scifi.com navigationscifi.comnewsletterdownloadsfeedbacksearchfaqbboardscifi weeklyscifi wireschedulemoviesshows
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
The next issue of Science Fiction Weekly will appear Tuesday, Dec. 27, so that our staff may celebrate the holiday season. We would like to wish all of our readers a healthy and happy holiday season, wherever they are.


December 19, 2005
Issue 452
Vol. 11, No. 51

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:
Anobrin Tain


THE CASSUTT FILES

 While considering the future of films and television, columnist Michael Cassutt insists that at its heart, "The Experience" will always remain the same.


INTERVIEW

 Director Peter Jackson monkeys around with stars Jack Black, Adrien Brody, Naomi Watts and Andy Serkis on the set of King Kong.

NEWS OF THE WEEK
 M. Night Shyamalan reveals the truth behind Lady in the Water, Nicolas Cage drives Marvel's Ghost Rider flick back to 2007, David Boreanaz haunts Alan Cumming in Suffering Man's Charity, and much more.
ON SCREEN
 Andy Serkis channels the eighth wonder of the world in King Kong, Joss Whedon proves that dreams never die on the Serenity DVD, and Genndy Tartakovsky animates Star Wars secrets on the Clone Wars volume-two DVD.
OFF THE SHELF
 Catherine Asaro trains for combat aboard a deadly warship in The Final Key, while Linnea Sinclair frees a space pilot from a prison planet in Gabriel's Ghost.
GAMES
 The Matrix: Path of Neo for the Xbox 360 finally allows players to become The One in a martial-arts extravaganza that lets players relive the major events of all three films.
CLASSICS
 Tom Cruise talks to the animals—notably two sacred unicorns—in director Ridley Scott's romantic and visually sumptuous Legend.
COOL STUFF
 For Harry Potter fans who wish to be the dream instead of merely reading or watching it, Hermione's Wand is now available for spellcasting.
SITE OF THE WEEK
 The Mutant Reviewers from Hell deliver plain-spoken write-ups of oddball cult classics, plus essays on theater etiquette, graphic novels and more.
LETTERS
 Readers nominate Bryan Singer to take over Star Trek, rally to rescue Threshold, hail The Chronicles of Narnia as a classic, and much more.

FeedbackSearchBack IssuesSubmissionGalleryStaffSuggestions


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