Armchair Casting Director: Good Omens

Published on November 26th, 2010 in: Books, Movies |

By Lisa Anderson

good omens

I will always associate late November with Good Omens, the classic comedy novel by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. This was the time of year that I first read it, and it helped get me through a rough period in my life. For those who don’t know, Good Omens is the story of an angel (Aziraphale) and a demon (Crowley) who have, over the course of millennia, become friends, and now have to avert Armageddon with the coming of the Antichrist.

Sadly, the film version of this beloved book has been stalled for years. Director Terry Gilliam has been signed on with the project since 1999, with a script completed since 2002, but funding for the movie has never come together. In the meantime, however, it is fun to speculate about who might play the characters that so many readers have come to love. The main rumor, for a long time, was that Johnny Depp would play Crowley and Robin Williams would play Aziraphale. As you might imagine, I have my own ideas for my ideal Good Omens cast. (more…)

Let Me In

Published on October 6th, 2010 in: Current Faves, Horror, Movie Reviews, Movies, Reviews |

By Lisa Anderson

let me in

As the leaves turn and the air grows colder, a few extra horror movies always make their way into theaters. This year, one of the most anticipated new releases is Let Me In, a remake of the 2008 Swedish vampire film, Let The Right One In. Transplanted from 1980s Stockholm, Sweden to 1980s Los Alamos, New Mexico, this version is helmed by Cloverfield director Matt Reeves.

The basic storyline is the same: a bullied 12-year-old boy in a dreary, snowbound apartment complex befriends a mysterious new neighbor his age. At first, their relationship appears to be typical preteen love, albeit between two strange children. It turns out though, that she is a vampire, and the adult human who lives with her has been committing murder to obtain blood for her. Before the story is over, vampire, boy, and man all see their lives change permanently.
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Blood Writes: Q&A With Author Alex Bledsoe

Published on September 29th, 2010 in: Books, Halloween, Horror, Q&A |

By Lisa Anderson

Alex Bledsoe is the author of the novels of the Memphis Vampires: 2009’s Blood Groove and The Girls with Games of Blood, which was released earlier this year (both from Tor books). For Popshifter‘s Halloween Horrors issue, he recently took time to answer some of my questions about writing and the bloodthirsty monsters currently enjoying such popularity.
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Armchair Casting Director: Dark Shadows

Published on September 29th, 2010 in: Halloween, Horror, Movies, Over the Gadfly's Nest, TV |

By Lisa Anderson

As a pre-teen vampire fan in 1991, I was very excited when NBC launched Dark Shadows, starring Ben Cross as vampire Barnabas Collins. The show got good ratings, but was pre-empted so often by Gulf War coverage that it was canceled in March after premiering in January. I realized at the time that it was a revival of an earlier show, but it wasn’t until I was in college that I got to watch some of the original Dark Shadows, which aired on ABC from 1966 to 1971, and in which Barnabas was played by Jonathan Frid.
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Armchair Casting Director: Water For Elephants

Published on May 30th, 2010 in: Books, Movies, Over the Gadfly's Nest |

By Lisa Anderson

Over a year ago, I saw that a friend of mine was listening to a book called Water for Elephants on audiobook. I did not know at the time that it had been a commercial and critical success, or that author Sara Gruen had orginally written it as part of National Novel Writing Month. I did, however, have a fascination with elephants at the time, so I asked her to let me borrow it.
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Review: Peacock

Published on May 27th, 2010 in: DVD, DVD/Blu-Ray Reviews, Movie Reviews, Movies, Reviews |

By Lisa Anderson

peacock

Not much happens in the small, quiet town of Peacock, Nebraska, until one day, a train caboose jumps the rail and lands in the backyard of bank clerk John Skillpa. Everyone thinks the young Skillpa is a bachelor, and has lived alone in the house since the death of his mother the previous year; when the neighbors rush to the scene however, they find an woman—thankfully uninjured—who they’ve never met before.

She introduces herself as Emma and says that she lives there. Soon, this woman, who all assume to be John’s wife, is drawn not only into the web of state and local politics focused on the runaway caboose, but also into the dark secrets of John’s life, which he had been keeping even from her.
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WhedonFest 2010: A “Can’t Stop The Serenity” Weekend Event

Published on April 14th, 2010 in: Conventions/Expos, Current Faves, Movies, Science Fiction, The Internets, TV |

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact information:

Cynthia O’Malley, Chair
Cindy@whedonitesunited.com

Joe Jordan, Vice-chair
Joe@whedonitesunited.com

WHEDONFEST 2010: A “CAN’T STOP THE SERENITY” WEEKEND EVENT

joss whedon

Joss Whedon fans reunite in Kentucky to raise money for Can’t Stop the Serenity Charity.

Whedonites United present their second annual Whedonfest, a weekend-long convention, to be held August 6-8 at Barefoot Republic in Scottsville, KY. All proceeds will be donated to charities designated by the Can’t the Stop the Serenity Global organization or Whedonites United.

Joss Whedon fans have repeatedly done the unlikely: turning a failed movie into a long-running and much-loved TV series (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), turning a canceled series into a movie destined to become a cult classic (Serenity), and then turning repeat screenings of that movie into a series of worldwide popular fund-raising events to keep the fandom alive while promoting gender equality (Can’t Stop the Serenity).
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Top Five Funniest Evil Mad Scientists

Published on March 30th, 2010 in: Cartoons, Comedy, LGBTQ, Listicles, Movies, Retrovirus, Science Fiction, Staff Picks, Top Five Lists, TV, Underground/Cult, Video |

By Lisa Anderson

sheldon plankton

The Evil Mad Scientist is a familiar figure in popular culture, and is found most often in science fiction, horror, or superhero tales. Evil Mad Scientists are not to be confused with their more benevolent counterparts, like Emmett Brown of Back to the Future. While the Evil Mad Scientist can be a figure of great terror, when this archetype is used for comic effect the results can be hilarious. Following are five of the best examples.
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Béla Fleck, Throw Down Your Heart, Africa Sessions Part Two

Published on March 30th, 2010 in: Culture Shock, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Lisa Anderson

Many people may not know this, but the roots of banjo music actually go back to Africa. Eclectic American banjo player Béla Fleck traveled to Africa to explore this history and learn from African musicians. The result was the 2008 documentary Throw Down your Heart, and the 2009 album Throw Down Your Heart, Tales From The Acoustic Planet, Africa Sessions. Part two of the album was released early this year.
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Showdown At The Oscars

Published on March 5th, 2010 in: Feminism, Movies, Reviews, Science and Technology, Science Fiction |

By Lisa Anderson

cameron bigelow BW SMALL
Image from
Awards Daily

As Oscar night grows near, two of the most closely watched nominations are for Best Picture and Best Director. Former spouses James Cameron and Kathryn Bigelow are pitted against each other in both categories—Cameron for Avatar and Bigelow for The Hurt Locker. If Cameron wins, it will be a rare triumph for science fiction, one achieved despite controversy about Avatar‘s content. Bigelow stands not only to score an upset victory against a blockbuster, but also to become the first woman to win the Oscar for Best Director.
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