Pixel Scroll 3/21/24 Mr. Sandworm, Bring Me A Dream

(1) MASTER OF SF. Vernor Vinge died March 20. One of the many callbacks to this distinguished sf author’s genre contributions comes from the Hugo Book Club Blog: “A Tribute To Vernor Vinge”.

…“Singularity is the point at which our old models will have to be discarded, where a new reality will reign,” Vinge wrote. “This is a world whose outlines will become clearer, approaching modern humanity, until this new reality obscures surrounding reality, becoming commonplace.”

One of these forays into singularitarianism helped launch an entire subgenre of science fiction. First appearing in a Dell paperback alongside George R.R. Martin’s Nightflyers, the story True Names offered a blueprint for cyberpunk that would influence and inspire everything from blockbuster movies to role playing games and television series….

(2) CIXIN LIU ON PRODUCTIVITY ISSUES. [Via Zionius on Weibo] On Wednesday, Singapore newspaper The Straits Times published an article tying in with the release of the Netflix adaptation of The Three-Body Problem.  The piece includes a few quotes from Liu himself, where he talks about his activity in recent years, and his sympathy with one of his peers, George R.R. Martin.

While he yearns to see Martin place the long-delayed sixth book, The Winds Of Winter, in the hands of publishers, Liu, 60, also sympathises with his 75-year-old peer’s plight – Liu himself has been through a long fallow period.

“The Winds Of Winter has been delayed for 10 years. As a writer who also writes fantasy literature, I completely understand this, because I have not been able to publish a new work for more than 10 years,” Liu tells The Straits Times in an e-mail interview…

Other than Of Ants And Dinosaurs (2010), a work that imagines a war between the two species of the title, Liu has not produced a new novel since.

“Martin has at least published other works during that time, and I had done almost nothing,” he says. 

(3) A LIFELINE TO SANITY. The Guardian calls it, “’A fascinating insight into pandemic psychology’: how Animal Crossing gave us an escape”.

“Today is the first day of your new life on this pristine, lovely island. So, congratulations!” says Tom Nook, the benevolent tanuki landlord, a few minutes into Animal Crossing: New Horizons. (Nook is often besmirched online, but you can’t argue that he’s extremely welcoming.) Many players read this comforting message at a destabilising and frightening time in the real world: Animal Crossing: New Horizons came out on Nintendo Switch on 20 March 2020, a few days before the UK entered its first Covid lockdown.

This was fortuitous timing. When we were all stuck at home, the game let us plant our native fruits, tend to our flowers and see what the town shop had on offer, repaying our extensive loans (interest-free, thankfully) to Tom Nook as a way of escaping the chaos and daily death tolls. We opened the gates to our islands and welcomed friends and strangers into our pristine little worlds. As real life crumbled, we started anew with bespectacled catssheep in clown’s coats and rhinos who looked like cakes.

The game’s sudden popularity caused Nintendo Switch sales to skyrocket among pandemic-induced shortages. New Horizons had sold 44.79 million units by December 2023 – nearly three-and-a-half times more than any other game in the Animal Crossing series, which has been running since 2001. It’s the second best-selling Switch game to date, behind Mario Kart 8 Deluxe….

(4) BOT AND PAID FOR. Annie Bot has already been called “A sharp take on a sex robot that becomes human” in a paywalled New Scientist review:

I opened the novel with low hopes, because the idea of a robot learning to be human, then chafing at its bonds, seemed a bit old hat. How wrong I was. Right from the first page, the book is coruscating, unexpected and subtle….

Now Glamour has interviewed author Sierra Green in a Q&A titled “Annie Bot Is a Chillingly Prescient Novel That Asks What Happens When a Sex Robot Realizes Her Worth”.

…The character of Doug felt so real to me (a man who would rather have a sex slave robot than a real human companion), which is scary, to say the least. What does his character represent to you, and why do you think it is important to demonstrate these types of men in the media?

This is a complicated subject. I think it’s important to try to understand what in our society encourages a man to feel like he ought to be in control, even when he’s not. No one likes to feel helpless, but men can feel doubly conflicted when they are denigrated because society has taught them that they deserve respect. Suddenly they have to reassess the entire system. When we see a character like Doug who is lonely and wants to be in control, we understand why he’s reaching out for a connection. We’re not surprised that men turn to the internet for pornography, and Annie is just a step beyond that. What matters to me is that Doug learns from his situation. He experiences deep shame, isolation, and rage, but he’s also willing to reflect on how to become a better man, a better human. Almost despite himself, he takes risks that lead him where he needs to go.

