it’s a quick read). But it took the Wikipedia article to really begin to dig beneath the surface – like the series, I think the story is fairly deep, and actually even may shed some light on the VERY enigmatic (and often heavily criticized) ending episode of the series (Fall Out).
I won’t recap anything here, save to say i’ll need to re-read the story multiple times to dig through all the stuff noted in the Wikipedia article, to be sure. But for Prisoner fans, I think this definitely merits a read – or Six. 🙂
candybowl
but the first are still the best – the Daleks!
Tags: '10s, 00's, 60's, 70's, 80s, 90's, computers, freaks, malevolence, monsters, movies, mythology, robots, sci-fi, space travel, TV
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on All nefarious….
A bit weak on plot, some quibbles with the firepower of the relative ships, and the closeups of the basestars look a bit too ‘Lego-y’ but otherwise not bad…. He really likes the ‘flip over flyby’ too – a bit overused, nearly every ship does one at some point or another in the video…stupid robots, you messed with the WRONG starships! Although truth be told, I bet the Defiant could take a couple base stars on its own… 🙂
candybowl