Side Project Week 3
We didn't watch Classic Who last night, but we did watch Pushing Daisies in an attempt to catch up since the show is coming back so very soon after so very long a hiatus (stupid writers' strike!). I've seen all the episodes before, of course, but it was almost like watching them for the first time. I'd forgotten just how charming the show was, how vivid the world was-- entirely stylized and colorful and strange, nothing boring and normal in it at all. I want to live in Lilly and Vivian's house. I want to work at the Pie Hole. I want to look out my window and see endless miles of yellow daisies.
I hope the show stays as it is-- long breaks can break the flow, and I think it would just be a tragedy in this case. There was such a cohesive feel to these nine little episodes, such a unified idea of what was happening. I have trepedations about the new episodes more than I usually do at the start of a new series...
Week 2 News
news:
10 dumbest deaths in scifi: http://io9.com/5049753/12-weakest-deaths-in-science-fiction-
history
first picture of an exoplanet: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7617031.stm
lhc hacked: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7616622.stm
weird bright obkect: http://io9.com/5050127/hubble-finds-an-ultra+bright-mystery-object-outside-any-detectable-galaxy
planning for the apocalypse: http://io9.com/5050070/live-in-a-yuppie-missile-silo-in-upstate-ny
top ten geeky movie characters: http://blog.wired.com/geekdad/2008/09/our-10-favorite.html
more on the exoplanet: http://www.tor.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=blog&id=5347
top ten sexy geeks: http://www.geeksaresexy.net/2008/09/15/top-ten-sexiest-fictional-
geeks-part-1/
AND http://www.geeksaresexy.net/2008/09/16/top-ten-sexiest-fictional-geeks-part-2/
nasa has ideas about how to stop astronaut bone loss: http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/09/16/nasa.bone.loss/index.html?eref=rss_topstories
the oldest roots of scifi: http://io9.com/5050642/the-roots-of-todays-science-fiction-go-back-centuries
this is atlantis's last season! http://blog.scifi.com/stargate/
they're cancelling atlantis, for 'kids in the gate'? http://io9.com/5051841/the-stargate-
universe-team-assembles
the 20 best worst scfi movies of all time: http://io9.com/5052003/the-20-best-worst-science-fiction-movies-of-all-time
mccain and ufos: http://io9.com/5052098/mccain-acknowledges-the-lights-over-arizona-were-ufos
Sulu got hisself hitched!: http://www.tor.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=blog&id=5646
Flash Forward has a fun idea but is made by questionable talent: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080919/tv_nm/flash_dc
New SciFi Channel show stars Sully and looks fun! http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117992463.html?categoryid=14&cs=1
Sickest Transporter Accidents in SciFi: http://io9.com/5048821/the-sickest-teleportation-accidents-in-the-universe
New Red Dwarf coming:http://io9.com/5052663/details-about-red-dwarfs-revival-finally-emerge
Why Fringe is TVs most reassuring show: http://io9.com/5052384/why-fringe-is-sf-tvs-most-reassuring-show
Weekly Roundup 2 - Sept 14 to 20
Sorry it's late today-- my internetsen are not friendly to me this week. So here we go:
sun: true blood
You know that cliffhanger at the end of last episode? Yeah, now that that's cleared away, let's get back to the softcore ****. I can tell this show's going to be one of those 'leave them in abject fear and then fix it easily next week' shows; I mean, it already is. Sookie? Not dead by kicking. Jason? Not a murderer. Moving on. Bill went to talk to the Grandma, Sookie yelled at alot more people, Sam tried to calm her down at work again, Tara almost got some alone time with her idiot love, and Jason went back to his slutty ex. Sookie totally made out with the gash in Bill's arm and drank up all his v-juice, which means now they're connected and she's got super-senses. On top of being a telepath. That dog that follows Sookie showed up again and Bill popped a fang when he and Sook started to make out-- after that thing that vampires do these days where they smell along your jugular. I mean, it's hot and all, but it's also silly and kind of weird, but I guess it reinforces the idea that you're basically food, however else they choose to treat you.
