Weekly Update – Summer Glau Officially Joins Dollhouse, Defying Gravity in Trouble

August 31, 2009 at 7:19 am | In News and Updates, Paul S. White | Leave a Comment
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Summer Glau to Join Dollhouse: We had previously mentioned that Joss Whedon wanted to find a place on Dollhouse for Summer Glau (recently off the cancelled Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles). Now she has officially been announced as a member of the cast playing a recurring character who is a Dollhouse employee and who shares a past with Echo (Eliza Dushku). Glau previously worked with Whedon on the short-lived but fan-championed Firefly. (Full Article)

Quick Hits – The Spider #1, Fantastic Four #570, Incredible Hercules #133, Batman and Robin #3, and More

August 31, 2009 at 7:09 am | In Comic Book Reviews, Quick Hits, Sam Christopher | 5 Comments
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By Sam Christopher

This was a HUGE week for comics for me.

SpiderJudgementKnightI’ll begin with the coolest cover of the bunch, as Moonstone’s revival of true pulp fiction continues with The Spider: Judgement Knight #1. “Blood of the Innocent”, a prose story by C.J. Henderson (Penthouse Comix, Moonstone Monsters Volume One) written around fantastic art by J. Anthony Kosar shows Richard Wentworth as The Spider, scourge of New York’s underworld as well as “Master of Men” (and an inspiration, if only for the name, for Stan Lee’s creation of Spiderman), in an adventure that threatens the woman he loves. A madman known only as “The Professor” (and, no, it’s not the friendly guy who made all manner of cool things out of coconuts for the castaways) has made a name for himself in the underworld of NY. The Spider has come to look upon this man as his equal and opposite; both men seem to be brilliant strategists who will do anything, dare anything to attain their ends. The Spider learns that The Professor’s main plan is going to come to fruition tomorrow and where the bad guy’s hideout is. Our hero realizes this is a trap, but given the master plan and what it could mean for not only New York but the entire world he feels he must attack immediately. Little does The Spider know the secret trap The Professor has in store for him. A great story about a great character, even if Wentworth and lady love Nita van Sloan are pretty much just Lamont Cranston and Margo Lane. There’s also a more typical comics story backing up the main feature here. “The Crossroads of Solomon Strang” stars a pulp character named Ghost Zero, who I admit I’ve never heard of. Written and drawn by Dave Flora, this is an okay story that’s really too short to get a handle on the main character. Excellent stuff all the way around.

Next, since I don’t give much love to Marvel we’ll go into two titles that made it out this week. Fantastic Four #570 brings us a new creative team and a new direction (unless you read Alan Moore’s Supreme, or his Captain Britain). Jonathan Hickman (Red Mass for Mars, Dark Reign: Fantastic Four) and Dale Eaglesham (Justice Society of America: Kingdom Come Special, Countdown: Arena) take over the title and begin by giving us more of what we’ve had: Johnny needling Ben, Reed and Sue being domestic and detached, Reed retreating to alternate realities in an attempt to solve all the problems of the world. In this story, this quest of Reed’s leads him to “The Council of Interdimensional Reeds”, which would have been more interesting for me if it had also contained Victor von Doom’s and Bentley Wittman’s—The Wizard, whose latest scheme has led to this ish’s action—as well as Reed doppelgangers from across the multiverse. Apparently, these guys save Earths everywhere from all manner of destruction (having them save Earth-2012 while “our” Reed is standing there was a nice touch—maybe that Galactus was going to eat the Mayan Calendar). Anyway, it’s not that it’s all that bad; I’m just never too sanguine about too much cosmic scope in these things. I would have thought the disaster that was “Doom’s Master” would serve as warning to all.

And, in Incredible Hercules #133, they keep us in suspense as to the travails of Herc and Zeus in order to apprise us as to the status of one Amadeus Cho. Seems AC had lost trust in Athena and the other Olympians but not in the Prince of Power himself. Finding out the circumstances of his parents’ deaths is just something Cho feels he must do alone. Along the way here we get a healthy dose of backstory—which helped me out since I didn’t read any of the “Planet Hulk” storyline (see my review of Skaar: Son of the Hulk for more on that)—for Cho as he takes the bus to his hometown of Excello, Utah, and walks right into—sorry, it’s not gonna be that easy… read it. Another issue, another winner from the talented writing team (and they must be talented as it surely never occurred to me that anyone could make Marvel’s version of Hercules interesting enough to carry an ongoing title) of Fred Van Lente (Action Philosophers, Amazing Fantasy) and Greg Pak (War Machine, Warlock), with some outstanding Rodney Buchemi (Marvel Adventures: Avengers, Incredible Hulk) art.

