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January 2, 2001
Issue 193
Vol. 7, No. 1

Science Fiction Weekly
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COVER ART Featured Artist: Alex Aurichio

INTERVIEW

 Leni Parker and Anita LaSelva, who portray Da'an and Zo'or, the dueling Taelons of Gene Roddenberry's Earth: Final Conflict, invite readers to learn which alien would make the better world ruler.


EXCESSIVE CANDOUR

 SF critic John Clute visits deep space to Look to Windward and catch a glimpse of the latest installment in Iain Banks' epic space-opera series about the galaxy-spanning society known as the Culture.

NEWS OF THE WEEK
 Arthur C. Clarke has a message of peace for the world as 2001 begins, Spielberg is rumored to help Lucas on Episode II, Spider-Man and Warhammer flicks seek fan extras, Ray Park is tapped to portray Iron Fist, and more.
ON SCREEN
 John Malkovich turns a bloodsucker into a star in Shadow of the Vampire, Roger Corman's Black Scorpion kicks supervillain butt, and The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne uncovers the truth behind the science fiction legend.
OFF THE SHELF
 Catherine Asaro tells an unusual love story when man and machine contend for the love of a woman in The Phoenix Code, while Shariann Lewitt pits the DNA-enhanced elite against the merely human in Rebel Sutra.
GAMES
 Players can battle the Cardassians, the Dominion, the Pah-wraiths and the Jem'Hadar as Kira, Worf and Sisko when the Deep Space Nine gang finally gets the game it deserves in Star Trek: The Fallen.
ANIME
 An apparent terrorist attack brings the mecha crew of the Tokyo Police Department back on the case when conspiracies worthy of The X-Files unfold in Patlabor 2: The Movie.
SOUND SPACE
 Space 3: Beyond the Final Frontier delivers 27 rhythmic cuts from films, television shows and even a game on a two-CD set that proves science fiction makes beautiful music.
SITE OF THE WEEK
 Stanislaw Lem's novel Solaris was the inspiration for one of the most mind-blowing SF flicks ever, and now it is also the name of a site dedicated to the works of this inventive author.
LETTERS
 Readers confront the end of Star Trek: Voyager, continue to debate the merits of the two versions of Dune, condemn Dungeons & Dragons itself to the dungeon, and more.

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