Archive for the 'Science Fiction' Category



16
Jun

Doctor Who crashes into the mainstream

The New York Times pays some attention Russel T. Davies, and brings to the masses what was once a cult phenomenon:

image In the last three and a half years he has built “Doctor Who,” “Torchwood” and another spinoff, “The Sarah Jane Adventures,” into Britain’s most successful homegrown drama franchise. Mr. Davies recently announced that he would step down as executive producer and head writer of “Doctor Who” at the end of 2009, in order to pursue other projects (he won’t say what they are). But at a time when young audiences are fleeing television for the Internet and other hipper media, “Davies has made family television cool again,” in the words of The Guardian.

I’ve talked about the character here before, and I will soon again.

11
Jun

Gina the Concept Car

Sometimes Science Fiction doesn’t have to be a story.

Sometimes it can just be an object:

27
May

Back To Babylon AD

I mentioned this strange Vin-Diesel picture a while back, and there’s a second trailer for it now:

 

It seems to be falling more into the realm of “weird euro science fiction” category.

But maybe not this weird:

20
May

Steven Moffat takes over the top spot on Doctor Who

I’ll be following up my previous post on Doctor Who with a more in-depth discussion next week, but I wanted to take note that the shows best writer, Steven Moffat, has just become the head writer for the next season.  There’s always a risk when someone new comes on board a show that the magic will be broken, but it should be a good thing for fans of the more serious sci-fi elements of the series.image

14
May

Doctor Who - Who are you?

image It’s hard to be a fan of Doctor Who over the age of 25 without also being a meta observer of the strange and unique place that the show holds in the firmament of the modern Science Fiction show. Premiering in 1964, two years before Star Trek, the show ran continuously for over 20 years. It pioneered concept of the modern traveling show, with a character able to move through space and time so that he could appear in radically different locations each and every week. Originally this was intended to allow the BBC to use their vast historical wardrobe to create period dramas that far less constricted by actual history, and focused on action. That all collapsed with the arrival of the Daleks. Deeply-inhuman fascist monsters that took Britain by storm, both literally and figuratively, and sent the show into a deeply sci-fi, and gave nerds the first hit of meta-story and continuity that they so desperately crave.

??????image Then the show disappeared for twenty years, leaving the airwaves for a long trip through alternative media. These side journeys including a movie, a series of novels and radio-plays that kept the love alive. Then, in 2005, the show returned with a bang, picking up not quite where it left off, and becoming one of the top rated shows in England.

And it’s clearly not an American product, even if it has picked up a few tricks from serial soaps like Buffy. Unlike the clear stories told in American television, Doctor Who plays fast and loose with its own rules, going from hard SF to fantasy in the blink of an eye. It’s doubly odd when you consider that it manages to hew to it’s own continuity in what is essentially a single long story that stretches all the way from it’s original broadcast in 1964.

image Of course some of the unique features of the show was built into its structure early on. One is that the main character is not actually human. The main effect of the character’s inhumanity is that it often makes him uniquely British, allowing him to lecture and reprimand humanity as a whole rather than a single member of the species at a time.

That other outcome is a hero can completely change his face and personality.  Like everything else in the world of Doctor Who the specifics form when severely hurt, creating a dramatic way to for the show to change actors when the current actor is either losing popularity or simple feels the need to move on. So far ten actors have “officially” played the Doctor, with Paul McGann managing to turn his one shot appearance in the spin-off film into a veritable cottage industry.

I’ll admit that I’m personally fascinated by the character, but even more so with it’s seemingly endless ability to generate spin-offs, which I’ll discuss in more detail in a follow-up post.