Eccelston's Doctor really makes sense now. Now that we know what he was like during the GTW, he couldn't possibly have gone from John Hurt to Matt Smith in one shot.
Eccelston's Doctor really makes sense now. Now that we know what he was like during the GTW, he couldn't possibly have gone from John Hurt to Matt Smith in one shot.
Tron on Betamax from the local "Video Den", we even had to rent the machine!
It can't be a sentient zombie Lawrence because he would not be lying there any longer, but I still vote for Lawrence, he wrote his own epitaph and offed himself before he was infected so he would not become a zombie. The sequel is "Ironically, help arrived ten minutes later."
I STILL think Joust would make a cool movie. Knights on flying ostriches and falcons dueling it out in a medieval-type world...
Looks more stop motiony than the last one, which is cool.
Still, until I see a Minecraft pun, not sure.
"To the Invisible Jet!!"
Frankenstein Jem'Hadar?
Close! My first image was her stopping the scrum between Supes and Batman with equal parts power and strategy... thus earning respect from both combatants. Yours works as well or better.
I am oddly nostalgic for a period in 1940s -1950s where ww2 never happen and maybe hindenburg didnt blew up, where jetengines, rockets, and various other technologies never got matured and where the war strategies of the 30s never got proven wrong. Of course its the technology I long after, tho such a world tickled…
I have said before and will say it again.
For me, it's the final chase scene in Mad Max 2/The Road Warrior (1981). Both a chase and a battle, with no CGI, no superheroics, incorporating cars, trucks, motorcycles, gyrocopters, a decent Mel Gibson and a feral kid.
Speaking seriously, I quite agree. We need a science fiction adventure show or movie that isn't Star Trek or Star Wars derivative, one that isn't going to go the lazy "Let's show the dark side of the character" route. Buck Rogers or Flash Gordon — perhaps both together? — would be fun.
James Caan
Especially for the image of women in science fiction.
You should check out the new Space Battleship Yamato 2199
The Gall-Peters Projection still blows my mind.
Kochanski (re-) introduced in series 7 of Red Dwarf. The character just felt flat and forced and unfunny, probably due to poorer writing rather than the actress, in my opinion. Not helped by the fact that the actress has a really tough task replacing Rimmer. Clare Grogan in the first series gave a more interesting…
On my phone, so can't post evidence, but when Chris Barrie took a hiatus from Red Dwarf, they replaced the absolute brilliance of Arnold Rimmer with the walking stereotype girlie of Kristine Kochansky. Her mission? To be the snidey woman, constantly rolling her eyes at the menfolk's antics and to be an occasional sex…
X-men 3 with a storyline centered around Phoenix..
My FIX for the MIDICHLORIANS: I don't know if someone else has already had this idea but here's my fix. The midichlorians are good indicators of the Force not because they are responsible for it, but because they are mysteriously drawn to it, like moths to the flame! Doesn't screw up anything and returns the mystery…