mnemonick
mnemonick
mnemonick

Oh man, the comment code ate my links! Oh well, go the ESO image site [www.eso.org] and look for the pic (3rd one down on the left).

Yay for awesome space porn! If you'd like a repulsively titanic version, go here: [www.eso.org]eso1208a/">[www.eso.org] and look on the right side of the page.

Don't feel guilty! It's one of the better supernatural shows on TV right now. I'm just happy that we don't have to wait as long for it as we do for new Dr. Who!

100% Agreed. Scott should bring the Admiral out of retirement one last time. But- only if the mustache can come along for the ride. :D

TinEye says it a stock photo. The highest resolution I could find (640 x 640, not watermarked) is not surprisingly from Gizmodo: [www.gizmodo.jp] Hope it's OK to post here. :D

I've seen both, and the SyFy one is every bit as good as the Beeb original. It's kind of fun to watch the first half-dozen episodes of each; they're nearly shot-for-shot identical (not in a bad way). :)

That was the first thing I thought of too! And I've always thought it'd make a heck of an animated feature (though they'd have to really prune the main story. :D)

Olivia's character was completely locked-down, repressed and disengaged at first. It wasn't until the backstory of Fringe began to unfold that viewers began to understand why. That helped me find a new perspective on and even appreciate Torv's early performance. The writers gave her a tough job to do in the first

That's how I saw it. I even wondered for a minute if the machine 'felt' protective of Finch and believed Ingram was a threat to him, which makes me wonder how they're going to explain Ingram's death.

Wow, I missed that when watching the episode but you're right!

I will admit I do enjoy the occasional breakfast cereal digression. :)

They were two of my early long-time favorites as well! I think because both novels had such a strong sense of place and history that appealed to the obsessive armchair adventurer in me; both authors had so clearly spent a lot of time thinking about the worlds in which their characters lived, and were great at

Hrm, guess you can't reply to replies?

Yep, that sums it up nicely. :D

Y'know, I could see that. It frightens the daylights out of me, but it could work!

No, you're not- I posted just above before I noticed your post. :D

I have to disagree with you about "Cura Te Ipsum." I found that scene particularly engrossing because it encapsulated John's growing uncertainty about the 'better' person he's trying to become. And also because the writers left it to us to guess the ending, which happens all too infrequently on TV.