In our “World’s Finest” section:

In Batman and Robin #3, we find that Dick’s methods of interrogation appear to irritate Commissioner Gordon; of course, what Dick does here seems rather Batman-like to me. Maybe Gordon’s still a little on edge from Damian’s interrogation methods (baseball bats and metal buckets). And speaking of Robin, he awakes in Pyg’s HQ (the Pyg Sty?) only to find himself about to be added to the ranks of Pyg’s surgically-enhanced followers. The girl we met at the end of the first ish, Sasha, returns here and looks to be lining up for duty as someone else’s “Robin”. Looks good. “Very, very good,” as Wooderson would say (sorry, just watched Dazed and Confused again). Grant Morrison (The Invisibles, Vampirella) and Frank Quitely (Bite Club, We3) just keep this title rolling along as the best Batman-centric Batman: Reborn title, it’s strongest competition among all the B: R titles being Gotham City Sirens, which followed up a stellar first ish with a rather ordinary second.

And then there’s Gotham City Sirens #3, which brings the whimsy back—and that’s saying a lot for a story about a serial killer—while the Sirens themselves take the issue off. Harley, of course, was kidnapped by Hush at the end of #2, and Catwoman and Poison Ivy spent a couple panels this ish talking with Ed Nigma, former Riddler, to establish they were looking for Quinn before leaving the story to the reformed Nigma and Batman as the two men use similar methods to track the same murderer. Another excellent chapter in the Batman: Reborn saga, with writer Scott Lobdell (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Nick Fury: Agent of Shield) doing a marvelous job with the very eccentric Nigma and Guillem March (Oracle: The Cure, Power Girl) handling the artwork in fine fashion.

Thirdly in our Dark Knight portion of this “team-up” we have Detective Comics #856, where Kate’s story gets into high gear as the hybrid “true believers” help Batwoman’s father save her from Alice and reveal the new Queen of Crime’s ultimate plan to Kate. On a more elegant note, Kate’s father talks her into attending the GCPD Annual Charity Ball—he thought she could use a night off from crimefighting. Kate embarrasses her step-mother, ignores her cousin, dances with Maggie Sawyer (transferred from Supes to Bats, was head of SCU in Metropolis and now heads Major Crimes in Gotham City—she’s Chief Brenda Lee Johnson from The Closer on a different coast), and gets very scared by the end of the story—with good reason. Another gem from Greg Rucka (52, Elektra) and J. H. Williams III (Promethea, Inhumans). The Question Second Feature is not as good. Not awful, just don’t understand the rationale. A guy is ordered to kill her and he’s going to make no pretense that it’s an accident. He injects her with a knockout drug, ties her up, and puts her in the trunk of a car he then pushes into (probably) the bay. Why not just give her an immediately fatal dosage? Anyway, Rucka’s overall story is all right—just nothing great—and Cully Hamner’s (Blue Beetle, Red) art is good, too.

And our final Batman title is the out-of-continuity toon-inspired Batman: The Brave and the Bold #8, which continued the Global Guardian theme and took the Dark Knight to Tibet to track down the Yeti. Meh. Kind of a lame story with a few good moments and a fairly heavy-handed ending.

Okay, okay, Superman #691 is bringing us closer to my total loss of patience with this storyline. I can accept that a lot of people will buy into Supergirl attacking Mon-El in order to further the aims of New Krypton—of course, that’s without my questioning why over one hundred thousand “Supermen” need to resort to the subterfuge of destroying Metropolis’ water supply, or why they would do so pretty much completely in the open, or what’s the point in destroying that water supply in the first place. I can even—maybe—accept the world thinking a Kryptonian rogue like Ral-Dar attempting to assassinate the US President. What I find impossible to believe is the world’s populace believing that Superman, who has saved the planet on countless occasions, was aiding in any assassination attempt of anyone. And that’s without seeing anything. But there have to be cameras on-site not controlled by the military, cameras that would have shown Superman stopping Ral-Dar not helping him. And microphones, mics that could have picked up the conversation between Superman and Gen. Lane. But even without any of that, I just don’t believe anyone on this planet would take the word of a general involved in secret government black ops programs over the single greatest hero the Earth has ever known. The general and his cohorts, like Morgan Edge, just don’t have the credibility to stand against Supes. Especially after Mon-El, who despite all reports is not dead, comes to tell the truth about what happened in the sewer. Gen. Lane is beginning to look more and more like DC’s answer to Norman Osborne. And that is not a good thing.

And there was also the Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen Special #2, which followed our intrepid reporter as he tried to find out more about Project 7734 (get it? upside down and backwards?) and does learn a lot from a very unlikely source. Two unlikely sources, actually. Unfortunately, this didn’t help my impression of this storyline. A pretty good story until put into context with the rest of this increasingly unruly mess. And when you see the ending, the first thing you’ll think is, “okay, why didn’t this happen earlier in the story, at the guy’s house?” because that’s precisely where it should have happened.

