his "Farmer's Almanac of Celebrity Worth" is dedicated to keeping track of a subject near and dear to many a fan's hearthow popular are a site visitor's favorite celebrities ... and are they moving up or down the success register? Reducing beloved and belittled Hollywood actors to contestants in a high-school-style popularity battle, Fametracker offers humor, film news, reviews, satire and plenty of delightfully snarky commentary.
Fametracker covers the entire entertainment industry, not just SF. Its best is gathered in its Galaxy of Fame, which includes updates and special fametracking editions in a number of categoriesEmmy Awards coverage, the California gubernatorial recall election, upcoming television seasons and a special American Idol edition, to name just a few. The site conducts fame audits of various stars, most recently Bill Murray. In its 2 Stars 1 Slot section, Fametracker defines niches of stardom (check out Battle of the Cruise-Alike Heartthrobs-in-Waiting!) and chronicles the struggles of various actors competing to fill these celebrity voids. Meanwhile, the Hey! It's That Guy! area tracks the rise of barely identifiable actors as they struggle to move beyond being bit players and become household names. (SF fans will be pleased to see articles validating the existences of Adam Baldwin of Firefly and The Lord of the Rings cast member Sean Bean here.)
This site has its share of celebrity gossip and current Hollywood news, of course, and offers forums where interested readers can argue with Fametracker's assertions. The true appeal of this Web page, though, is its writing. Whimsical, witty and irreverent, it never loses sight of the fact that its chosen subject matter is essentially unimportant ... and yet at the same time is hotly debated, online and in real life, by thousands of people.
A.M. Dellamonica
Site of the WeekSeptember 22, 2003
hinking of writing an SF movie? Curious about what might have been done differently with a favorite filmor a flawed one? Check out the blueprints for a wide range of SF movies at Sci-Fi Scripts, a site that boasts a wide collection of screenplays for the greatest (and the not-so-greatest, as the site itself notes drily) genre movies ever made.
The experience of reading the script for a beloved and often-seen film is frequently surreal, revealing notable divergences between script and finished product, shedding light on the screenwriter's intentions and goals. A site that offers many scripts in one place is therefore a treasure. And the library of material on offer at Sci-Fi Scripts is extensive, though it does have a distinct lean toward more recent films. Classics like A Clockwork Orange and Invaders from Mars do appear in its lineup, but the large majority of the movies currently available on Sci-Fi Scripts date from the '80s or later. Big franchises like The Matrix, Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings movies are represented, of course, as are lesser-known films, camp classics and a host of box-office disasters. What's more, there are multiple versions of many film scripts, not all of them the final shooting draftsthere are rough drafts, directors' revisions and even scripts for as-yet-unproduced films. (Spoilerphobes beware!)
This Web page maintains a tight focus on providing scripts and not much else; it fosters a small community of loyal fans by printing letters and links, but does not have discussion forums. Visitors looking for movie reviews, photos or backstage information on an SF movie will have to get them elsewhere. Instead, Sci-Fi Scripts delivers endless reading material for anyone interested in the path that a story idea takes while on its journey from the plain white page to the local multiplex.
A.M. Dellamonica
Site of the WeekSeptember 15, 2003
racking the latest news not only on big-screen pictures but on television releases, too, Coming Soon is a natural gathering place for film fans wondering about anticipated films, programs or DVDs. Friendly in tone and exhaustive in its information-gathering, this site is a virtual library of data on upcoming media releases.
As its name suggests, Coming Soon whets the appetite of film fans with movie trailers, production stills, discussion forums and a movie database. It has links to news articles on both movies and television programs currently in production. Surfing to Superhero Hype allows visitors to track various famous superbeings as they travelas they increasingly dofrom comic books and graphic novels to live-action film and television projects. Want to know how many hours, minutes and seconds until the Hellboy movie is released? The answers on his fate, and that of every other film superhero, are here.
Other quirky sections of this Web page are the Weekend Warrior area, where Coming Soon predicts how well each week's newly released movies will do at the box office, and its Box Office Report, which has the actual numbers. The movie, TV and DVD reviews are informal in tone but packed with thought-provoking content; they also link up with discussion forums about each show in question. The interviews section has a daily audio clip that gives visitors a chance to hear about movies directly from the stars and directors who make them.
Where Coming Soon stands out from other Web sites covering the entertainment world is in its focus on time. This page not only knows what is going to happen, it knows when ... and the answers are freely available to anyone who cares to stop by.
A.M. Dellamonica
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