Showing posts with label sf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sf. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 July 2007

The Tate Hate Support Group

While the Americans were waking up to the sound of fireworks and general merry making on the 4th of July this year, a very different sound could be heard in Britain. If you listened really carefully you might just have caught the thud of tens of thousands of jaws hitting the floor. Perhaps you heard a muttered "Oh no..." or an indignant "They can't be serious!" This is the day when Dr Who fans everywhere woke up to the news that Catherine Tate had been cast as The Doctor's regular traveling companion for the fourth series of the new Dr Who.

The Russell T. Davies Publicity Department, formerly known as the BBC, announced that the "comedic" actress would be reprising her role as Donna, the Runaway Bride from the show's 2006 Xmas special, because apparently she was such a hit last time. No honestly. I'm being serious. Incidentally this is definitive proof that trans-dimensional travel is possible, because in my world her performance was almost universally panned and only Mr Davies' most ardent apologists could muster anything approaching even a lukewarm response to her appearance.

Dr Who as we know it is dead and has been since the end of Davies' first season as ruling deity on the show.In all honesty the BBC should rebrand this series as "Russell T Davies' Dr Who", they've obviously lost all creative oversight and in its current incarnation it's about as far removed from the classic series as boy bands are from Beethoven.

"RTD's Dr Who" is ignoring most of the rules that helped make the original show the longest running SF series the world has ever seen. When he cast Tate he ignored what was probably the most important dictum from that era.

The companions are the most important part of the show.

They're more important than the TARDIS, the Daleks or any of the monsters and baddies. They're more important than the alien planets or even the character of the Doctor himself.

The series' both old and new have gone through phases where the TARDIS wasn't featured. The stories have been Earthbound for years at a time and yet the show flourished. At the height of "Dalekmania" in the 60s about half the stories were historical dramas, rubber tentacles, tin foil robots and Lego spaceships didn't get a look in. The Doctor was hardly on screen for the most highly praised story of the last season. The much lauded "flexible format" of the show can take all these changes and still deliver some cracking television, it's the audience that decides if a show is successful.

The viewers watch the show through the eyes of the companion. We identify with them, we share their sense of wonder and excitement. It's their perils that thrill us the most. They ask the questions that we want answered. They're our conduit to the worlds of Dr Who. So it really is vitally important for the success of the show that we have companions that we're sympathetic with, in a nutshell we should enjoy their company as much as the Doctor.

The show has had unpopular companions in the past, and the ratings have always dipped as a result. Jon Pertwee's era started off with relatively low ratings. Yet there was a new Doctor, the show was in colour for the first time and the stories centered around the popular UNIT concept, viewing figures should've been at their highest. His companion at the time, Liz Shaw, was a physics scientist intended to be the Doctor's intellectual equal, but the audience couldn't identify easily with her and the ratings stayed low. When her character was replaced with the much ditzier but more lovable Jo Grant, ratings started to climb, peaking at an incredible 25% improvement over Shaw's season.

It takes time to make that recovery though, years in fact. When the original series was canceled in 1989 ratings were actually starting to trend upwards slightly, the companion at the time, Ace, was popular with viewers and critics, who'd had to endure years of the spectacularly unpopular Mel (Bonnie Langford) and Peri (Nicola Bryant).

Tate's previous outing as Donna was almost universally detested so it's not as if her character or her take on the role are unknown quantities. As an actress her range is limited to shouty chav type characters, a sort of nightmare guest at a wedding reception.

Ah but this is New Dr Who isn't it ? We've got to move with the times, the companions have to reflect that, don't they ? Nope, not at all. Only six of Patrick Troughton's twenty one stories had contemporary companions. Tom Baker, the most popular Doctor ever, went for four and a half of his seven years in the role with companions from the far future or who were out-and-out aliens. When Dr Who tries to show that it's trendy and with-it, it usually fails, and those stories are the ones that go past their sell-by date first. Did we have a punk companion in the 70s or a skinhead in the 80s ?

