Ha! In honor of the crappy re-makes that Hollywood keeps on turning out (and budgeting over and over and over again) – don’t you think the word we use to describe these things ought to be “re-tread”? (captures the cheap, shoddy, will fall apart within the first ten minutes feel), I just finished a re-make of the Classic Science Fiction Channel’s ‘moving images’ page.
The page was originally all text links. Now I’ve replaced the text links with film posters and title screen images. Too bad there isn’t an industry standard size for these advertisements. If they were all the same size, the page would look really cool. As it is, I think it still looks pretty cool.
Besides, there’s just something right about sticking a poster for Skiffy Tube’s short-lived Flash Gordon series next to one for Plan 9 From Outer Space…
You can check out the goodness here.
I’ll probably re-make the radio show page next. What I’d really like to do is find a book cover for each of the episodes that are based on a short story – but in most cases such covers aren’t available: most of these shorts appeared in pulp magazines and more often than not they weren’t the cover stories. But have no fear, I’ll figure something out.
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Warning – this is going to be a multi-post day (including pictures of the snow that is keeping me inside) – so check back often!
Upcoming: the C’s from the continuing series of reviewing the reviewers (getting a lot of comments and emails on that one) – which includes my massively brilliant solution for those bloggers who are ‘nervous’ about their upcoming review – and – snow pictures!
Wow. I thought I was the only person who even remembered A Boy and His Dog. It is one of my favorite surrealist works EVER.
I remember an old sf book about all the major cities on earth onstalling anti gravity engines and leaving. they hired out like day labor in the universe, new york city was one and never used it’s name one of the moto for the sity was HLMYOL — ha lady mow your own lawn. The mayor still ran the city bit the pentily for failure was death. But I cant remember who wrote it or what the title was any one else remember the story?
Joseph,
that would most likely be the ‘Cities in Flight’ stories by James Blish.
‘Spindizzies’ were the engines used to lift the cities.