Moving on to other members of the Justice League, first we finally have Flash: Rebirth #4, and in this ish Eobard explains it all. Seems there’s a negative side to the Speed Force, and Eobard Thawne, the Reverse Flash, actually creates it and causes it to spread by running. Also, according to Thawne as well as all the evidence the talented team of Geoff Johns (Green Lantern, Adventure Comics) and Ethan van Sciver (Impulse, Claw the Unconquered) show us here, unlike all the other speedsters in the DCU Barry Allen doesn’t tap into the “positive” Speed Force, he creates it. I don’t think I buy any of that. It’s a good story but makes no sense given all we’ve seen in the past. I do like this tale, and this issue does give us the return of a certain mentor of Bart Allen’s (and not with a Black Ring on), but I just don’t think this whole system of Barry making Speed Force while Eobard Thawne makes “Reverse Speed Force”, and whoever runs the longest wins, can hold out against other writers’ takes on this thing. But, then, I didn’t think all that Parallax nonsense in GL would last and look where we are.

And speaking of the Green Lantern, GL #45 answers the question of where that humongous, planet-sized Black Ring was headed—and the answer’s not to John Stewart’s liking. Meanwhile, on Zamaron, the Star Sapphires are battling with Sinestro’s half of the Sinestro Corps—Mongul controls the other half—hoping to remove the GLC’s greatest enemy by introducing Love to the Soldiers of Fear. Here we find that Carol Ferris is seen as a great leader for the Sapphires by the Zamarons because she won’t allow the ring to guide her. Meanwhile, on Odym, the Blue Lanterns battle to defend themselves and their Power Battery from the orange gang of thieves sent by Larfleeze while Black Rings hover around the planet waiting for someone to die. Meanwhile, on Okaara—and I know there are a lot of “meanwhiles” here but this ish was entirely vignettes and I’ve actually spared you a couple—the Black Rings infiltrate. And you do know the entire “Orange Lantern Corps” is made of constructs of beings Larfleeze has murdered and collected in his lair. Redrum.

Finally, and since we’ve brooched the comics event of the steaming Summer about to fade into the glorious Autumn, we have Blackest Night: Titans #1. No team in the DCU has been hit as hard by death as the Teen Titans, even with the returns of Superboy and Impulse (both of which puzzle me; with all this going on I’m wondering if the “returned” heroes might not end up as some sort of bridge between the living and the dead). This issue shows the return of Tara (which you’ll get from the cover) and of Hank Hall, the original Hawk who died rather than become Monarch (for those who didn’t read the “Armageddon: 2001” annual series), as automatons of the Black Rings. The Rings also try and raise Don Hall, the original Dove, but he is said to be “at peace” and either wouldn’t or couldn’t be raised (which gives me another thought: I wonder if those who are “at peace” may not eventually rise anyway to help their friends against the Black Lanterns). And the ending of this ish is… WOW! And it could stand. A good opener by J. T. Krul (Soulfire, Titans) and Ed Benes (Gen13, Birds of Prey).

Other comics:

Buck Rogers #3- Buck and Wilma get closer in the future, even as his funeral takes place in the present.

Final Crisis Aftermath: Ink #4- mark makes a pact with Samurai as Liberty Hill burns. And we find out the cause of all this. Maybe. There are still two issues left.

Justice Society of America #30- The team recovers enough to capture a few of the villains—with the help of the big stuffed “watchbear” Jay Garrick borrows from Fred Sanford’s window—and return to the Brownstone to find Mr. Terrific near death. The seeds of Magog leaving to go into his own solo series are further sown here as well.

The Last Days of Animal Man #4- Prizmatik and Bloodrage attack the league of Titans tower and do something at the end I find unfathomable. Buddy, meanwhile, takes a beating but keeps retreating, saving Starfire in the process from not only the aforementioned villains but also that old man who was making a pass at her—oh, wait, that was him. And then he takes her to the last place you’d expect but also the most logical place he could.

Red Sonja #47- As we continue the slow march to #50, Sonja decides to aid some slaves she finds on the trek north to the Blood Dynasty. She finds her sister, who betrayed the family to Lucan Martur and then was sold into slavery (along with her and Martur’s baby daughter), and, well… let’s just say that understanding isn’t one of Sonja’s strong suits.

Sherlock Holmes #4- Continuing this great mystery with a mysterious stranger, a found letter, and the recapture of the world’s greatest detective.

Son of Hulk #14- Dunno. I liked this new direction at first, and it is still interesting, but I’m not as sure of it anymore.

The Unknown #4- This mini winds up with an interesting non-answer to the current mystery and an interesting prologue to the next.

Wonder Woman #35- WW and Black Canary finish up in Tokyo but not before Diana is forced to make amends to one she (sort of) wronged. And the ending was a real, real shock.