We should spare a thought for Freema Agyeman who played Martha Jones. She's the one who's being replaced and for no sensible reason. She's a talented actress who's shown a maturity beyond her years and managed to wring decent performances out of the oft times woeful scripts she's had to work with. She's not leaving entirely, she will feature as recurring character in the fourth season's later episodes, but at the end of the day I can only imagine her sense of confusion and disappointment. She did everything right, pressed all the right buttons and jumped through all the right hoops, and she still gets kicked in the teeth for it.

We'll finish this by speculating why this decision was made. We know RTD is leaving next season, David Tennant has also said that he knows when he'll be leaving and it's an odds on bet it'll be next year. We also know that RTD has not been best pleased with the reactions of the fans, the dwindling viewing figures or the distinct lack of awards now that the honeymoon season is over.

His attitude to the fans of the classic show has been dismissive and borderline arrogant in interviews, he's been quoted as saying"if they don't get it that's just tough." So I'm speculating that this is a scorched earth policy that Davies' is operating. When he leaves the franchise will be in tatters, Dr Who will be a parody of its former self. He's probably hoping that history will look kindly on his tenure and focus on the first year or two, picking out the gems. If that's his aim then he's ignoring one other lesson from the classic series, we have long memories.

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Monday, 25 June 2007

Sci-Fi Now #3 - What Works and What Doesn't

Another month, another issue of Imagine's new SF title, and as day follows night, another review.

The Letters pages were very entertaining, on the face of it identical to the letters pages in almost every other genre mag, but SFN's seemed sparkier. Much fun to be had here.

The news section, Launch, does pretty much what it says on the tin, nothing new for fans tracking their faves online, but a lot to be learned anyway, we go into more detail here.

The Convention Report was a four page whopper on the Bristol Comics Expo and we liked this a lot. You got the feeling there wasn't all that much happening there but SFN made the most of it and wrote it up with some genuine enthusiasm. Even if cons aren't your thing this was a good read anyway.

The Spoilers pages again give you what it says on the tin. Four pages giving you detailed rundowns on Lost, Jericho, Heroes and Smallville. I really wish they'd include some sort of ratings but the synopsises are so detailed you can easily draw your own conclusions. Maybe that's a better way to go ?

New Series gives us a four page dissection of The Dresden Files. For a show that I'd written off after the pilot I found this informative and entertaining. I may just give this series a second look.

The Op-Eds were mixed, Danny Graydon's look at the UK scene probably could've been condensed into a single paragraph, a bit meh to be honest. Gray Nicholson's look at how our colonial cousins are faring was a much better read, I think his piece on the afterlife in American TV overlooked one point though, 9/11. Is it a coincidence that since that day a lot of high profile US shows have had death as a central theme ? Six Feet Under ? Dead Like Me ?

Now we come to the cover feature, which this month was focused on Heroes. I tried to like this, I really did, but in the end it felt like nine wasted pages. The feature was riddled with factual errors, it was grammatically questionable and personally I didn't care for the writing style at all. It was out of date ("As season one, now coming to a close as you read this...") when in fact season one had finished a full eight days before the issue went to press and at least four weeks before it hit the shelves. The Missing Links bit was neither informative or entertaining, and the whole feature felt like it was written by someone was paid to write it. Sorry if that seem obvious but there was no love, enthusiasm or even informed criticism of the subject matter here.

Top 10 was as ever a snorefest for me. This month we're told what are the ten best SF weapons, and five of the worst.

The Nicholas Cage Interview was interesting, good art, good layout, we liked this. It's a shame these interviews are sourced from syndication because they lack the personal touch.

Danny Graydon's feature on the second FF movie was pretty good, ticked all the right boxes and looked great. The only criticism here is that his writing tone seemed a bit "chummy" at times, a bit SFXy. On the whole it was an informed piece written with a dash of enthusiasm, for which he deserves a beer or three given the subject matter.

Robocop vs Predator oh Jim, oh Jim, oh Jim. I have the feeling this was a writer making the best of a bad idea and being told to run with it. Let's just say the Forum Feature on next season's TV look's a lot more interesting and worthwhile.

Now it's the meat and potatoes of every good SF mag, the Reviews section. When it's a bit a fallow period in the cinemas, most mags will try and big up one of the releases, adds a bit of feelgood factor I suppose. Not so SFN! Fair crack to you guys, you were watching turkeys, you called 'em turkeys, this is what the readers want. No pandering to PR hacks or studios wishes, call a spade a spade. Top marks for the cinema and DVD reviews, Tristan Burke made his critique's very entertaining. His reviews are the ones I'll be reading first next month.

