scifi.com navigationscifi.comnewsletterdownloadsfeedbacksearchfaqbboardscifi weeklyscifi wireschedulemoviesshows
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
The next issue of Science Fiction Weekly will appear Tuesday, Feb. 18, so that our staff can join our readers in celebrating the Presidents' Day holiday.


February 10, 2003
Issue 303
Vol. 9, No. 6

Science Fiction Weekly
Now More Than
322,000
Registered Readers!


Sign up on our mailing list for your chance to win a free T-shirt:
COVER ART Featured Artist:
Carola Kassner

INTERVIEW

 Award-winning author Mike Resnick—creator of the Santiago saga and the famed "Kirinyaga" story cycle—makes exciting myths of the far future.


LAB NOTES

 In his latest column, Wil McCarthy discovers that though hindsight may be 20/20, "Blindsight" may be what gives unseeing superheroes such as Daredevil the edge they need.

NEWS OF THE WEEK
 Ian McKellen crowns Return of the King as the lord of the Rings, Angelina Jolie flies high with Jude Law in The World of Tomorrow, Stanislaw Lem slams Soderbergh's Solaris remake, Jackie Chan voyages with Jules Verne around the world in 80 days, and much more.
ON SCREEN
 Sarah Michelle Gellar bids farewell to high school on the Buffy the Vampire Slayer—The Complete Third Season DVD, and the genius behind Universal Studios' creepiest creatures is celebrated in Jack Pierce—The Man Behind the Monsters.
OFF THE SHELF
 Stephen Baxter takes over 100 million years to build humanity in Evolution, while David Smeds explores the alien in his newest short-story collection, Embracing the Starlight.
GAMES
 Giant lizards and insects take on colossal apes and robots as battling B-movie nightmares invade and destroy a metropolis in War of the Monsters for the PlayStation 2.
ANIME
 A deadly, super-powered, top-of-the-line combat android brings sex to the future city (and a rich orphan) in Mahoromatic: Automatic Maiden.
SOUND SPACE
 Miklós Rózsa makes beautiful music out of the apocalypse for stars Harry Belafonte, Inger Stevens and Mel Ferrer in The World, the Flesh and the Devil.
SITE OF THE WEEK
 There are bad movies, and then there are BAD MOVIES—and the encyclopedic cinema site And You Call Yourself a Scientist? embraces the best of the worst.
LETTERS
 Readers protect the legacy of Tarzan, ponder the meaning of the space-shuttle tragedy, rate sci-fi's most sinister villains, insist on Enterprise rewrites, and much more.

FeedbackSearchBack IssuesSubmissionGalleryStaffSuggestions


(c) Copyright 2003, Science Fiction Weekly (tm)