Sunday, 28 October 2018
One Foot in the Genome
You know the drill by now, it's an article culled entirely from old Radio Times listings back in the day where producers got the chance to write their own, as found on the BBC Genome. The show under discussion is One Foot in the Grave.
Sunday, 21 October 2018
Cliffhangerama
In 2007, Futurama returned four years after being cancelled by Fox, in the form of four direct-to-DVD movies. As part of a deal struck with Comedy Central, these movies would then be chopped up into four episodes each, creating a 16-episode season. There were a couple of differences between the movies and the individual episodes (which have never been released commercially), the biggest of which were the creation of twelve cliffhangers obviously not seen on DVD. Let's find out what they were, along with some assorted other trivia...
Monday, 15 October 2018
Cahiers Classiques d'Horreur
Image recycled from previous article owing to obscurity of subject matter |
I have recently discovered several references on the Internet (primarily on TV Tropes) to an unofficial third book in this series. It appears that the two books in the original series were hugely popular in France, to the point that a fan wrote their own entry in the series and managed to get it officially printed. (One wonders if J.H. Brennan was ever aware of the existence of this; I suspect not.)
The book was entitled La Malédiction des Baskerville, which translates as "Curse of the Baskerville", and allows you to play as either Sherlock Holmes or... the Hound of the Baskervilles. (One presumes the author felt the 'villain' character should be a monster of some kind, following the lead of the two 'official' books, hence why it isn't Moriarty.)
If you happen to have any more information on this (especially if you know any way I could get an English translation of it), I would welcome it.
Sunday, 14 October 2018
The Tell-Tale Edit
BART: And if you still want to tear apart this young Sunday School student as he stands on the brink of salvation, I await your wrath.
[The mob sounds moved.]
KRUSTY: Somehow, I don't feel like killing any more.
If you happen to watch the Complete First Season DVD's copy of the Simpsons episode "The Telltale Head", you will find those lines in the final scene. However, that is not how the episode was originally broadcast. But just what was aired, and when, and why were the changes made? We can reasonably confidently answer two of those three questions.
Saturday, 13 October 2018
The Author of This Blog is a Common Thief
I have posted this elsewhere on the internet today, but thought I'd stick it here for anyone interested - a promotional stand I stole from an A Series of Unfortunate Events promotional event circa 2006, around the time the final book in the series, The End, was released.
The event in question was part of the Cheltenham Festival of Literature, and featured an actor portraying Count Olaf, who then proceeded to run a quiz with a few children chosen from the audience. (I recall thinking he wasn't particularly familiar with the series, as he struggled to come up with a convincing answer when a few children informed him he was dead...)
The event in question was part of the Cheltenham Festival of Literature, and featured an actor portraying Count Olaf, who then proceeded to run a quiz with a few children chosen from the audience. (I recall thinking he wasn't particularly familiar with the series, as he struggled to come up with a convincing answer when a few children informed him he was dead...)
Sunday, 7 October 2018
House of Hellish Difficulty
1984's House of Hell, then. An early entry in the Fighting Fantasy series, penned by the range's co-creator Steve Jackson, the only book in the series to feature a contemporary setting (a title it would hold until 2012, when Ian Livingstone's Blood of the Zombies was unleashed upon the world), and surely responsible for many a nightmare given to unsuspecting young children who read it. It was also easily the hardest book in the series up to that point, and remains well-known for its high difficulty level.