Not much happened this ep, really, but at the end, some vamp-hater dies mysteriously and the crazy bald vamp is at Bill's house, so who knows what's going to happen next, and I guess that's what keeps me coming back: I really don't know. It's like a soap opera that happens to have people-eaters in it.
You know what would be really interesting? If they keep with the books, eventually Sookie's going to have a steady boyfriend who's a weretiger and she'll meet her great grandfather who's a faerie. Even if they don't keep with the books, it'll be fun to know that vamps aren't the only mystical beings around, you know?
My review: Still waiting for the point, but keep it coming!
mon: sarah connor
So! John's finally acting something like a normal teenager, and, unfortunately, it's entirely the wrong thing to do in a life like his. Riley is fun, pretty, quirky, kind of a damaged kid but still really normal outside of the terminator-knowledge, she's exactly what John thinks he needs, and my bet is that she'll die. Barring that, she's the enemy in some way we haven't figured out. Meanwhile, Sarah's scared for her life from something she can't shoot and has developed a fobia of radiation. I think it's her control-freak issues. And maybe when she was in the loony bin, she actually was crazy; I mean, just because the robots were real, doesn't mean she wasn't driven off the edge by them. Meanwhile meanwhile, Cameron's acting off... something's come loose in her robobrain or something, and she's having trouble making decisions for herself, possibly getting stuck in data loops until someone knocks her out of it, she's lost in her own lack of knowing... Outside the big three, Charley's wife Penny Widmore knows what's up now, and I think they'll continue to be a fun dynamic as they get more invovled in his ex-fiancee's fight to save the world, and Agent Ellis is still gathering info and talking things through with people, and that'll be fun, too.
Season two is off to an interesting start. This episode wasn't as rip-roaring as the first one, but it's setting up the plot for the season better, and as they've got a whole season to work with this time, I think they're doing it carefully. So far, it looks like there's a plan, and I'm sold. Now it's time to wait and see what happens. Season one got better and better as it neared climax, let's hope season two can top it.
My review: Pretty neat. Keep it up! And I'm kinda glad John made Sarah stop petting on him. That was getting a little too Oedipal for me. She should pet on Dereck; he's hot and seems to be concerned about her.
tues: fringe, eureka
Fringe continues to be weird as all get out. And a little gross, though this week was only magic-oldman-babies and eyeballs and discriptions, instead of all crisco-skin and visible muscles. Not as crazy as the first episode, but there's progress with the interactions between characters-- Pacey-Peter continues to be concerned about Olivia, Charley-the-Fed is getting just the tinsiest bit annoyed at not knowing what's going on, roboarm seems to be working both sides of the Committee, Walter is still a total nut bar, but is figuring out how the world works a little and is starting to remember things from before he was locked up. I'm still not so sure of Anna Torv's acting-- most of the time, I'm not sure if she's supposed to look like she doesn't know what's going on, but for now, it's okay. The science... well, I knew going in to this that it wasn't really going to have much with reality, and it's kind of freeing that it's like that. Anything is possible.
I think the plot of this episode was a little choppy; things seemed a little too convenient sometimes, but it held together easy enough by the end, and it seems to be introducing the idea that there's something wrong with PaceyPeter, and that maybe he doesn't know about it. And, knowing how weird his dad is and how freaky the show wants to be, I'm sure it's something really weird.
My review: I'm still with ya. Keep it coming!
This week's Eureka was my first in a long time. I mean, I watched all of the first season with rapt attention, and cried like a very sad baby at the end, but I lost track of it in the second season, and this... well, this is the third, and I'm doing my best to get back.