Comics and books though.... I know you said in the letters page that books at least would be getting more coverage in future, but two pages ?? Three books ??? SF fans read a lot and from what I've read in other forums you're losing readers by not giving them more coverage.

Podcasts and Videogames, you got them pretty much right, can't fault them.

Ahhh Timewarp, how I've missed thy subtle charms... Darran Jones' feature on the Aliens movies was great, well written, good art, if I liked it any better I'd have it framed. If you guys are gonna do a "Year in Review" or "Best of..." special edition towards Christmas time this is a must-have.

The Taken article was another pleasant surprise, I haven't watched this since its initial US transmission and memory, being the fickle mistress she is, had confined this to Turkey department. I think I'll probably dig it out again and give it another whirl after reading your take on it. Cheers guys.

Lost in Space, B5, ahh the hits just keep on coming. Timewarp is now accounting for the fact it's taking me two days to review this issue. Manimal and Farscape, OMFG, I can't fault Timewarp at all, it's bliss, it's a fine wine in printed form.

Whatever you're doing in the Timewarp section at the moment, don't stop, don't change a thing, you've got it just right.

After the orgasmic bliss of Timewarp we get that strange burning sensation when you pee that is Dissected. FFS guys you have to label advertorials, sponsored sections or whatever the hell you call them, for what they are. I'll bet dollars to donuts the Advertising Standards Authority has some directives on this.

Fanboys is an area I've never been much interested in. The Collectors Guide to... Dr Who though made me blush a little when I realised how much tat I'd accumulated over the years. The Coventions section, like the Bristol Expo feature in Launch, was a real eye opener for me. A darn good read, and made me think I'd like to see a few before I emigrate. Memorabilia left me cold though, nothing against the article itself it just doesn't press any buttons.

The Nitpickers Guide to... Flash Gordon was a lot of fun, although it did feel like you were shooting fish in a barrel. I'm still waiting for a guide to RTD's Dr Who.

Literary SF felt like you were treading water this issue, just two more months 'til you get to the 1930s, when things get really interesting. In fact I think you'll have to break down the remaining decades because there was simply too much going on to fit it into Literary's page space at the moment.

TV-Guide...meh. It's there, a couple of the sidebars are nice.

Obsessed was okay, but I think you could use a little more pizaz in this section.

Overall this is a huge improvement over an already impressive debut. It feels like you're really finding your voice now and, it seems to me anyway, you're listening to your readers. I noticed the omission of the gadgets feature this issue, I think that was a good decision.

Fair crack to you guys, SFN's getting better, you're on the right course. First star to the right, then straight on 'til morning...

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Print Media vs Digital - Another Take

Just a quickie, but while I was reviewing the third issue of Sci-Fi Now when I had a small revelation about the impending doom of printed media and the rise of the web and all things digital.

The news section of that magazine is divided into various areas of interest, TV, movies, comics, cons, specific TV shows, etc. Now while the printed news is almost always out of date before it hits the shelves, reading Sci-Fi Now I found myself picking up tidbits of info about media I'm only peripherally interested in and wouldn't normally have bothered with. Wonder of wonders it's pretty fascinating stuff.

Now I didn't pick up anything new about areas I'm already tracking, Lost, BSG, etc. I get all that from my RSS subscriptions.

The revelation was this; my RSS feeds and my bookmarks are maybe a little too specific. I can zero in, with perhaps too much accuracy, on my areas of interest and tend to miss the tangential stuff. Sure it sometimes pops up on a page or a feed I'm reading, but I can rarely be bothered to click on the articles and read further. Whereas in a magazine that I've already bought, that I'm already reading, I will take the time to look a little over my horizons.

