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sci-fi

Captain Kirk (and you?) on LSD

by MK on September 29, 2009




You’ll feel as though you’ve taken a few tabs after watching this strangely edited/remixed clip of Captain K on a voyage to the great beyond.
[via Nerdcore]

Timeline of Science Fiction Inventions

by MK on September 16, 2009




An impressive effort to whoever put this listing together. Going as far back as 1634 to the present is a timeline of inventions as they’ve appeared in the world of science fiction. A large number of these items also have links to the real-life inventions and inventors linked up with them.
[Sci-Fi Timeline]

RYAN MCGINLEY – Moonmilk series

by MK on September 9, 2009













These otherworldly photos by Ryan McGinley are stunning. The use of color and landscape in conjunction with his subjects — beautiful.
[Moonmilk]




Wired’s collective web and print team put together their list of favorite Sci-fi films. This time, from Star Wars (1977) and onwards. Again, if you just want to see what flicks made it on the list and not click through numerous thumbnails:

-Star Wars: A New Hope
-Close Encounters of the Third Kind
-Capricorn One
-Alien
-Stalker
-Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back
-Outland
-Road Warrior
-E.T.
-Blade Runner
-Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan
-Liquid Sky
-2010
-The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension
-The Hidden
-Robocop
-Spaceballs
-Terminator II
-Twelve Monkeys
-Starship Troopers
-Gattaca
-The Matrix
-The Iron Giant
-Children of Men

On a side-note, do a google search for “robocop” and “unicorn” if you want to amuse yourself for the day.

Wired’s Favorite Sci-Fi Films

by MK on September 1, 2009

Over at Underwire they compile a list of favorite Sci-fi films from the various staff at Wired’s blog and Wired Magazine. The following list is for everything pre-Star Wars (1977), while tomorrow will summarize their favorites from that point onwards. Loving the unadulterated resurgence of people showing their love for Sci-fi. Much ado no doubt to District 9, because who are we kidding — T4 and Transformers 2 didn’t do S#@*! for the genre. Oh and in case you’re too lazy to click around or suffer from debilitating carpal tunnel… here you go:

-A Trip to the Moon
-The Thing From Another World
-The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T
-Them!
-Invasion of the Body Snatchers
-The Fabulous World of Jules Verne
-The Creation of the Humanoids
-Dr. Strangelove or: How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
-Fahrenheit 451
-Fantastic Voyage
-2001: A space Odyssey
-Planet of the Apes
-Solaris
-Silent Running
-Soylent Green
-Day of the Dolphin
-Zardoz
-A Boy and His Dog
-Logan’s Run
-Lassie Come Home

Given District 9’s #1 opening at the box office this past weekend, I’d say it’s relatively safe to say there exists a public hunger for some savvy, intelligent sci-fi. The unfortunate circumstance however is that many such titles fly under the radar, never quite achieving much success beyond smaller cult circles. District 9 could easily have been that type of film had the momentum not been heavy in the final weeks leading up to its release. Over at CHUD they put together a list of titles that embody all the good aspects of science fiction in the 21st century:

There were three criteria that had to be met for these films to be listed: they had to be smart and thoughtful, and they had to cost less than a hundred million dollars. And they had to be damned good. A couple of the films here get pretty close to that hundred million dollar blockbuster number, but that’s made up for by the films that cost a pittance.

[CHUD]

Illustration by Jan Kallwejt via Wired.com

Illustration by Jan Kallwejt via Wired.com



Wired’s Mark Horowitz created an “Unofficial Guide to LA” via Thomas Pynchon’s past experiences. Horowitz announces that Pynchon,

the paranoid poet of the information age, is LA’s greatest writer. To be sure, Los Angeles—whose aerial view he likened to a printed circuit board—has always been central to the elusive writer’s weird weltanschauung, his hallucinogenic stir-fry of Cold War hysteria, high tech anxiety, and low-brow pop-culture references. But did you know he actually lived there in the ’60s and early ’70s, while writing Gravity’s Rainbow, the Moby-Dick of rocket-science novels?

Using a Zeemap, user-submitted annotations can be marked down all throughout the greater Los Angeles area. Already, they far surpass the 14 spots mentioned at the publication of this article. How very appropriate.

With the dust settling on another Comic-con, speaking in terms of film-related happenings, this was perhaps one of the biggest years for the show. Attendees watched 24-minutes of footage from James Cameron’s Avatar, but the real news seems to be how District 9, the first feature film from Neill Blomkamp, has stolen the show. While NDA’s prohibit any of the critics from specifically reviewing the film at this current time, you can still get a sense of their reactions.

“District 9″ is political and hilarious and gory as hell, sad and savage and visually dazzling. It is, in short, exactly what great science-fiction should be… it is a film of ideas, first and foremost, and since Blomkamp grew up in South Africa, I’m sure you can guess what sort of real-world ideas the movie might engage. The thing is… if you want to tune out all the social commentary, you’re left with a truly incredible sf movie. But because Neil’s own experience is so much a part of this film and the world he’s created, the result is sort of devastating.

(more…)