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February 26, 2001
Issue 201
Vol. 7, No. 9

Science Fiction Weekly
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COVER ART Featured Artist:
Ronald R. Languskie

INTERVIEW

 David Boreanaz stakes his claim as Angel, the vampiric heartthrob who's captured Buffy's heart, while Henry Selick, the director of Monkeybone, gets animated about the bizarre look of his first live-action fantasy.


EXCESSIVE CANDOUR

 SF critic John Clute books passage board Richard Paul Russo's deeply-felt Ship of Fools and discovers that the author has given his readers "A Bullet to Bite."

NEWS OF THE WEEK
 Chris Carter still trusts that there'll be a ninth season of The X-Files, George Lucas admits that Star Wars will end with Episode III, Bryan Singer climbs aboard Battlestar Galactica, Lucy Lawless promises surprises as Xena ends, and more.
ON SCREEN
 Brendan Fraser's cartoon creation Monkeybone comes to life and traps him in a hellish netherworld, while The Lone Gunmen--those Three Stooges of conspiracy and paranoia from The X-Files--break free to launch their own series.
OFF THE SHELF
 Sir Arthur C. Clarke gathers a lifetime of gripping short fiction in The Collected Stories, while Ben Bova descends to the surface of a treacherous planet to solve a great mystery of the universe in Jupiter.
GAMES
 Lara Croft and Dark Angel have finally met their match in Konoko--the femme fatale fighting star of Oni--who kicks and punches her way through an unforgiving cyberpunk future with style and moves to die for.
ANIME
 Five high-schoolers must band together to save the world when only the teen-aged magicians of the Magic User's Club have any chance of stopping an overwhelming alien invasion.
SOUND SPACE
 Rock and jazz music blend with electronic and orchestral sounds as Charlton Heston--The Omega Man--fights for the survival of the species on a plague-ridden planet.
SITE OF THE WEEK
 Ellison Webderland, the official Web site of multiple award-winning living legend Harlan Ellison, features fiction, essays and audio that reveal the man behind the myth.
LETTERS
 Readers clarify why there's a difference between violence in film and fiction, hope that TV will be kind to Pern, continue to debate the wisdom of remaking movies, and much more.

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