Anyway, I'm not entirely sure what's going on in the overall season arc, but this episode was about the town elections-- Eureka needs a mayor, even though I'm pretty sure it never had one before. Vincent of the coffee shop was running, with Fargo as his campaign manager, Zoe's boyfriend Lucas was running, though it seemed it was all a front for Zoe to be all Lady Macbeth behind the scenes and I'm not sure why she didn't just run herself, and some guy named Hererra who farms clouds was running. There was much techno-fictioning, with clouds shaped into campaign signs and gel that keeps you cool under pressure and so on. Meanwhile, there's some bunker recently discovered, and Allison and Carter investigate and find out that Eva, who I'm assuming is this season's big bad, removed several fourty-year-old bodies from it, and she's not sharing any info on them and is acting like she knew them personally. Oh, and there's a science project that creates as second sun.
Carter and Jo's superbrain boyfriend Zack manage to save the day, and Henry is voted in, even though he didn't run. It's still silly and quirky and fun, and I have no idea what's going on between the characters, but I'm okay with that. Though I do want to know what happened with Allison and Carter-- that's not there at all anymore, and that makes me sad.
My Review: Fun standard Eureka.
thurs: supernatural
Smallville premiered, and I will not be adding that to the rotation. I watched it a little at the beginning, but Superman just isn't that interesting to me, and the show is not good. I just can't bring myself to come back after five and a half years.
Better, was that Supernatural premiered. Season four finds Dean dragging himself from the grave after four months, and having to reunite the gang so he can find out why. Sam has a girl whose name he can't remember in a room with mirrored ceilings, Billy almost kills him thinking he's a revenant or something, a psychic is blinded and several demons are killed and blinded, too. Sam's working on his psychic powers with the help of Ruby and a bunch of lies to preserve the secret, and, it turns out, Dean is chosen of God. Neat. It was really only a matter of time, I think, before a show full of demons had to get around to the fact that demons are warped angels, and therefore, there are angels. And it's always fun to watch a rock-hard skeptic get a mission from a god he doesn't believe in. Not to mention watching an angel be really freaky and creepy. This is so much better then whitelighters and darklighters on Charmed.
fri:atlantis, discovery project earth
Atlantis brings us Keller tied up in the woods again! Really, this is getting to be a habit. This time, she's kidnapped by a Runner like Ronon, and that means he's the only one who can track them; meanwhile, Rodney's been practicing talking to her intelligently about medical matters, and has gone with her on his day off juse to near her, so he insists on helping her too. So there's woods, and Wraith, none of which are Standard Wraith Baddie or Hot Toddy The Wraith, so they manage to kill them all and the rest is sunning around and avoiding further capture while Keller helps a sick girl and disables the Runner's transmitter. He draws the rest of the Wraith off, but isn't killed, so I think he'll probably come back later-- or would have if the show wasn't canceled. ::tear:: The best parts were when Keller actually got to do things like speak her mind and even fight off an attacking Wraith who was, like, twice her size-- and when Rodney confronted Ronon back on the base to ask him "his intentions". Seems both Ronon and our Rodney like the same girl! This'll be fun, what with them being entirely different people with entirely different skill sets and personalities and life-views. I'm voting for Rodney, though, if only because I like the little possible sparks between Ronon and Teyla.
My Review: Standard low-budget Atlantis, okay, but not as neat as last week. An excuse to move the plot along.
Discovery Project Earth was about getting rid of Co2 in the air. There was the idea to drop it into the oceans, and they built a torpedo that could slam dry-ice into the sea floor, and they built a massive air-scrubber something like they use to get the co2 from shuttle air and something like they use for getting the sulfur out of factory air that was more than twice as effective as they thought it should be. There was talks with Norwegian natural gas miners who separate the co2 on site and pump it back underground, and the mention that the rest of the world could use the same plan to sequester millions of tons. There was mention that cleaning the air might make peole think it's okay to continue spoiling it.
