GregCox
GregCox
GregCox

And this is the part where I mention that "Real Steel" was inspired by a story by Richard Matheson.

Good to see Selene back in action.

This is the part where I mention that the original Beastmaster was (loosely) based on a novel by Andre Norton. Strange but true.

Seconded! I thought the same thing!

I don't think Myka was in the game long enough to manifest her fears. It seemed to be a gradual process that took a while to kick in . . . .

Okay, that would have been great . . . .

Especially since Teddy actually mentioned a sasquatch-like monster in one of his books. (The word "Bigfoot" had not been coined yet, but he does he relate a story he heard from two old prospectors about a mysterious ape-like creature they encountered out on the frontier.)

Sigh. I honestly thought this article was going to be about some cute teen satire movie. But it's for real? I weep for humanity . . .

There was another Silver Age story where "Satan" turned out to be Kal-El's godfather!

As Bakana already pointed out, this has nothing to do with the "terrible" 1978 movie. That song is from the (worse) Rankin-Bass tv special. Maybe you can fix the first paragraph? #corrections

I think Earthsea is considered YA as well . . .

Maybe we should post a billboard in boldface and all caps at the top of the comments thread reminding people that "YA BOOKS WERE NOT ELIGIBLE."

But suppose some fantasy fan complained that there were too many dumb scif-fi books about robots and spaceships and aliens and shit . . ..

Because YA books weren't eligible.

Twilight would be disqualified on the grounds that it's YA.

Same with Sturgeon. We need a good movie version of MORE THAN HUMAN to put him back on the map . . . .

But, er, it says it's a list of the top 100 Science Fiction AND Fantasy books . . . .

Remember, YA books were ineligible. That eliminates most of Jones' best books.

Don't forget THE 4400 . . . .

Isn't Earthsea considered YA? In which case, it was ineligible.