Though if the same information is only a click away on the web, why would I be more willing to read it in a magazine ? Most people would read this sort of information as part of their leisure time and there's an awful lot that can happen between that click and the reader actually getting the information they want. There could be a problem on the server, the reader's connection might be slow or have more serious issues, the browser may crash or any one of thousands of problems might stop the would be reader from getting the goods. Most of the potential audience will be under some sort of time pressure, it's a lunch break, they've got ten minutes before they have to get to work, or feed the kids, something is making demands on their time. Pressing that button and making that click is a bit of a gamble (in terms of time), they don't know if they're gonna get to the article or how long they'll have to wait and they don't even know if they're going to be interested in it anyway. Far better to gamble their precious time on going for material that they know they'll be interested in.

It's totally different with a printed magazine though. They've already invested, not just time but money as well, and the information's already there. They're much more likely to read it.

The online world could respond to this though. Back in the mid-90s a few flirtations were made with "push" technology, whereby the data would be delivered to the readers for them to peruse at their leisure. In the dark days of dial-up this wasn't really an option for most users and when the same thing was tried with WAP it didn't really work out there either. The reason being that in both scenarios the subscriber was paying, in the form of telephone bills, to have the data sent to them, it was also tying up their bandwidth when at those speeds every bit was precious. Broadband has removed the bandwidth problem but as most users are under some sort of data cap from their ISP they are again paying for every bit they receive whether they want it or not. This leads me to think that maybe net neutrality has a few pitfalls, because with QoS packet marking the cost of the data transferred could be factored into the reader's subscription price.

Let's say a reader spends £50 on an annual subscription to a digital magazine, it's a multimedia affair so let's say each issue takes up 250MB or so. Most domestic users will have data caps of around 10GB or so imposed on them by their ISP, obviously there's a whole raft of packages, but let's say on average 10GB. Now that 250MB, small though it may be, is still a chunk of that 10GB, and the reader has paid for it in addition to their actual subscription. Though with packet marking the magazine publishers, or distributors, could pick up the tab for the delivery. The ISP wouldn't count that download against the reader's quota. Economically it would work in much the same way paper subscriptions do now where the cost of mailing the magazine is part of the price.

That scenario is a long way off. It'd require cooperation on and ratification of standards between the distributors, the carriers and the ISPs. Given the amount of hostility there is towards moving away from net neutrality I'd say five years or so before such a system becomes viable.

In the meantime I'll just turn the page and have my horizons broadened a little further.

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Tuesday, 19 June 2007

Heroes Season 2 News and Spoilers

Some more news of the second season of Heroes.

One of the new characters is an Irish mobster who goes by name Ricky, or possibly Will, or maybe Blackie. It depends on which source you believe. Anyhoo, his sidekick will be a guy called Tuko who's of West African descent.

David AndersDavid Anders (Alias' Mr Sark) will play a character called Kane, he was born in Europe over a thousand years ago but now lives in America.

Although Nathan Petrelli's fate seems safe enough, one of the Heroes who "was in jeopardy" at the end of the finale, won't be returning as a regular. A quote from Greg Grunberg (Matt Parkman) would seem to point the finger in his direction, when asked if he'd be returning next season, the actor refused to be specific but said viewers shouldn't assume anything about about his fate adding "This will be the hardest secret I have ever had to keep during a hiatus."

Personally though I'm expecting to see Peter Petrelli on the bench. His character is simply too powerful and it must be a bitch for the writers to put him in dramatic situations he can't get out of by drawing on his arsenal of powers. Another snippet which'd support this theory is that one of the regulars is now suffering from amnesia. This would dig the writers out of a hole with regards Peter's all powerful character.

Jayma MRiyo Moriays probably won't be returning as Charlie, despite the actress' recent pilot tanking. It seems our favourite time traveller's new girl is the current Miss Universe no less. Twenty year old Riyo Mori is a dance student and actress. She recently went to audtion for the role of Yaeko where she read in her native Japanese as well as English. Hiro's certainly got something to smile about now.

Another beauty queen, this time a former Miss World Aishwarya Raiis also joining the cast. Aishwarya Rai will play Mohinder's sister, Shanti, and yes she's got some special powers. Hey this is Heroes after all!

She starts filming in LA by the end of June and she'll be on screen this October.

The second season is shaping up to be something of a Dania Ramirez babefest. As well as introducing a gay cheerleader called April... sorry I just had to reread that a couple of times... former Sopranos and X-Men graduate Dania Ramirez will be playing a latin Hero called Maya, her powers are being kept under wraps at the moment though.