But it wasn't as interesting to me as it usually is. I don't know; the tech was not as neat, the plan was not as ambitious, things went too smoothly, something wasn't as sparky as it usually is. A worthy episode-- they all are-- but not my favorite.
test-running:
The Wrong Door is a BBC3 sketch comedy show with a weird scfi-esque twist and a penchant for running gags and potty humor. Not hilarious, no, but silly enough to be entertaining, and scifi enough to be somewhat unexpected. Let's see what the next few eps are like before I decide whether to make this a regular part of thelineup or not.
excited about:
Merlin on BBC has Anthony Stewart Head and Eve Myles, both of whom I already adore, and is already getting some good press. RTD says it's something worthy of showing against the Doctor.
Warehouse 13 is one of SciFi Channel's new shows-- Sully from Bones and his partner have to protect a warehouse full of paranormal artifacts. (anyone notice how secret semi-governmental programs are the thing for scifi this season?)
Flash Forward-- from the guy who wrote the Blade movies, a show about everyone on the planet getting a 2 minute vision of the future and how it changes everything.
Side Prject Week 2: Classic Doctor Who
Up this week: Carnival of Monsters!
This one is sillier than usual, even for Classic Who. The Doctor and Jo, recently restored to free range time travel after saving the Timelords in the Three Doctors, aim for some perfect planet and wind up on a ship in the Indian ocean in 1926. In a time bubble. With a pleisiosaur. Meanwhile, intergalactic hucksters Vorg and Shirna wind up on a gray planet full of weird little gray people, trying to sell their show-- a peepshow of several species from all across the galaxy in little mini-habitats, like a traveling zoo. Three and Jo, of course, are inside the machine, and, also of course, they get out, into the guts of the device, where there is much running about. After getting into a Dashig habitat, they're chased about in high Who fashion by said Dashigs, which eventually make it into the real world after the Doctor, while Jo is still inside. The Doctor prevails and Vorg and Shirna are not thrown in jail.
Like I said, sillier than usual. Shirna sounds almost exactly like Jackie Tyler, and has eyebrows made of sequins, and Vorg looks like some sort of proto-Doctor Six with his crazy clashing outfit. His bowler hat is see through and tends to fog us under the lights. But both of them are amusing enough, the gray guys are amusing and mincing and somewhat like Ferengis, and the scenes on the ship are fun, especially since they keep repeating and somehow Jo is the only one who remembers what happened last time. Best of all, though, is the continued development of Jo as a reasoning, useful and competent human being, not just an ankle-twister.
Next week: Frontier in Space, and then only three more stories with Jo before she gives way to Sarahjane Smith.
Roundup 1 PS:
It occurs to me that I liked all the shows I watched this week. This isn't to say I'm not critical enough, only that I feel the quality was pretty good, and with the new shows, I want to see where they go. Let's come back in six weeks and see if they're still good, and then I'll be impressed!
Weekly Roundup 1 - Sept 7 to 12
sun: true blood
True Blood is off to a rousing start full of blood and sex and lots of yelling and all kinds of not-so-subtle race relations parallels. Sookie can read minds, which most people don't know and the rest treat as normal, but she can't read vampires, and that makes Bill immediately attractive. That fact could have turned her into another stupid girl, but she's brave and smart and moral to a fault and has very strong views about the world. The whole first episode takes up less then a day in her life, and so far I'm pretty hooked. The high level of swearing is overlookable because it's HBO, and the boobs are the same (though it'd be nice if we got a little fair play-- there wasn't even a full backside of a guy the whole time).
he unrelenting southerness is a little... smothering, but i think that's intentional, as this is all about integration and such in the small towns. It'd be nice if their accents matched, though. There's good interplay between the subplots of a boss who loves her and can't keep his mind out of the gutter at the same time, a best friend who can't keep a job, a slightly batty grandma, and a brother who's in way over his head in disreputable things. And it's a rough world. Idealist Sookie gets yelled at alot, yells back alot, defends a vampire who's being drained, and gets beat up in the last scene. It looks like there'll be more than one source of blood in this show.