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Aug 23 – Viking, Batgirl, Batman: Streets of Gotham, and More


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See Alive in Joburg, the Inspiration for District 9

August 30, 2009 at 6:30 am | In Miscellaneous | Leave a Comment

Before Neill Blomkamp directed the new hit science fiction movie District 9, he did a six minute short film titled Alive in Joburg.  This film follows basically the same premise of aliens arriving in South Africa and facing discrimination and decrepit conditions.  Blomkamp filmed the short in documentary style which shows Johannesburg locals giving their opinions on the aliens which reveal their prejudice toward the newcomers.  In truth, most of the interview clips come from actual footage where people were asked about Zimbabwean refugees, thus placing aliens in the film as stand ins for another disenfrachised group of people.  The film is available for viewing at YouTube at this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNReejO7Zu8

Book Review – Voyages of Imagination: The Star Trek Fiction Companion

August 28, 2009 at 6:30 am | In Book Reviews, Sam Christopher, Star Trek | Leave a Comment
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(Part of our ongoing series covering all aspects of the Star Trek franchise)

By Sam Christopher

Rating: 5 out of 5 Stars (Highest Rating)

In 1966, Gene Roddenberry’s singular vision of a (mostly) peaceful, (mostly) optimistic future for the human race hit the airwaves and began stoking the fires of imagination for coming generations of writers and sf fans. The show has been credited with helping many to aspire to their dreams, with the characters of Mr. Spock, Montgomery Scott, and Lt. Uhura (she had no first name on the show) most often cited as inspirations, and the half-Vulcan Spock having the widest appeal among the masses. A need was seen almost immediately for novelizations of episodes—and by “need” I mean an opportunity for profit—and a series of books by the well-regarded sf author James Blish began hitting the stores in January of ’67. These proved very popular, as did Blish’s original novel Spock Must Die, which was released in 1970. A few years later, though, came the real springboard for what was to follow, when Sondra Marshak and Myrna Culbreath edited, at the behest of GR himself, an anthology of original Star Trek fiction by fans of the show called Star Trek: The New Voyages. The success of this book—along with the momentum of the entire Trek phenomenon—showed the amazing versatility and depth of thought this cancelled show could inspire in its devotees. This realization of profit potential by publishers has led to the publication of nearly 600 works of prose fiction since, and Voyages of Imagination, edited by Jeff Ayers, is a compilation of these titles along with interviews from many of the authors.

The first thing that intrigued me was how many of the authors who use just their initials are women. I remember reading about how Dorothy Fontana was DC Fontana for the credits on the tv show because of some prejudice against women by tv execs (note: I have never heard or read Ms. Fontana herself say that, just people around the show at the time) but I never thought of it in terms of prose publishing. But here we have JA Lawrence (James Blish’s wife Judith Ann with her maiden name), MS (Melinda) Murdock, JM (Jeanne) Dillard, AC (Ann) Crispin, VE (Vicki) Mitchell, to name a few. But I think the best use of initials—at least the most interesting to me—is LA Graf. This started out as four authors from a writers group getting together to do one ST novel.  This group was pared to three by the time that novel (Ice Trap) was published, and further reduced when one of the remaining three (Melissa Crandall, who would author Shell Game on her own) moved away. The last two, Karen Rose Cercone and Julia Ecklar, have gone on to publish several works in different aspects of the STU. The name LA Graf comes from the name of their writers group, which was Let’s All Get Rich And Famous. Not to say that no woman uses her full name as author in Trek, just that the use of initials in lieu of a first name is virtually a completely female phenomenon that I never noticed before reading this book. I’m sure there are valid reasons for this—maybe there’s a little known psychological thing where women just like using initials more than men (and maybe there’s not)—but I found it interesting.

Beyond that, I really cannot do this work justice by covering even a smattering of it in this column. Mr. Ayers has done Trekkies everywhere an immense favor by compiling this list of books and interviewing as many of these authors as he could find and convince to talk to him—which is most of them. You have to remember that virtually all of the Trek writers were Trek fans first. The vast majority of them watched the shows in either first run or in the early waves of syndication, when despite the limited channels available Trek could be seen at least once a day every day.  When these authors talk about the show, they are reminiscing about something they love. On the other hand, some of the authors’ comments, and lack of same, has me wondering. Ann Crispin, when asked about any future Trek projects, stated flatly that she would not be doing any. This could just mean she has enough going on in her own original fiction that she doesn’t have time to play in Roddenberry’s universe anymore—and I try not to read too much into things in print like this. But Vonda N. McIntyre, a great sf writer who handled the novelizations for ST II through ST IV and gave Sulu his canonical (is that really a word?) first name of Hikaru and about whom it is said that writing ST was a lifelong dream come true, refused to comment for the book at all. Again, this could just mean she was busy and didn’t have the time but I thought it strange. I have read a few interviews with Ms. McIntyre and she seems to be none too thrilled with the whole publishing community, so maybe that has something to do with it.

So, when you read this book, you’re probably going to think, “What the h-e-double-hockey-sticks kinda review was that?!?” Like I said, no matter what tack I took on this one it was going to be leaving out so much as to render what I wrote almost useless in conveying the true value of the book. All I can say is, if you’re a Trekkie like me you’ll love it and find it an invaluable resource for finding out about books you haven’t read, as well as communing (in a way) with other Trekkies through the authors comments.  And if you’re not a Trekkie—well, you should be.