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Sunday, 17 June 2007

Painkiller Jane Gives Me A Headache

Kristanna Loken headlines as Jane Vasco in Sci-Fi's Painkiller Jane. Her world is a dystopian future, almost identical to the one portrayed in Dark Angel. As a DEA agent Jane and her partner Maureen accidentally stumble across a covert government agency that is tasked with tracking and neutralising "neuroes", or mutants to you and me. Jane and Maureen wind up working for this agency and along the way discover that Jane cannot be killed, in fact her healing ability rivals that of Wolverine or Heroes' Claire Bennett.

Eight episodes into the twenty two commissioned by the Sci-Fi channel and I'm amazed at this series' ability to survive the most mortal woundings by critics, audience dissatisfaction and chronically low ratings. Unlike Jane herself though, this time it's the viewers who are feeling the pain.

The problems start with the scripts. The initial premise isn't just derivative it doesn't have a single original idea. The plots manage a neat double act, on the one hand they're hackneyed and cliched beyond belief, while on the other they're so full of inconsistencies and holes you start to wonder how much experience the writing staff have actually got. The dialogue is so riddled with technobabble it becomes nonsensical, and there's a lot of it.

The characters are one dimensional and pretty unlikable. Jane's only given a smidgen of depth by the annoying and preachy monologues that bookend each episode. It's not that the acting is bad, it's just uninspired. Between the first and second episodes Maureen went from Jane's closest friend and partner at the DEA to another background grunt who's only there as animated scenery and to spout off exposition whenever the writers feel it's her turn to infodump.

The tissue thin plots do offer some scant character development, but this confused me at first. Andre, Jane's boss, seems tough and distant from her initially, then they seem to grow closer. My problem was that each week their relationship seemed to hopscotch between the two extremes. It was only after a little digging on the show's homepage that I realised Sci-Fi were showing the episodes out of order. It says a lot about this series that darned few people seem to have noticed this and no one at all seems to care. Including me.

Episode 2 Toy Soldiers

In which the team get to protect the president with all four (count them, one two three four) of their field agents. They neutralise a neuro with the power to raise and control the dead, and the series' budget is revealed as being pitifully small, even for a story of such limited ambition.

I think most folks are probably aware of Miss Loken's sexuality, it's not exactly broadcast around but it's not a state secret either, which gives the scenes she has with her new next door neighbour a little extra humour.

2/5

Episode 3 Piece of Mind

In which we learn that a working knowledge of quantum computing and high energy physics are now prerequisites for being either a train driver or a signalman. The Neuro-Of-The-Week has the ability to mess with memories the way most people treat their MP3 collection. He can rewind, erase, copy, upload and download memories.

It's an interesting ability but it's a shame it's wasted in such a gob smackingly ludicrous plot. The ending has one of those twee, happy slappy we're all great mates types of ending that went out of vogue with The A-Team. Watching it made me a little sick in my mouth.

1/5

Episode 4 Catch Me if You Can

This one's not too bad. Team Tylenol are given a warning by a precog neuro that three of them will die in a few days if they try to apprehend him. This neuro's a good guy though, he's warned the authorities of various impending disasters in the past only to be ignored every time. Andre insists he should be taken down, Jane thinks otherwise and their conflict plays out against the ticking clock of the fatal prediction.

There's some missed opportunities in this story, the ending's too trite to be satisfying and there's some really overwrought melodrama to contend with. It does make an attempt to address pre-determinism as well as some of the ethical issues this series builds itself on.

3/5

In the Final Analysis...

This episode more than any other is a text book example of why this series is failing so utterly to win either the fans or the critics. They've forgotten who their target audience is. SF fans tend to have more liberal views, we root for the underdog and we like to see someone stick it to the man. Why do you think the X-Files was such a runaway success ?