My rating: Juicy. Let see if it holds out-- or barrels into the gutter.
mon: sara connor s02
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles opens up big and stays that way. Right off the bat, we have a kick-ass new song from Shirley Manson backing a largely-silent attack on casa Connor, where the new villain turns out to be a chump, John and Sarah get beat up alot, and Cameron goes all badass when damage to her chip makes her revert to old programming. The rest of the show is fights and chases, with little side stories of Dereck and Charley looking for John and Sarah, and Agent Ellison dealing with the after-effects of the season-ender's killoff. There were references, visual and plotwise, to T2, which I've been waiting for and loved-- I mean, these characters lived through that, they'd understand how it works and would recognize that things were the same. There were tense mother-son moments when she wanted to kill psycho!Cameron and he wanted to help her / fix her. There was a crazy heartbreaking performance from Summer Glau as a girl-shaped Terminator who doesn't want to be killed-- and we still aren't sure whether it was bluff from a badguy or a confession from a restored goodguy. There were lots of explosions. There was lots of damage done to main characters (really, Sarah's shoulders should be immobile by now). And there was a great juxtaposition of a killer cyborg with torn bloody flesh, visible metal bones and a limp with a street full of normal people who never seemed to notice her. And best of all, there was space for real human emotion, and John got to face some terrible things and grow up a little.
My rating: Amazing. A great start to a second season they might never have had.
tues: fringe
Fringe starts our crazy-- A plane full of people all melt and the feds are called in to find out why. Meanwhile, lovely main character Olivia is boinking her partner John, and they're sent out to find out who's responsible. A lead takes them to a bank of storage containers, things go bad, and she's blown against a wall while he's exposed to really crazy chemicals. And that's when it gets really interesting. There's a mad scientist who's been in a loony bin for seventeen years and his son who's equally as brilliant and may or may not be a conman. There's a massive corperation of very large white rooms and strange people who have undisclosed goals, the founder of which was an old lab-partner of the mad scientist. There's sensory deprivation and massive drug overdoses; there's inter-governmental intrigue; there's action and adventure; there's plot twists all over the place; there's a Pattern we've only just started to guess at; there's a cute lab tech; there's a cow; there's some really interesting character dynamics (including but not limited to old grudges, secret love affairs, budding attraction, father-son madness and angry bosses)-- and there's alot to work with. The episode was a slow burn, with the first half leaving you wondering where this was going, what this mattered for, and feeling like a fairly typical fed drama; and there's the second half, where things get strange and you realize the first half was her world and the second half is what's replaced it. It's been compared to X-Files, and I think there's some of that, but it's not just that. It's its own creature, a new thing that I can get behind if it holds up, and as it's supposed to be a crisis-of-the-week idea rather than a massive-ongoing thing like Lost, I think there'll be room to watch it without feeling obsessively obligated, and that's a good thing.
My rating: A fine start, and i'm not disappointed. Keep it up, gang!
fri: gemini division, atlantis, discovery project earth
Gemini Division is the story of Ana Diaz, a New York cop who finds out that her boyfriend is not a natural human, a former soldier in the War, possibly a terrorist, and being hunted by a covert group-- the Gemini Division of the title. This week's ep bundle, parts 9 through 12, bring us from her trip back to the states, through her investigations, to her first offer of cooperation with Gemini. So far the story is tense, strange, interesting, and a good use of webcast tech-- it's all in small blocks, usually somewhere around three or five minutes, and it's got a near gritty feel, though sometimes the obvious CGI seems unecessary. There's alot of mystery, and this weeks eps take it up to a new level of strange.
My rating: Neat! And keep it coming.
