‘Welcome to the Hellmouth’… Buffy the Vampire Slayer rewatch
Hey guys… in honor of Joss Whedon’s upcoming new movie, over the next year, I’ll be doing a Buffy the Vampire Slayer rewatch for Boxfire Press and the Lowercase. We’ll start tomorrow (Monday 3/5/12) with Welcome to the Hellmouth and at the moment, I’m planning two to three episodes a week… though I could do like two or three a day!
Anyway, I hope you’ll be watching along with me. If you don’t have the DVDs, the entire show is available for streaming on Netflix. Like or reblog to let me know if you plan to watch along! We’ll be adding Facebook comments in the next 24 hours so you can participate in the discussions.
Go!
Source: thetvscreen
Think you could write a story about this photo in less than 300 words? You could win a $100 Amazon.com giftcard if you do!
Source: theshortestfiction.com
The first trailer for Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter hit the web this morning. Looks. Pretty. Amazing.
Source: torchthewarrant
I watched Metropolis last night.
It completely blew my mind.
This film is an unyielding, unending visual spectacle from the very first moment it graces the screen. The sets, the models, the costumes, the matte paintings, even the actors and actresses are so visually striking that for at least a third of the film I was watching with my mouth agape, fully in awe. Each shot, each exaggerated silent-film-era pose struck by an actor or actress, is so well composed it could stand on its own as a single frame work of art. And as for the visual style of the film, it’s as though you’ve stepped into a living 1920’s Art Deco mural.
I can’t believe I waited until now to finally see it. I could have been hit by a bus or something, and then I would have never known what I was missing. It’s on netflix and dvd. Check it out.
Source: citadelbloodbeard
Chronicle, the found footage film about teens with telekinetic superpowers, topped the box office on Superbowl weekend to everyone’s surprise — making it the fourth highest Superbowl debut ever. Teens with superpowers are nothing new; in fact thinking back through our favorites brought out a lot of me mories. Here’s just a few on our list.
- Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers
You may not want to admit every having watched this show, or dressing up as the red one for Halloween, or wearing those Zordon boxer shorts, but the Power Rangers were/are teens with superpowers we won’t soon forget. We can’t. We’ve tried. - Matilda
Originally a Roald Dahl book and later a big screen star, Matilda seems like a smart kid. Okay, she’s not a teen, but like the guys in Chronicle, she does have the superpower of telekinesis. She uses it to create havoc for those mean people around her. That’s something we can get behind. - X-Men
In the latest X-Men movie we see some of our favorites — like Banshee, Beast, Havoc and Mystique — learn to develop their superpowers as teens. Magneto’s already pretty old by the time the movie starts, but he’s a lot like some of the Chronicle characters, with a superpower and super-rage. - Captain Planet & The Planeteers
When these teen heroes were on their own, they only had the superpowers of earth, wind, fire, water or heart, but when combined they summoned… CAPTAIN PLANET! They saved the Earth from countless environmental disasters while also teaching us how to save energy in our own lives. - Spider Girl
You know all about Peter Parker’s web swinging, but did you know he and Mary Jane had a daughter named Spider Girl? In a male-dominated superhero world, Spider Girl showed that she could fight crime and beat up bad guys with the best of them. She also holds the record for the longest-running comic book with a female lead. Now that’s girl power! There you have it. Whose on your list of teens with superpowers? Chronicle is still in theaters, so be sure and check it out and let us know what you think.
Washington DC for sci fi and fantasy fans
There’s a lot you can say about Washington DC — and we know, not all of it’s good. For most outside the beltway* our little city is synonymous with just one thing: crazy politics. But we don’t want you to get the wrong impression, because we’ve got culture, too! Really. No, seriously. And for science fiction and fantasy fans, we’re almost a mecca. Okay, maybe not, but imagine your Comic-Con cred if you tell your fellow line buddies outside Hall H that you’ve seen a few of these sights.
The Space Shuttle Enterprise
Yeah, we’ve got that. It’s spent years locked away in a hangar at Dulles airport but is now on display nearby at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center — an annex to the National Air and Space Museum on the Mall — located about 40 minutes outside Washington. And bonus! You can visit the hangar were parts of Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen were filmed. Public transit to Dulles is tricky… your best bet is to start at the Air and Space Museum downtown and pick up one of their shuttle guides for details on how to get out Udvar-Hazy Centr. Better yet, if you’re flying through Dulles, make it a stop into or out of town.

The Exorcist Steps
Fantasy and horror more your thing? Not a straight science fiction guy? Okay. Then the power of Christ compels you to visit this movie landmark in Georgetown, one of Washington DC’s upscalest neighborhoods. Avoid these suckers in high heels, while drunk and if Linda Blair is around. They’re pretty steep. Take the Circulator (those red busses you see every where) to get to Georgetown and head ove to 36th St and M St NW . The trip is $1 each way.
Dupont Circle
Remember the landmark series The X-Files? The predecessor of modern long-arc serial science fiction dramas like Lost and Fringe ? Sure you do. In the series, Dr. Kurtzweil, the informant for the Syndicate, has an office just off this historic thoroughfare. Dupont connects so many Washington DC streets we can’t keep them all straight… no pun intended, but Dupont is also Washington’s oldest and best-known gay hotspot. The circle is right off the Red Line, though you’ll need to take the Q Street exit and walk south (the only other exit is closed for the next year). History aside, Dupont is also just a great place to sit on a sunny day, and the free wi-fi will keep you entertained if the people watching doesn’t.
The Willard Room
This 3000 square foot banquet room at the Willard Intercontinental Hotel in downtown Washington was the scene of a premature celebration in The Minority Report . This hotel has more than a bit of science fiction history attached, though — Martin Luther King penned his “I Have a Dream” speech as a guest here and Mark Twain wrote two books while staying at the Willard in the 1900s. At 1401 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, a room in the hotel will put you close to the White House and another science fiction setting: Federal Triangle, where the Reagan Trade Building doubled as The Minority Report’s Department of Pre-Crime.
The National Archives
Located just off the National Mall, behind the National Gallery, the Archives played a prominent role in the first National Treasure movie (aside from all the scenes in the building, a lot was shot outside, on Pennsylvania Avenue, too). Okay, it’s not fantasy or sci-fi, but will you give us alternate history? While you’re there, soak up some real history. The Archives hold not only the Declaration of Independence, but the United States Constitution and the Magna Carta, too. Admission is free, but get there early — there’s a line for entrance during tourist season in the spring and summer.
The President’s Gallery
The painting of Theodore Roosevelt at the Portrait Gallery in Chinatown featured prominently in the Ben Stiller and Amy Adams fantasy adventure-comedy (their words, not ours) Night at the Museum 2 . Other Smithsonian artifacts that inspired the film’s writers were Dorothy’s ruby slippers in the American History Museum and the T-Rex skeleton in the Natural History Museum, all within walking distance of each other on the National Mall (hit the Portrait Gallery first by taking the Yellow / Green Line to Chinatown, then walk south down 7th Street to hit up the other museums).
*Washington DC is surrounded by a six-lane highway affectionately known as the Beltway. It’s also called “oh my God why am I driving on this thing” or, alternatively, at rush hour, “damnit, I’m so sick of sitting on this thing.”
—Justin McLachlan
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