Do you think if Stellas really existed, a lot of men would buy them?

Yes. Women would buy them too, or the male Handy models. People will buy a new toy whether it’s good for them or not….

(5) MONSTER MASHER. Radio Times says “Doctor Who needs Steven Moffat – despite what he might say”.

…Every showrunner has brought something incredible to Doctor Who, from Russell T Davies’s famously skillful writing to Chris Chibnall’s bold new directions, but there’s something that Moffat brings to the show that no other writer does.

He remains unmatched as Doctor Who’s monster maker. By his own admission, his creations are simple and actually a little formulaic, usually riffing on a childhood fear to create a chilling physical embodiment of our nightmares. But it doesn’t get old – because he does it so well.

Moffat’s first episodes, a season 1 two-parter, introduced the Empty Child. Arming his creation with a haunting catchphrase (“Are you my mummy?”) and a gruesome physicality (I’ve never forgotten that transformation scene), he immediately ensured his first Doctor Who monster would be one for the ages. But it was far from his most iconic.

In season 3, Moffat penned what is widely described as one of Doctor Who’s best ever episodes, Blink, creating an all-time classic monster, the Weeping Angels….

(6) A TILT TOWARD NORTH AMERICA. “Doctor Who’s schedule change is inevitable – but still heartbreaking” opines Radio Times.

With the decision being made to debut new Doctor Who episodes at midnight on BBC iPlayer, many Whovians have expressed their disappointment. They argue that the choice was made for US-based audiences, and it undeniably was.

When the first two episodes are released on BBC iPlayer at midnight on Saturday 11th May, they will also be available on Disney Plus at 7pm ET on Friday 10th May, before BBC One airs them again later in the day on Saturday.

This means that while viewers on the US East Coast can enjoy the premiere episode in the late evening, UK fans will have to stay up into the late hours of the night to watch, diminishing the event nature and experience of watching the series…

(7) NEW HORROR. Gabino Iglesias reviewed Premee Mohamed’s The Butcher Of The Forest, C.J. Cooke’s A Haunting In The Arctic, Tim Lebbon’s Among The Living, and Amanda Jayatissa’s Island Witch in “Demons, Haunted Forests and Arctic Nightmares in 4 New Horror Novels” for the New York Times in February.

(8) SPUR AWARDS. The Western Writers of America have presented the 2024 Spur Awards. Complete winners list at the link – there do not appear to be any genre works among them. Not even Thomas Goodman’s Best First Novel The Last Man: A Novel of the 1927 Santa Claus Bank Robbery has much to do with jolly old elves.

(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born March 21, 1946 Timothy Dalton, 78. Timothy Dalton made his film debut sixty-eight years ago as Philip II of France in The Lion in Winter. I remember him distinctly in that role. Of course, I’ve watched that film enough times that I think I’ve memorized much of the script. 

He would do two Bond films, The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill. He made a decent Bond, but then I think the only true Bond was Connery. 

Timothy Dalton in 1987.

Now doing a dive into his genre roles, he was Prince Barin in Flash Gordon, and had a major role as film star Neville Sinclair, one of baddies in The Rocketeer. An absolutely amazing film which is why it got a nomination for a Hugo at MagiCon. 

And he was Lord President Rassilon in “The End of Time”, the last Tenth Doctor story. He made a rather impressive Time Lord indeed. 

I’ll finish up with his role as the Chief on the DC Universe/Max Doom Patrol series which just wrapped up. It was a great role for him, and a most excellent series indeed. 

(10) COMICS SECTION.

(11) TRAINING FOR WAR. James Bacon reviews an issue of Battling Britons, “The Fanzine of Vintage British War Comics”, for Downthetubes.net: “In Review: Battling Britons 6 – Planes, Trains and Giant Vampire Bats!”.

The Book: The latest issue of a fanzine dedicated to British war comics, offering articles, reviews and features on comics such as Commando, still published, and vintage comics such as Battle Picture Weekly, War Picture Library, including items on strips such as “Black Max”, “Dredger”, “Maddock’s Marauders”, “Kommando King” and more…

…Editor and publisher Justin Marriott often writes about subjects that are close to my heart, and this issue he looks at Commando comics that feature trains. He starts this with a fabulous laugh out loud list of the ten things he has learned from reading comics which featured trains. It’s a light hearted and humorous approach, and then lists some 30 Commando stories, and discusses them briefly….