Buy Voyages of Imagination: The Star Trek Fiction Companion from Amazon.com

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Cancellation Watch: A New Season and More Shows to be Cancelled

August 27, 2009 at 6:14 am | In Cancellation Watch, John J. Joex | 3 Comments
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By John J. Joex

Last season, my Cancellation Watch column tracked the likelihood of each Science Fiction and Fantasy show getting renewed. Also, in my Ratings Tracker column, I tracked a Cancellation Alert for each show. Since the two were just a mirror image of each other, and to simplify things, this year I am going to use just one method of tracking which will be the Cancellation Alert. This has five levels (Low, Moderate, Medium, Elevated, and High) and tracks the likelihood that a series will get the axe.

Not to toot my own horn too much (but I’m gonna), but last year my tracking system gave a good indication of whether a series was in trouble. I predicted that shows like Pushing Daisies, Knight Rider, and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles were in trouble within their first few weeks, and I had shows like Life on Mars and The Eleventh Hour pegged as endangered as early as last November. In fact, every show which had the Cancellation Alert raised above Low was gone be season end with four exceptions: Fringe, Heroes, Chuck, and Dollhouse. Fringe I pegged as in trouble early on because it got off to a very slow start, but it quickly picked up steam especially once it was paired with House and I dropped its Cancellation Alert back to Low. Heroes and Chuck would have received the axe if they resided on any network other than NBC. And Dollhouse was the miracle renewal of the ages that nobody could see coming.

So what’s the secret to my system? I really don’t have one.  I just watch the weekly numbers then just go with my gut based on the network that airs the series and how they have previously leaned toward Science Fiction and Fantasy shows. It’s that simple.  Sure, it’s not as scientific as the Renew/Cancel Index published by TV by the Numbers (which is also quite accurate and I highly recommend checking out), but then I did a pretty good job of it last season so you might want to keep an eye on my predictions for the coming year.

So as we prepare for the new season, I have set up the 2009 Cancellation Watch page with the fifteen Fall Science Fiction and Fantasy shows and my pre-season predictions. I am going with these based on my initial gut feeling at this point as I have no numbers to back them up yet. But follow my weekly Ratings Tracker column which will start up in September for a better gauge on which shows are struggling and which ones are doing okay.

Go to the Cancellation Watch for the 2009-10 Season

Fringe: The Complete First SeasonCatch up with last season’s episodes before the new season begins. Fringe, Dollhouse, Heroes, Lost, and more are available on DVD now.

Countdown to Fall: Five Science Fiction and Fantasy Shows Facing Big Question Marks This Year

August 26, 2009 at 11:04 am | In Articles, John J. Joex, Previews | 1 Comment
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By John J. Joex

The Fall 2009 season is almost upon us bringing us sixteen shows in the Science Fiction and Fantasy vein, ten returning series and six new entries including AMC’s The Prisoner mini-series (see our Fall Preview for more information on each these shows). That’s quite a lot of television viewing, even if you only plan on watching half of those shows on a regular basis. Last week I gave my list of five must-watch shows for the upcoming season. Now it’s time to take a look at five shows facing some pretty big question marks as they prepare for their Fall bow. This includes one returning show that faces the task of winning back fans and four new shows that I question whether it is really worth our time to commit to watching on a weekly basis.

Not dead yet!

Heroes (NBC, Returns September 21st)– How much does this one have left in the tank? After a stellar first season (weakened a bit by an anti-climatic finale, though) this show has struggled through its two subsequent seasons. And this has lead to a significant drop off in viewership as the series tumbled down to only around six million viewers by the end of last season. The creative team just cannot seem to reconnect with what made the show great early on and the show has continued to deliver erratic episodes. Bryan Fuller returned to the series late last season, sparking some sense of hope among fans, but he quickly abandoned ship. Allegedly that was planned all along, but I would much rather see his name in the credits. So we have to ask at what does the future hold for this show? How many times can they kill of characters to only have them come back to life again (and we already know Tracy is coming back)? How many times can the time travel to reset the timeline? How many more characters can they throw at us? The show has just become tired and has to rediscover itself pretty quickly otherwise NBC (who remained patient with it last year) will most likely show it the door. And there is no one in the real world who can time travel and save it.

V (ABC, Debuts November 3rd) – Those who remember the original mini-series know that it was quite an event when it aired in 1983 giving us one of the biggest special effects laden spectacles ever to be seen on television up to that point. And the follow up mini-series was kind of fun as well. But by the time they had turned this into a weekly series, they seemed to be scraping the bottom of the barrel. Now ABC will put us through the whole cycle again, but without the mini-series kick-off. My whole problem with V, which became a factor from the second mini-series on (spoilers to follow), is that once the humans found out that the aliens were actually just lizards wearing costumes, what was the point for them to keep the disguises on? Those things must have been incredibly uncomfortable, but they continued to wear them throughout the run of the series. I was hoping that the new series would dispense with that and use some sort of transformation gimmick instead, but the preview trailer suggests not. This was something I could just never get past in the original version and will apparently have to deal with in the remake. I will definitely tune in to see how the new version looks, but I am hoping it diverges significantly from where the original went after the initial mini-series.