With Painkiller Jane though our sympathies are obviously supposed to be with the government and Team Tylenol. In Ep4 Andre says the pre-cog has to be neutralised, despite his track record of trying to help, because of what he might do in the future. The rights of their targets as well as those of their friends and family are completely ignored. Even bystanders aren't immune, Jane attempts to browbeat a power plant manager without telling him why, simply telling him she's a federal agent and she's giving him an order. She offers him no proof or even a means of verifying that she is who she says he is, the audience is expected to believe that the mere fact that she's a federal agent giving him an order should be all he needs to bow to her seemingly outrageous demands.

So why is this series being allowed a full season's run when we've seen a lot of high quality shows being dropped since last Autumn ? Why is the Sci-Fi channel backing a program which is so obviously a bad fit with their target audience ? Maybe we should ask General Electric, the owners of the Sci-Fi channel. A company that has profited massively from the "war on terror", from the Patriot Act, from Homeland "Security" and from the Bush regime in general.

Maybe I'm reading too much into this, but all forms of broadcasting (by which I mean one-to-many in this case) are viable forms of propaganda. SF fans, like geeks, tend to be mavens, so if you can win their hearts and minds, they will evangalise for you.

Or maybe it's just a crappy TV show.

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Kyle's Back and He's Brought a Friend

ABC's Family channel had a sleeper hit on their hands last year. Kyle XY is that rarest of shows, it manages to cross genres and engage almost everyone who watches it. Unusually for a genre show with any kind of conspiracy arc it also gives you answers.

This season's opener feels like a natural continuation of the storyline, it doesn't feel like any of the cast or crew have been away from this show for several months. You could watch this back to back with season one's finale and not miss a beat.

The writers have managed to pull off a very neat trick here. As a long time fan of the show, the plot rewarded me with some genuine answers to most of last season's mysteries, I might add that these answers made a lot of sense, didn't reinvent the show and didn't leave us with more questions than we'd started out with. Most importantly of all they developed the plot and character arcs.

Now my girlfriend hasn't seen a single episode, knows nothing at all about the show in fact. Yet she thoroughly enjoyed it as well. She's up to speed on who's who, how their relationships connect and what's happening plotwise. Kudos to the writers then, they've kept the old fans and welcomed the new ones.

As the story unfolds we learn a lot about Kyle and the reasons behind his existence, we also see how his absence is affecting the Trager family. Kyle does eventually return to the Tragers but no one's pressed any reset buttons here. Kyle's a very different person now, much more in tune with who he is and what he can do, in a reverse of season one's premier, this time it's the Tragers who are the innocents in the relationship. It'll be interesting to see how this repolarised relationship unfolds. The Trager's youngest, Josh, didn't get any resets either. After feeling increasingly sidelined by Kyle's addition to the family last year, his expected return to the status quo didn't quite happen. Michelle's mourning over Kyle's absence just pushes Josh further away from her motherly affections. I don't think Josh will react well to Kyle's return to Chez Trager.

He might be more enthusiastic if he saw Kyle's "sister" in vitro. XX was supposed to be the more successful result of the project that created Kyle XY, who apparently was regarded as a failure.

ABC Family are so pleased with this show that they've expanded this season's order to a full 23 episode run. They'll be airing in two blocks, 13 episodes this summer and the remaining 10 next winter. I'd love to see some new Kyle air over the Christmas period, it'd be a terrific show for that time of year. Kyle is expected to be repeated on the ABC channel later this year, the first time a cable commissioned series has migrated back to the main networks.

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Saturday, 16 June 2007

Was Enders Game Ghostwritten ?