(12) NOT JUST LOOKING AT THE PICTURES. And Downthetubes.net founder John Freeman suggests, “Comics: The Answer to The UK’s Literacy Crisis?”

We’re used to Spider-Man saving the world from the Green Goblin and a multiverse of masked miscreants. But new research by Comic Art Europe, and a separate research project by the National Literacy Trust, suggests that he could have the super-powers to do something even more valuable – something our government has signally failed to do: turn us into a nation of readers again

That’s the view, at least, of Lakes International Comic Art Festival chair Peter Kessler MBE, in an article for the latest issue of Books for Keeps magazine.

“A unique project has been unfolding in a primary school in North Manchester,” he notes, discussing the Comics and Literacy Project the Festival worked on as a partner of Comic Art Europelaunched in 2021, supported by The Phoenix comic, its full, interim report here on the Festival web site.“Abraham Moss is a typical, hard-working community school in an underprivileged area. Most of its students are from ethnic minority backgrounds, and it has a higher-than-average number in receipt of the Pupil Premium subsidy given to disadvantaged students. The school has spent two academic years participating in a Europe-wide research project entitled Comics and Literacy. The aim of the project: to analyse and quantify the impact of exposure to comics on young people.

“The results are jaw-dropping….”

(13) FANAC ZOOM NOW ONLINE. You can view the two-part FANAC History Zoom: “The Women Fen Don’t See” with Claire Brialey, Kate Heffner and Leah Zeldes Smith on YouTube.

Part 1 – 

Description: Women did not magically appear in fandom with the advent of Star Trek, but have been part of science fiction fandom since the earliest days. They’re faneds, and convention chairs, writers and artists, club fans and costumers. Sometimes, they’re all of the above. Our impressive panelists (see bios on the bottom) Claire Brialey, Kate Heffner and Leah Zeldes Smith talk about why early female fans have received less credit than they deserved, or been overlooked entirely, and describe the contributions of a number of them…In this recording (Mar 2024, part 1 of 2), our panelists talk about how this research began, and why women that were cranking the mimeos, writing fanzine articles and going to conventions were not even regarded as fans. Early fan historians didn’t correct this impression, reflecting the attitudes of society and ignoring women’s contributions to fandom, especially married women. In this recording, you’ll learn about what fans did say about women in the community, “the radical hoax of Lee Hoffman”, and Miss Science Fiction 1949 (and the Fake Geek Girl response that ensued).

Women discussed in this part 1 include Jean Bogart, Pam Bulmer, Daphne Buckmaster, Marion Eadie, Helen Finn, Nancy Kemp, Trudy Kuslan, Lois Miles, Frances Swisher, and Jane Tucker. There’s a lot of information, a little hero worship and a dive into those hard-to-research women whose fanac was not primarily in fanzines. The discussion continues in Part 2. For more fan history, go to https://fanac.org and https://fancyclopedia.org. If you enjoyed this video, please subscribe to our channel.

Bios: 

Claire Brialey – Claire encountered fandom in her early teens, in the mid-’80s, after having read SF for five or six years. She’s a fanzine fan and co-editor of Banana Wings, as well as having won the 2011 Best Fan Writer Hugo. She’s a former President of ANZAPA and a conrunner (up to and including the Worldcon level). She’s worked on clubs, fan funds, and awards administration. She is one of the Guests of Honor of the 2024 Worldcon in Glasgow. And she still enjoys reading and watching SF. 

Kate Heffner – Kate Heffner (she/they) is a PhD researcher at the University of Kent England in the Department of History and an adjunct faculty member in the School of Library and Information Science at the University of Iowa. She is completing her dissertation entitled ‘A Fanzine of Her Own: Femme Fans in the Post-War Era.’ She is the recipient of the 2022 Peter Nicholls prize for best essay and a former judge for the Arthur C Clarke Award. For the last several years, she has also been adding to Fancyclopedia.org. 