Stargate: Universe (SyFy, Debuts October 2nd) – Trapped on a starship at the far side of the galaxy with no way home, Captain Janeway and her crew must struggle to survive with only their wits in Delta Quadrant . . . oh wait. Wrong franchise! But still, it seems like we have the same story. Stargate: Universe follows the exploits of a team who, after boarding an ancient starship, get flung off into deep space and must try to find their way back to Earth. I have never been a huge fan of the Stargate franchise to begin with, so seeing that this is following the path of that other well know “Star” franchise does not really entice me into watching the series. Still, I admit that the previous two Stargate incarnations have been watchable and have delivered consistently competent episodes, so I will at least take a peek at the early episodes of this show.

Eastwick (ABC, Debuts September 23rd) – Based on John Updike’s novel The Witches of Eastwick which also spawned the film starring Jack Nicholson, this series follows three women with magical powers who find that their abilities increase when a devilish visitor comes to town. I admit that the preview trailer peaked my interest in this a bit, but ultimately I wonder if this one will just be Charmed for an older crowd. The fact that this concept has been tried twice before on television and resulted in two failed pilots for both NBC and FOX does not bode well for Eastwick’s future. And ABC has not had a good track record recently in the Science Fiction and Fantasy realm beyond Lost for the last few years (though we have to give them credit for continuing to try). At this point, I’m thinking this will be one of the early casualties for the coming Fall season.

Vampire Diaries (CW, Debuts September 10th) – Oh my god! This series is going to be just the coolest! I mean I have all the books and Paul Wesley is just so dreamy , and . . . Oh wait. I’m not a fourteen year old girl. So maybe I’m not the demographic they are shooting for. This series is adapted from L.J. Smith’s book series of the same name and essentially gives us Twilight for the small screen. In fact, reading the descriptions of the Vampire Diaries novels, I can barely distinguish them from what I know about the Twilight series. But I guess that just shows how far off the mark I am from that target audience. I actually think that this one could be a hit for the CW (God knows they need one), but unlike Supernatural, which this will lead into, I doubt this will attract many viewers beyond its core demographic. They have to just hope that there are enough girls in that pre-teen to young teen range that will keep coming back for more of this.

Previous: Five Science Fiction and Fantasy Shows You Have to Tune in For

Next: We Tell All!  Spoilers for the Fall Shows

See a Rundown of all the Science Fiction and Fantasy Shows on the Upcoming Schedule at our Fall Preview Page

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Weekend Box Office Results – District 9 Drops to Number 2

August 25, 2009 at 6:30 am | In Box Office Results, Paul S. White | Leave a Comment
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In a relatively slow weekend for Science Fiction and Fantasy at the Box Office, District 9 ceded the Number 1 slot to Quentin Tarantino’s war movie Inglorious Basterds this past weekend. Still, the Peter Jackson produced Science Fiction film pulled in $18 million for the weekend and elevated its domestic gross to almost $73 million, more than twice the movie’s budget. G.I. Joe slipped to the Number 3 slot in its third week of release, and The Time Traveler’s Wife dropped to Number 4. The kid-oriented fantasy film Shorts had a pretty poor performance out of the starting gate as it only pulled in $6.4 million in its opening weekend. Expect to see that one move quickly to the dollar theaters.

Following are the results for all of the Science Fiction and Fantasy oriented movies in the Top 20 for the weekend of August 21-23:

Title / Box Office Rank (Rank Prior Week) / Weekend (Total) Draw
2) District 9 – Prior Wk: 1, Draw (Total): $18.21 MM ($72.8 MM)
3) G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra – Prior Wk: 2, Draw (Total): $12.2 MM ($120.24 MM)
4) The Time Traveler’s Wife – Prior Wk: 3, Draw (Total): $9.74 MM ($37.17 MM)
6) Shorts – Prior Wk: New, Draw (Total): $6.41 MM ($6.41 MM)
7) G-Force – Prior Wk: 5, Draw (Total): $4.11 MM ($107.22 MM)
8) Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince – Prior Wk: 7, Draw (Total): $3.48 MM ($290.24 MM)
16) Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen – Prior Wk: 15, Draw (Total): $.97 MM ($398.44 MM)
20) Orphan – Prior Wk: 16, Draw (Total): $.8 MM ($39.93 MM)

Source: Box Office Mojo

Previous Results: District 9 Takes Number 1, G.I. Joe Drops to Number 2

Weekly Update – Bryan Singer May Not be Doing BSG Just Yet; Warehouse 13 Renewed

August 24, 2009 at 6:30 am | In News and Updates, Paul S. White | 1 Comment
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Bryan Singer Not Working Battlestar Galactica Just Yet? Last week, we passed on the news that Bryan Singer would direct the upcoming big screen version of Battlestar Galactica which would follow the original 1978 series instead of the recent re-imagining from SyFy.  Now, Sci Fi Scoop is reporting that  the film may not be moving forward just yet.  According to that site, his next project will most likely be a remake of Jack the Giant Killer for New Line.  And after that he has a commitment with Warner Bros. for a remake of Excaliber and he is also eyeing an X-Men prequel titled X-Men: First Class.  So whether he sticks with the Battlestar Galactica project, and whether that comes to fruition with our without him, remains to be seen.

