Quick SciFi update

January 14, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Science Fiction 

I watched the first episode of the forth season of Heroes. Frankly it didn’t leave me with a strong desire to watch anymore.

I’d rather see new episodes of Warehouse 13 or the up coming season of Doctor Who. Reruns of Brisco County, Jr. would be probably be better.

Avatar spoilers

January 5, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Movies, Science Fiction 

This is a comment I left on a review of Avatar on Dark Worlds blog that raises issues with the lousy science in Avatar:

Then there is the subject of evolution on Pandora. All the animals have six limbs. Four up front and two in the back. All of them, including the Pterodactyl like creatures. Four wings and pair of legs. Four eyes as well. One pair above sightly farther out than the inner pair.

Everything except the Terminator Smurfs. Two eyes, and four limbs.

Radically different biology, yet they could mesh their nervous system with the local animals.
Did the Terminator Smurfs braid their hair to protect the nerve bundle or did it grow like that naturally.

Oh, why did the Pterodactyl like creatures naturally develop stirrups for the Terminator Smurfs?

With all the “scientists” they had on that planet, why didn’t any notice that the Terminator Smurfs obviously didn’t evolve there?

Originally posted at e-Ramblings

Update: One of the comments points out that the story line is remarkably similar to a Poul Anderson short story, “Call Me Joe.” There are also comments about the movie drawing from Ursula K. Le Guin’s “The World for World is Forest.” I would add Alan Dean Foster’s Midworld as well.

Quote of the Day

January 3, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Politics, Science Fiction 

“I made it to 2010 and all I got from the SciFi books of my youth was the lousy dystopian government.”

Friday B-Movie Pick: Star Wars

January 1, 2010 by · 1 Comment
Filed under: Movies, Science Fiction 

Star Wars

The 1977 original! The one where Han shot first! B-Movie? You betcha! Check out sets, the plot, and delicious evilness oozing out of the bad guys. George Lucas is a big film buff and this is a tip of the hat to multiple genres, including some Japanese classics and WWII flying Ace movies.

Friday B-Movie Archive

Monday Book Pick: His Majesty’s Dragon

December 14, 2009 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Monday Book Pick, Science Fiction 

His Majesty’s Dragon by Naomi Novik

An interesting bit of historical fantasy that reads like a cross between Horatio Hornblower and Jane Austen, with dragons. Yup, dragons, and the best dragons, of course, come from China. This is the first in series about a British Navy Officer who captures a dragon’s egg in a sea battle and ends up bonding with the beast when it hatches. Of course, it speaks English, and French. An interesting read. While I’m a mostly a hard core SciFi reader, I do enjoy good alternate history stories.

Monday Book Pick Archives.

Monday Book Pick: Tom Paine Maru

December 7, 2009 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Monday Book Pick, Science Fiction 

Tom Paine Maru by L. Neil Smith

This is the “author’s edition” release, recovered from an old hard drive, in an obsolete word processor format. This is what was originally submitted to a publisher who then edited it with a weed wacker. A delightful bit of space opera in the classic L. Neil Smith Hard Core Libertarian style.

Monday Book Pick archive.

Star Trek Crossover

November 22, 2009 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Movies, Science Fiction, Star Trek 

There was a really cool, in an uber-nerd Trekker kind of way, cross over in the latest big budget Star Trek movie.   In the middle of the bridge set, the one that looks like an Apple Computer threw up, not just once, but twice, you saw on of the biggest ST:TOS fans in existence, James Cawley.

James Cawley cameo

James Cawley cameo 2

Cawley is the man behind Star Trek: Phase II, some of the finest fan produced Star Trek episodes out there.

Monday Book Pick: Kildar

November 9, 2009 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Baen Books, Monday Book Pick 

Kildar by John Ringo

The second book in the Ghost series. The story of how a wayward, Tango killing, ex-SEAL, buys a valley in Georgia (the country, not the state) and stumbles on a lost tribe of dedicated warriors who farm between battles.

Monday Book Pick Archive

Monday Book Pick: She Murdered me with Science

November 3, 2009 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Monday Book Pick, Pulp, Science Fiction 

She Murdered Me with Science by David Boop

A delightful mix of hard boiled dective story and good old fashioned pulp science story, with a dash of Jazz thrown in for flavor.

Monday Book Pick Archive

Ya, ya. I know it’s Tuesday. I’ve been busy.

Monday Book Pick: March to the Sea

October 26, 2009 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Baen Books, Monday Book Pick, Science Fiction 

March to the Sea by John Ringo and David Weber

Second in the Empire of Man series. Prince Roger continues his education as he and the Bronze Barbarians continue their trek across a harsh alien wilderness filled with hordes of aliens, hostile and otherwise, but mostly hostile.

Monday Book Pick Archive

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