Leah Zeldes Smith – A retired journalist, Leah has been an actifan for more than 50 years, since she was a young teenager. She is a fanzine fan, and her zine STET was nominated for the Best Fanzine Hugo 3 times (1993, 1994, 2001). She’s a DUFF winner (93). She’s been involved with APAs, clubs and convention running. Leah’s involvement in documenting fanhistory dates back several decades. She has been a mainstay of Fancyclopedia, and has made thousands of updates to the site. Recently she’s pulled together a list of Fandom Firsts.

Part 2: 

Description: Women did not magically appear in fandom with the advent of Star Trek, but have been part of science fiction fandom since the earliest days. They’re faneds, and convention chairs, writers and artists, club fans and costumers. Sometimes, they’re all of the above. In this part 2 of the session (Mar 2024), our panelists Claire Brialey, Kate Heffner and Leah Zeldes Smith continue to talk about why early female fans have received less credit than they deserved, or been overlooked entirely, and describe the contributions of a number of them.

Women discussed here include Ina Shorrock, Bobbie Gray, and Ethel Lindsay. There’s more about Femizine, the impact that early female fans can have on younger generations today, and whether women fans today will experience the same sorts of erasure. At about 32 minutes in, Q&A from the audience begins, with the difficulty of researching women fans, especially those that change their names multiple times, and anecdotes of Nan Gerding, Lynette Mills, Fuzzy Pink Niven, and Noreen Shaw. Maggie Thompson contributes a wonderful anecdote about her mother SF author Betsy Curtis and Tony Boucher. The recording concludes with a welcome discussion of how women have been treated in fandom in recent years.

(14) OSCARS A RISING TIDE FOR THESE ACTORS. JustWatch asked: (1) Which movies featuring Oscar-winners Emma Stone and Cillian Murphy are the most popular with audiences? (2) Are their 2024 Oscar-winning pictures at the top?

Key Insights

Poor Things is topping our popularity ranking, with an overall popularity of 48.6% among global audiences. The Favourite, her other Oscar winning performance, is no surprise in second place. Followed by La La Land, which was also a top contender during the 2016 Oscars. Surprisingly, Cruella ranked lower on the list, even though it was a big budget Disney project. 

Oppenheimer blew away Cillian Murphy’s other movies, garnering more than 60% of global popularity. Inception, another Christopher Nolan project, took second place. Dunkirk, A Quiet Place, and The Dark Knight also ranked in our top 1010. 

We created this report by using our JustWatch Streaming Charts, which are calculated by user activity, including clicking on a streaming offer, adding a title to a watchlist, and marking a title as ‘seen’. This data is collected from >40 million movie & TV show fans per month. It is updated daily for 140 countries and 4,500 streaming services.

(15) DON’T BOTHER ME, I’M BUSY. The form letter Robert A. Heinlein devised to answer his mail is making the rounds again. In the Seventies when I heard this existed I wrote him a fan letter in hopes of receiving a copy in reply, and I did — though it was a later variation than this one. (Click for larger image.)

(16) VIDEO OF THE DAY. Arriving in theaters on September 9: “’Beetlejuice Beetlejuice’ Trailer: ‘The Juice Is Loose’ In Sequel Teaser”. Let Deadline lead the way.

… The logline: Still haunted by Beetlejuice, Lydia’s life is turned upside down when her rebellious teenage daughter, Astrid (Ortega), discovers the mysterious model of the town in the attic and the portal to the Afterlife is accidentally opened. With trouble brewing in both realms, it’s only a matter of time until someone says Beetlejuice’s name three times and the mischievous demon returns to unleash his very own brand of mayhem….

[Thanks to Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Kathy Sullivan, Ersatz Culture, Zionius, James Bacon, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, and Mike Kennedy for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.]


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29 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 3/21/24 Mr. Sandworm, Bring Me A Dream

  1. (1) He will be missed. No, I miss him now, damn it.
    (4) Reminds me of an online comic I followed for a while, a year or two ago, where a bot escapes with the help of a lonely teenage guy… But… especially for someone like Doug, why would he want an actual AI? Exercise? Why? A bot that does what you want, and puts itself into the closet when you’re at work makes more sense.
    (11) Fascinating list of the 10 things he learned about trains…
    (12) No shit, Sherlock. Think about it for a minute – bet all the kids that don’t read were never read to by their parents, from picture books. And here we can give the kids age-appropriate (not “see Spot run”) picture books…
    (15) I have heard of it, but forgotten all about it.