Warehouse 13 Renewed: Coming as no surprise, SyFy’s hit new series Warehouse 13 received a renewal for a second season.  It is the most-watched original show in that network’s history having averaged 3.7 million viewers per episode so far in its first season.  It has also scored well with female audiences, delivering the highest numbers ever from that demographic for the cable channel.  That was actually one of the goals for the network when it recently rebranded to SyFy this past July.  Now if only they would pick up ABC Family’s cancelled The Middleman to pair up with the series, they could probably boost their female audience even more.

ABC Television Series in the Works: The Fall 2009 season has not even begun, but ABC is already working on potential new Science Fiction and Fantasy related television shows.  They have picked up Clive Barker’s Hotel which Barker will produce and Saw franchise veterans Marcus Dunstan and Patrick Melton will write.  The series would focus on ghostly occurrences at a haunted hotel.  Also, ABC plans to move forward with a small screen version of the book The Time Traveler’s Wife, which just recently hit theaters with a feature film adaptation.  Friends creator Marta Kauffman will develop it as a series and allegedly ABC had plans for this years before the movie came out.  Both series, if picked up, would bow no sooner than Spring 2010.

Movie News – Shazam and Yellow Submarine: With the all success of super heroes on the big screen of late, DC is looking to kick-off yet another franchise in that realm.  They are moving forward with a feature film adaptation of Shazam! which will be written by Bill Birch and Geoff Johns.  Film plans for this character have actually been floating about for a while, so we will see if this attempt will gain any momentum.  Also, iconic director Robert Zemeckis (Back to the Future, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Forest Gump) is hoping to remake the classic animated movie The Yellow Submarine which starred the Beatles.  He is currently in negotiations over the rights for the property and would do it in the performance capture animation style that he used for Polar Express and the upcoming A Christmas Carol.  No word on whether the two surviving Beatles would be involved with the project.

Previous Update:

August 17th – Bryan Singer to Direct Battlestar Galactica Movie; The Sarah Connor Chronicles May Live on

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Quick Hits – Viking, Batgirl, Batman: Streets of Gotham, and More

August 23, 2009 at 7:10 am | In Comic Book Reviews, Quick Hits, Sam Christopher | Leave a Comment
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By Sam Christopher

Comics Mini-Review: Viking #1-3

Rating: 3 ½ out of 5 Stars

viking_1This is the story of Egil and Finn, two thieves who happen to be brothers, intertwined with the story of Aki and Gylfi, the Tax Collector to King Bram and his assistant (or supervisor if you ask the king). The king’s daughter, Annikki, looks to be the catalyst for drawing the two stories together. We meet Egil and Finn as they are “plying their trade” and see that they are ruthless killers when crossed—and even when not, really. Their grandfather, we learn, believes Egil to be the worst of the worst, the old man at one point telling Egil, “If I had known what you would be… I would have killed your father in the moment of his birth”. The two brothers seem to be based on Seth and Richie Grecko, the George Clooney/Quentin Tarantino duo in From Dusk til Dawn. King Bram the Quiet lives in a place he doesn’t care for with the memory of a dead wife and the little girl who reminds him. He knows how to be a king, knows how to rule others, how to command their respect. At one point he tells his bumbling, fumbling, stumbling Tax Collector, “Be a man, Aki. Not what you think I want a man to be”. Gylfi is a good friend to Aki, attempting to cover up his incompetence and even warning him of the king’s intent when appropriate. These two are kind of like Hong Kong Phooey and Spot the Cat in Hong Kong Phooey. This is a cool setup and a very good series thus far. Ivan Brandon (Final Crisis Aftermath: Escape, Grounded) has captured the Northern voice, and Nic Klein’s (New Warriors, Olympus) art is perfect for this series (which just goes to show what I always say about art fitting a story, considering how much I hated his work on Olympus). My only complaint with the series thus far is them printing it Golden Age Size.

Short week for comics—for me anyway…

batgirl_1Batgirl #1 hit the streets this past Wednesday and it’s not who I thought it would be. After the events of Battle for the Cowl: Oracle: The Cure, I thought the new Batgirl—as DC had already announced the title– would be the old Batgirl, with Barbara Gordon using the piece of the Anti-Life Equation Calculator had worked out in order to cure her own paralysis. (Yes, I know they said it didn’t work but in comics these things only don’t work until a writer needs them to work for whatever he’s planning to do with the character). Here, though, we see Babs still in the wheelchair, but her anger and seeming absolute belief her paralysis will never change may be a hint that it will. For right now, and into the foreseeable future, I guess, we have the erstwhile Spoiler as Batgirl and Steph is doing her usual half-competent job. In all fairness to her, though, she kind of has all the problems of the ‘70s Spiderman with none of the powers. Or the fan base. But, with Dick, Damian, and Barbara looking over her shoulder, and with meaningful appearances and threads headed by Commissioner Gordon, Leslie Thompkins, and Gotham PD’s newest transfer-in Detective Gage, this book shapes up as a Batman Family, Birds of Prey-tinged fun-fest. No word yet on when the whole Tim Drake soap opera with Stephanie will resume. “Batgirl Rising” Part One is a product of Bryan Q. Miller (Teen Titans) with excellent artwork by Lee Garbett (Outsiders, Midnighter).