I was reminded today of an article I'd read a few years ago slamming Orson Scott Card's right wing political views. It led to a few heated debates on Slashdot, K5 and the rest of the usual suspects.
Curious to see if anything had changed I Googled around a little and came up with this fascinating story on K5 written by Roger Williams. The gist of it is that after Enders Game and Speaker For The Dead scooped both Hugo and Nebula awards for two consecutive years a very interesting analysis of them appeared in the now defunct Fantasy Review. "Ender and Hitler:Sympathy For The Superman" was written by Elaine Radford and it posits that the Ender stories were originally intended as an apology for Adolf Hitler, with Wiggin himself taking Hitler's role. This has been fairly widely disseminated by SF critics for over twenty years now and I think the only people still denying it are Card's own apologists.
The full story's very interesting but what caught my eye was Williams' account of Card's rebuttal which was also published in Fantasy Review. Card's response was "incoherent" and he denied things being in the novel, not only are they actually there but Radford had provided footnotes. Card's defense was so strident and his ignorance about his own novels was so profound that Williams eventually came to the conclusion that the man didn't write "Ender's..." and "Speaker..." at least not in their entirety.
There's some evidence to support this theory. The original novella, "Ender's Game" is reproduced is reproduced within the first book almost word for word, although it's obviously been padded out into book form with the addition of subplots like the giant's game, Locke & Demosthenes, etc. These subplots do feel substantially different to the sections based on the novella, not only in terms of plot but also in terms of writing style, as if they were written by different people, a small committee Williams suggested.
The publication of the third book in the series, "Xenocide", was delayed by four years and it's considerably weaker than the first two entries. Williams and Radford speculated that when the writing committee's cover had been blown they'd pulled out of the project forcing Card to continue alone.
Another interesting point is that in the ensuing, and very heated, debate that followed Williams' story on K5, none of Card's numerous supporters attempted to refute this idea that he may not have written "Ender's..." and "Speaker..." Every other point of that story was addressed with nothing less than vehement enthusiasm except that one.
Elaine Radford has updated her original article and made it available online as "ender and hitler:sympathy for the superman (20 years later)" Fantasy Review folded soon after the original publication, so Orson Scott Card remains the only rights holder to his rebuttal, he has never made it available online and almost certainly never will.

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Tuesday, 12 June 2007

New Bionic Woman Video on Youtube



I am so psyched about this show it's untrue. Like a proud father I have similar feelings for this video. Culled from the scant 4 minutes and 49 seconds of preview footage NBC uploaded to Youtube I have laboured long and hard to convert this "undownloadable" video stream into a format I could work with. Unfortunately Youtube converts it back to crappy low-rez flash video which brought back a lot of the artifacts my system spent nearly four hours removing.
I'm not bitter though, like I said I'm totally jazzed about this series, and the hours of work that went into this vid only make me appreciate it a lot more. I just wish we didn't have to wait nearly five months to see it....
The big surprise for me was Michelle Ryan. A British soap actress I didn't have much time for, she'd been in Eastenders for a few years, and being both female and having a pulse she did a few lads mags over the years. Sort of flying below my radar then. But she has got this part nailed, absolutely believable as the new Jamie Summers, a harder and much tougher Bionic Woman and from that accent you'd never guess she grew up a mile or so away from me in North London in the early 90s.
We're losing Battlestar next season, Studio-60, Drive and The Black Donnellys have already gone. I am praying Bionic Woman gets at least one full season. I want to watch one show that has balls next season, and no the irony of it having a half human woman as the central character hasn't escaped me.

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Friday, 8 June 2007

Music Video - Heroes Finale - Pure Energy



I did this a couple of weeks ago but it's been sitting on my hard drive because I'm just not 100% happy with it, but I don't think it's going to get any better so here it is warts and all.
The problem was that after clipping the final episode of Heroes I was left with about 90 seconds of usable footage and the song I wanted to use was over four minutes long, so there's a fair amount of repetition here, even more so than usual for me. I've got a feeling I'll probably take another stab at it during my epic project to make music videos for every episode of Heroes first season.
The music track is "What's on Your Mind (Pure Energy)" by Information Society

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Tuesday, 5 June 2007

Jerkio - season 2

The series that promised you Mad Max but gave you Little House on the Prairie is back.
CBS have apparently caved in beneath the weight of the nineteen, and counting, tons of nuts sent by fans to their offices. The only details we have so far are that closure will come in the form of an eight episode miniseries to air mid-season. No details on cast or script yet.

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Monday, 4 June 2007

Heroes - The Musical



Now that the first season of Heroes has limped off our screens to the sounds of millions of viewers sighing "Was that it ?" I thought I'd set myself a project for the summer. Having been dabbling with making fanvids over the last couple of months I thought it'd be fun to make a music video for each episode of Heroes. I've already done some for the last few stories but vidding an entire series from start to finish could be a lot of fun. For me anyway, don't know about the audience.
While we're at it another look at that finale and an overview of the season in general probably wouldn't go amiss. More on that later.

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