  2. 9) Connery was in fact the BEST Bond ever, but I consider Dalton second best. He wanted to return the character to something a little closer to the books. I also consider him the LAST Bond. Everyone since then is merely an actor sadly miscast.

  3. (8) John Shirley did win for Best Western Mass Market Paperback Novel, however. (According to his website, that is “our” John Shirley.)

    (9) I need to see “The Rocketeer” again…

    (12) It works! My father once told me he learned to read not through school but because he and his friends would go in the store and read the comic books (until the owner yelled at them for not buying anything).

  4. (6) He who pays the piper… I’m glad it’s 4PM my time, an eminently reasonable hour.

    (9) And don’t forget his turn in “Chuck”, as … a secret agent. Definitely SFnal. I think he made his LIW debut 58 years ago, unless he was an extremely tall and mature 10 year old. I too have it memorized, and a pal and I picked it for our very first scene in freshman acting class.

    (11) I do love the comics section. Even though Crankshaft is an abomination and always has been.

  5. Yeah, The Rocketeer really is that good. And it’s got one of my favorite scenes of all in it, one that a former US President might note: the FBI agent and the mobster are shooting at the Nazis with tommyguns, and stop for a minute to look at each other. The mobster says, “You might not like the way I make my money, but I’m an American.” And they go back to shooting Nazis together.

  6. Absolutely crushed by Vinge’s passing. His stories and books meant so much to me, from when I read True Names as a teenager, all the way to Rainbows End, and everything in-between.

  7. (9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

    Simon Pegg was great in Hot Fuzz, but Dalton was absolutely brilliant. My only awareness of him at that time was in his Bond roles. The contrast was just amazing.

  8. (1) RIP.

    (9) Timothy Dalton was also great (and hilarious) in the genre-adjacent Hot Fuzz, starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost.

    @JJ – beat me to it!

  9. 12) Oh, please! If things get dumbed down any more both here and abroad, we’ll have teach with stick figures!

  10. 1) A Deepness In The Sky is a total stunner of an SF novel disguised as a thriller. It has everything a fan ever wanted—thoughtful insights into humanity, really scary bad guys, a totally believable alien race, and a twist or two along the way. It was like Vinge said “Niven and Pournelle, hold my beer.”

    So high, so low, so many things to know.

    RIP.

  11. 9) Dalton also voiced Mr Pricklepants in Toy Story 4:

    I’ve been working on this asset for the last two weeks, trying to figure out why the hair is ever so slightly darker in places with our new rendering technology compared with our old.

    @ Troyce – strong disagree: Craig was an excellent Bond in the excellent Casino Royale.

  12. RIP Vernor Vinge. A Fire Upon the Deep is a wonderful book – one of my favourite SF novels.

  13. True Names has a wonderful mate bit when the main character points out how the virtual reality he’s using gives an immersive experience in spite of the very low data rate because it engages his imagination- while the reader is fully immersed using a very similar low data rate and imagination.

  14. I thought Dalton made a great Bond, but one of his films (Licence to Kill) remains my least favorite movie in the entire series.

  15. Licence to Kill is kind of strange. I think of all the Bond films, it does the best job of standing on its own as a film, not needing all the Bond accoutrements. On the other hand, it’s lacking all the Bond film touches that I want in a film (though it was nice to see Desmond Llewellyn as Q getting to be a field agent for a change). But I missed the large than life Ken Adams sets and a true larger than life villain intent on world conquest. The Bond films were becoming smaller. If I were in charge of the films (Hello, Broccoli family, call me) I’d make them period pieces set in the 60’s. Sadly, I find Daniel Craig completely wrong for the part. Short, brown haired, and completely lacking in charisma. I’m still upset they didn’t get Clive Owen who would have been perfect.

  16. My problem with Licence to Kill (which I think is the only Bond movie I didn’t see in the theater since I started with Moonraker) was that it felt more like Bond guest starring in a Miami Vice two-parter; and I’m kind of opposed to the notion of Bond going off the reservation for a personal vendetta.

  17. Troyce: I find Daniel Craig completely wrong for the part. Short, brown haired, and completely lacking in charisma.

    I think Craig oozes charisma, and I’d go for him in a heartbeat. I also wouldn’t consider 5’10” to be short.

    I thought the Dalton Bond was too glib and pretty — but his appearance in Hot Fuzz really won me over.