And then there’s Batman: Streets of Gotham #3, where Hush—Thomas Elliott, who has been surgically altered to be Bruce Wayne’s look-alike—has apparently come up with the perfect plan. He’ll pretend to be the missing socialite (no one knows that BW is dead, because the Bat-Family realizes the writers will eventually bring him back to life so they don’t want everyone to know Bats and Bruce are one and the same), give away billions of dollars to “stimulate” the economy of Gotham while siphoning off millions here and there in order to fund whatever nefarious scheme he has lurking in the dark recesses of that brilliant but twisted brain of his, and Dick and Damian can’t expose him without embarrassing questions about their own private lives being asked. Of course, Dick proves why he’s the Batman by coming up with a solution to this problem which is a doozy, although Damian’s far simpler solution of just killing Elliott would have probably worked better. And the subplot of Penguin, Black Mask and Victor Zsasz takes a new direction. All this from the talented duo of Paul Dini (Madame Mirage, Gotham City Sirens) and Dustin Nguyen (Batman, Jet). The Manhunter Second Feature chap was halfway decent, with Marc Andreyko’s (Manhunter, Black Sun) story continuing to be very good but Georges Jeanty’s (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Weapon X) art really falling down (there are two inkers, so maybe that had something to do with it). Spotty, I think, is the right word. There are pages where the art is what we’ve come to expect from the talented Jeanty… and then there’s Huntress. Also in this ish, there’s a preview of the Superman: Secret Origins mini. I still like Clark’s Harry Potter look but I’m not as thrilled with Lex Luthor’s Professor Moriarty impression. And, uh, Lana being sucked up into a tornado and Clark flying, probably for the first time, under the stress of trying to save her is a really innovative touch. Or at least it was eight years ago when they did it at the end of the first season of Smallville. I didn’t think very much of Birthright and this doesn’t look much better.

Other comics:

blackest_night_superman_1Blackest Night: Superman #1- Have to give it to the Big Red “S”: he saw it right off, realized it immediately. A couple more “DC Zombies” rise in this one. I am wondering where the most obvious one for this title is, though.

The Brave and the Bold #26- Spectre and Xombi. Meh.

Justice League of America #36- Okay, so maybe they’ve come up with a way to make the Royal Flush Gang a little tougher. I still have a hard time believing any of the RFG teams—or even all of them together at the same time—could take out Wonder Woman, much less the whole JLA.

The Mighty Avengers #28- Not thrilled with the whole “The Unspoken” storyline, and I’m becoming less and less “enchanted” with Loki being disguised as The Scarlet Witch, although the silencer spell that hearkened back to Strange Tales #115’s Origin of Dr. Strange was cool.

Power Girl #4- Dunno. I really like this character and this was all right as a transition issue but the book kinda feels like it’s already running out of steam. Could be wrong. Hopefully.

Star Trek: Spock: Reflections
#1- Not great but soooooooooooo much better than “Nero”.

Supergirl
#44- Not, uh, not that great. I was really looking forward to this whole storyline when it started. Now, not so much.

Superman Annual #14- Very good history for Daxam in general and Mon-El in particular. A couple things were kind of lame, and I am wondering why the original Daxamite that came here didn’t get the lead poisoning but all in all a fun story.

Vigilante
#9- Vig takes down Tobias Whale and heads off to Gotham, which means the Penguin will be in Vig’s sights next. And I have no doubt that we’ll get to see a few Bat-folk along the way, too.

Previous Column:

August 15th – Star Trek: Nero #1, Action #880, Adventure #1, and More


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Trailer: Avatar

August 23, 2009 at 6:30 am | In Previews | Leave a Comment
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avatar-posterIn the upcoming 3-D movie Avatar (scheduled for a December 18th release), James Cameron returned to the director’s chair for the first time since 1997’s Titanic (not including his work on a couple of documentaries).  This movie gives us the story of a parapalegic man who becomes mentally linked to an Avatar, and alien hybrid which can exist on a distant planet that Earth has designs on.  Cameron claims that his inspiration for the film came from “every single science fiction book I read as a kid”, with a particular emphasis on Edgar Rice Burough’s John Carter of Mars books.  Its themes of invasion and potentiall alien genocide make it sound similar to this Summer’s animated Battle for Terra, though.  In any case, this one looks like the blockbuster to beat this winter.  Watch the trailer at our Featured Trailer page and stay tuned for our full Science Fiction and Fantasy Fall/Winter movie preview coming soon.

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