I admit that I missed a huge chunk of Atlantis recently (::cough- half of last season and the beginning of this one - cough::), but this is a good time to come back. In this week's episode, Teyla goes undercover as a Wraith queen to push a biogengineering project that will allow the Wraith to stop feeding. She undergoes radical surgery and comes out a more interesting character. Queen Teyla is forceful, radical, ruthless, and far more fun to watch then the usual, painfully sincere Teyla we've all watched previous to this. And Todd-the-Wraith is one of my favorite villains on TV right now: you never know where he's really coming from and you can never be sure what he's going to do next, plus he's got a great personality made up of snark, arrogance, charm and menace that I find far too attractive in someone covered in a layer of slime and evolved from a giant bug. The upshot is that Todd is now in command of his whole alliance, the bioengineering has been delayed and yet still solidified, and as far as the Wraith know, Teyla is their queen, which finally gives them some real leverage with Todd.
My rating: Great ep. This is what I loved about Atlantis, and what I missed when I was away.
Discover Project Earth: Solar Sunshield-- Can I even explain to you how much I love this show? This is scifi, but it's real. And the reality makes it pretty damn amazing. In this week's ep, as the title says, they were testing out the feasibility of building a sunshield to keep planetary temps down as the century progresses-- geoengineering, they called it, which is really only a step or so away from terraforming, and that makes it a hit in my books. Basil-the-lovely went to Holland and they invented the world's thinnest lens that would scatter sunlight just enough. Then he and the team went to England's army to test coil guns, which use electromagnets to toss missiles fast enough to leave atmo and break out of the gravity well. They need a way to protect the lenses (there'll be trillions of them in the end-- what would that look like from the ground? would you see it sparkling from a million miles away? And no one suggested using any type of cusioning gel; it wouldn't compress like open space would, it would keep the lenses equally spaced, it would reduce shock and pressure, and it can't be that hard to invent some compound that would burn off quickly in hard vacuum and UV, setting them free to orient themselves into a shield), but the coil gun worked pretty well, even if the standard rocket they tested for backup suffered 'catastrophic failure' and plummeded into a pile of slag. Here's what gets me: These people really care about this. When things didn't work, grown men cried, in public and on international television. How ofted do you get people who care that much? Who believe in what they're doing so much? We need more of that, more people who have the skills to make massive changes, to invent the tech we need and get it where it needs to be, and take it personally.
My rating: Fantastic, as always.
the week's scifi and scifi-like news:
Scotland is getting in on the idea of space tourism, with an eye to the future of the industy, thanks to Richard Branson: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/highlands_and_islands/7595797.stm --
Afew scifi faces in the best TV characters of all time: http://www.ugo.com/tv/best-tv-characters-of-all-time/
Top X-Files monsters-of-the-week to remember and enjoy for the anniversary of our favorite conspiracy-show's premier this past Wednesday : http://www.ugo.com/movies/top-xfiles-monsters/?
The LHC starts up to general success, even though people were sure it would be the end of the world: http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/09/10/lhc.collider/index.html?eref=rss_topstories
News on a Dr Who Movie: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/article1668397.ece
what i'm looking forward to:
The American version of Life on Mars-- I loved the English one, loved John Simm, and I think it will be an interesting social study to see how it's the same and how it's different when they adapt it.
Sanctuary-- Amanda Tapping has a new show! And it looks frickkin awesome! And it's in one of my fav niches, the secret non-government agency that handles weird stuff niche.
Pushing Daisies-- I was SO scared this beautiful, artful, silly and intense show was gonna get axed. I was starting to prepare myself from the moment I loved it because shows I love always get axed, but the Strike really had me scared. Now it's coming back!
Valentine-- Roman gods in a modern world? Sounds like fun to me!
catching up on:
Eureka, before it's done again, and that gap in Atlantis.
See you all next week!
~:D
Side Project Updates 1
classic who: the time monster / the three doctors
In the wake of the most recent season-ender for New Doctor Who and the fact that there will be no more Who until Christmas, my roomates and I have been watching our ways through the Classic Doctor Who. At this point, we're half-way through Doctor 3, John Pertwee, and into the last season of silly companion Jo Grant, so that's where I'll start our discussion.