  18. Count me as one of the Daniel Craig fans. I think his Bond was much, much closer to Bond as written. But I am more of a Fleming person than a movie person, and after Craig I’d go for Brosnan or Connery.

    1.) I met Vernor Vinge at my first Westercon in the ’90s and was completely and totally fangirling. I forget what it was, but we ended up talking about something of interest to both of us and I remember thinking he was quite gracious and kind.

    12.) As a former middle school resource room special education teacher, I saw many struggling readers for whom graphic novels and comics made a significant difference in their reading skill. One of my sixth grade colleagues had a husband with dyslexia, and as a result knew her way around the graphic novel world. Reading isn’t just about decoding/phonics, it’s about deriving meaning from the written word. Some people are better visual learners and the use of graphic novels/comics absolutely has a place. One of my sweetest, kindest students struggled with reading in sixth grade. They developed an obsession with the Bone graphic novels.

    They were reading at grade level by eighth grade. Those graphic novels developed an interest in story and reading in them. Besides associating images with words, that’s the other gift of graphic novels/comics–they develop an interest in story for a lot of struggling readers.

    I don’t have much time or patience for those who scoff at and scorn graphic novels/comics as a result. They work. Period.

  19. Joyce Reynolds-Ward: I never understand why people want to reject something that leads to the desired result — being able to read.

    The argument reminds me of another experience. It so happens I learned to read before I started school. Looking back I realize that phonics was then a new thing used to teach reading in the early grades. Since I already knew, it was like I was learning phonics so I could pass certain tests. It may have helped others. In any case, I remember hearing some adults who questioned the idea of teaching reading in a different way than they’d been taught, which they called sight reading.

  20. Mike Glyer–it was much the same for me. I learned to read by being read to, and was reading at a sixth grade level in first grade (I remember it well because I was challenged by another kid at the bus stop to read from their sixth grade history text).

    Reading instruction is fraught with a lot of theorists who have never darkened the door of a classroom. Those of us who have spent time in the classroom know that different students learn in different ways, so multi-modal is best. One thing that the phonics hard-core advocates disregard is that a heavy dose of Direct Instruction phonics methodology can lead to students who can decode up a storm, but don’t really have fluency or comprehension.

    And now we have the abomination that is high stakes assessment and Common Core curriculum. The focus is on passages where students are supposed to derive meaning from the text alone, not external information. Because the focus is on a particular performance level at high school graduation as quantified by high stakes assessment, the prerequisite skills get pushed down to lower and lower grade levels, until you hit a developmental wall.

    Letter-sound correspondence and being ready to start reading used to be the goal for kindergarten. Now students are expected to have letter-sound correspondence when entering kindergarten, and exit kindergarten as readers. So if people wonder why kids seem less socialized…well, this trend started around 2010. Kindy is where a lot of kids used to learn how to function socially in school settings, as well as develop fine motor skills. Now it is much more heavy on the academic piece. I think that is a bigger unspoken problem than devices, which get a lot of blame.

  21. I’ve loved all Vernor Vinge books I’ve read, and am looking forward to reading the rest.

    However. The Singlarity is a fun science-fictional idea, but it’s a bit cringe when taken seriously by technobros. It’s been aptly described as technological millennialism.

  22. Readers may recall that the MIT Student Center, home of the MIT Science Fiction Society library, had a significant fire in its electrical system, and also had a roof leak that flooded part of the MITSFS Library. Repairs took a while. We read that MITSFS has been advised that in perhaps another ten weeks the shelving will be installed, and then the MITSFS collection, reported as 80,000 items in 30 pallets, will be delivered and reshelved by MITSFS members..

  23. I want to thank people for the mentions of Hot Fuzz.

    I’d been meaning to watch that film (completing the trilogy that includes Shawn of the Dead and The World’s End), but had never gotten around to it.

    I watched it today and enjoyed it immensely.

  24. Pingback: AMAZING NEWS FROM FANDOM: March 24, 2024 - Amazing Stories

  25. (9) Just to add another Timothy Dalton genre connection, in the winter of 2003/2004 the National Theatre in London staged a production of Philip Pullman’s ‘His Dark Materials’. Performed in two parts (essentially two plays, alternating), Dalton played the part of Lord Asriel. Rather brilliantly, I thought. The rest of the cast was fairly star-studded, though many of them (being young actors) became much more famous later. Most memorably, the dæmons were all excellently portrayed by puppets. More details here

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