It's nice to see Felicia Day and Wil Wheaton on Eureka. They have some amusing chemistry on the web series "The Guild" which I think is really great despite not being a gamer.
It's nice to see Felicia Day and Wil Wheaton on Eureka. They have some amusing chemistry on the web series "The Guild" which I think is really great despite not being a gamer.
I certainly hope that the thinking behind the script for Star Trek Reboot 2 won't necessarily involve a villain.
I guess this is an example of how myths begin and why a little bit of knowledge is dangerous in the wrong hands.
If all we want is tastier junk food we don't need a singularity to accomplish it.
My list includes all two of the great 1980's sci-fi comedies starring Jeff Goldblum:
There were a couple of other interesting story developments in this episode- the stranding of Telford with the aliens and a new opportunity to return to Earth, not to mention the allusions once more to Rush's hidden agenda. Did he disengage from the seeder ship to save Destiny or to fulfill the quest we all think he…
This is really misleadingly presented data.
What strikes me as interesting about this storyline is making Starkiller an anti-hero, the equivalent of Alia Atreides in the Dune series.
I would be interested in seeing the focus shift. Origin stories can be interesting- It's great for fans of the original material to see how their heroes became heroes on the big screen while introducing a new audience to the subject.
@shan164: I think you're right but this may have disturbed the film makers by the time Battle of the Planet of the Apes came around.
Rise of the Apes intrigues me the most although I'm disappointed with the purported absence of social context. Perhaps that will come with the stage that is being set. Of all the Planet of the Apes movies I feel that the Caesar story arc could withstand some updating.
What I found insightful about this episode was how it contrasted leadership and highlighted its loneliness.
Great post!
The only item on my list is that subject matter be treated seriously and believably.
These "plane's" look like surface effect vehicles. Their wings seem to be inverted so as to form a pocket of air between the craft and the surface.
Where's the pool and piano bar?
Looks awesome!
The way 3D is being presented is neither "evolution" nor capitalism. The selective process here isn't being exercised by either the market or the customer. It's being imposed by the studios who have outsmarted themselves when it comes to distributing movies to their own detriment.
The show stopper for me is any hint whatsoever of time travel. I'll spare the usual rant, but for me it's an overused deus ex machina and essentially the equivalent of magic the way it is used by Hollywood screen writers. A cure for this affliction would be to require anyone who writes about time travel to actually…
I selected Doc Frankenstein for a few reasons.