The Time Monster is remarkably fast-paced; the old habit of having nothing happen for the first three segments of a six-segment story seems to have fallen by the wayside and been replaced with Story right off the bat. The Master is stealing ancient god-powers from Atlantis and using them to conduct time experiments in the 60s, which of course brings UNIT into the equation and gets the Doctor and Jo involved.
Overall, it's pretty neat. The monster of the title is Chronos, the Titan that apparently gave Atlantis all it's power, and manifests as a blinding-white bird-winged monster which is far cooler when all you get is an impression of it so you can't see how low the budget was, and who has a habit of knocking people out of time on the Master's command. Jo gets a little volition of her own, as well as the ability to retain information and figure things out, and it's nice to see Jo being something other than a flake who twists her ankle and gets in trouble-- I mean, she's supposed to be an agent of UNIT, right? Atlantis is apparently full of the worst actors they could find, and everyone is far too in love with hair-crimping and an aesthetic that looks like an early version of Abydos from SG1, but the Minotaur (played by original Vader sans James Earl Jones voice for extra geek points) was neat, and the sets were almost definitely borrowed from some other show because they were huge and detailed.
The Three Doctors is just silly, but in a fun way, like all the Doctor-meets-himself storylines. Doctor Three is sent by the Time Lords to fix a power-draining black hole after a weird anti-matter blob starts stealing things from Earth, and as they have their hands full with the drain, the only help they can send him comes in the form of his previous selves. Lots of bickering about who's better and how to handle the situation ensues. It's worth it to see the Doctor using his sometimes-forgotten-about telepathy and the way the Brigadier just can't handle having two Doctors around while Benton accepts it easily.
When we finally get everyone through the blackhole to an anti-universe, we get Omega (pronounced more like OO-meh-gah), who is downright funny in his overacting and his woe-is-me emo-ness, and his blobby-bubbly-crab thing henchmen. All in a gravel quarry, in high Who fashion. There is much running about, much sciencing of the fiction, everyone is separated up and then brought back together, and the Doctor(s) stops the villain with a trick, not a weapon, though it amounts to the same.
Cute, and fun, and again Jo gets some better writing, but definitely more silly then good, and a prime example of how you have to watch Classic Who for the rediculousness sometimes, like watching old movies that might wind up on MST3K.
comics: the collected ninth doctor stories
I recently got my hands on a copy of these stories, and they were charming. The art was a little weird sometimes, but you could always see the Christopher Eccleston-ness of the Doctor, and Rose always looked distinctively Rose-like. They defeated villains, they ran about, they inspired people, they saved the world and they saved individuals, they bantered and they cared about each other and it was a perfect collection to remind me why I liked the first season of Nu Who so much. The Ninth Doctor was war-scarred and darker then the previous eight (except maybe six; I've only seen a little of him, so I can't judge just yet), but he was also silly and mouthy and really in love with the Universe, and he really really cared about Rose, and all of that comes through perfectly.
up next:
Later tonight after Atlantis airs, we'll have the weekly round-up, and then we'll see what happens as we wait for Roundup 2!
Welcome!
This is entirely a televisual-social experiment: Can one unemployed girl manage to keep up with a week's worth of scifi and genre TV while simultaneously looking for a job in the real world? I think I can, but for how long?
The fall season here on the TVs is full of all sorts of off-mainstream shows this year, and I'm making it my mission to follow all of them, even if I have to do it online. Here's the list so far:
Eleventh Hour (in Oct)
Fringe
Gemini Division (online only)
Knightrider (redux)
Life on Mars (US version)
Middleman
Pushing Daisies
Sanctuary (in Oct)
Stargate: Atlantis
Supernatural
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles
True Blood
Plus any other shows that have special scfi, horror, fantasy or otherwise speculative-rather-than-realistic episodes (I'm looking at you, Halloween Week!) that happen to cross my TV. I'll also be following movies, when I can, any random news items I come across that fit into the topic, and who knows, maybe even a book or two.
Tune in every Friday for updates recapping the week!
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