scifi.com navigationscifi.comnewsletterdownloadsfeedbacksearchfaqbboardscifi weeklyscifi wireschedulemoviesshows


October 10, 2005
Issue 442
Vol. 11, No. 41

Science Fiction Weekly
Now More Than
635,000
Registered Readers!


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


INTERVIEWS

 Director Nick Park teams with Helena Bonham Carter to make his Oscar-winning clay pay off in Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, while World Fantasy Award-winning author Jeffrey Ford dates The Girl in the Glass.


EDITORIAL

After Scott Edelman, Science Fiction Weekly's editor-in-chief, channels sci-fi's group mind, he insists that "You Can Quote Me On This."

NEWS OF THE WEEK
 Peter Jackson plans to bring Halo to the big screen, Eliza Dushku dreams of lassoing Wonder Woman, Jon Favreau travels to the Red Planet with John Carter of Mars, Woody Harrelson peers into A Scanner Darkly, and more.
ON SCREEN
 Ralph Fiennes declares war on bunnies in Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, Tia and Tamera Mowry try to tell which witch is which in Twitches, and Bill Mumy steals the show on the Lost in Space series-finale DVD.
OFF THE SHELF
 John Birmingham travels through time to wage war in Designated Targets, while L.E. Modesitt Jr. encounters aliens in The Eternity Artifact.
GAMES
 The son of a famous knight teams up with his father's friends in the role-playing adventure Radiata Stories for the PlayStation 2.
CLASSICS
 After Robert Silverberg announced his retirement in 1975, readers mourned—until he returned five years later with Lord Valentine's Castle.
COOL STUFF
 Johnny Depp's black-clad cut-up comes to life with Mezco's Edward Scissorhands 9" Action Figure, a stylized take on a Tim Burton creation.
SITE OF THE WEEK
 Memory Alpha uses wiki technology to populate an organic Star Trek encyclopedia that contains more than 14,000 pages so far.
LETTERS
 Readers applaud the success of Serenity, disagree over Night Stalker, demand that TV's monsters step out of the shadows, and more.

FeedbackSearchBack IssuesSubmissionGalleryStaffSuggestions


(c) Copyright 2005, Science Fiction Weekly (tm)