scifi.com navigationscifi.comnewsletterdownloadsfeedbacksearchfaqbboardscifi weeklyscifi wireschedulemoviesshows


August 18, 2003
Issue 330
Vol. 9, No. 33

Science Fiction Weekly
Now More Than
339,000
Registered Readers!


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


INTERVIEWS

 Robert Englund and Ken Kirzinger go head to head as horror icons in Freddy vs. Jason, while award-winning author Dan Simmons launches "The Iliad" into outer space.


EDITORIAL

As the Terminator races toward the governor's mansion, Scott Edelman, Science Fiction Weekly's editor-in-chief, succumbs to some "California Dreamin'."

HUGO AWARDS POLL
It's time once again for Science Fiction Weekly's annual unofficial Hugo Awards poll! What were the best SF books, movies and stories of 2002?

VOTE NOW
NEWS OF THE WEEK
 Peter Mayhew dons Chewbacca's hairy hide for Star Wars: Episode III, Robert Picardo runs Acme Industries in Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Ed Begley Jr. checks in to Stephen King's Kingdom Hospital miniseries, and much more.
ON SCREEN
 Robert Englund invades a demon's dreams in Freddy vs. Jason, Stephen Chow shoots and scores as a superhuman kung-fu kicker in Shaolin Soccer, and Joe Alaskey meets up with Marvin the Martian in Duck Dodgers.
OFF THE SHELF
 James Blish travels through space and time in In This World, or Another, while Ramsey Campbell, Jack Dann and Dennis Etchison assemble horror's finest fears in Gathering the Bones.
GAMES
 With six worlds and almost 200 unique creatures, the massively multiplayer online role-playing game Star Wars Galaxies: An Empire Divided brings the Episode IV universe to life.
CLASSICS
 After Air Force One goes down on the prison island of future Manhattan, Kurt Russell must rescue the president in Escape from New York.
COOL STUFF
 Doctor Who was forced to fight them, but fans will fall in love with the Radio Command Dalek, which can roam the room while blaring "Exterminate!"
SITE OF THE WEEK
 Not only does SF have a brain, it also has a heart, and nowhere is that fact better proven that at Romantic Science Fiction & Fantasy.
LETTERS
 Readers recommend buying more books on impulse, prepare for the debut of Battlestar Galactica, offer tips for Enterprise, and more.

FeedbackSearchBack IssuesSubmissionGalleryStaffSuggestions


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