The last few years saw some great strides forward for various realms of equality, but more recently, a setback has left many feeling down about the state of gender equality. So, in an effort to remain optimistic about not just the world at large, but the world of art, here are five female leaders who knew how to get it done.

Yeah, we realize that we’re a little late for International Women’s Day, but… better late than never?

Buffy Summers – Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The titular heroine of Joss Whedon’s seminal show, Buffy was a direct response to Whedon’s desire to see the female victims in horror movies turn around and turn the tables on their attacker. What this subversive impulse brought us was an upbeat, funny teenager with the weight of the world placed squarely on her shoulders. Though she initially tried to escape her destiny, Buffy quickly rose to the challenge of being a strong leader in a world that saw her as little more than a girl. From preppy cheerleader to fearless general, Buffy grew up before our eyes, and helped buck the stereotype that beautiful girls need saving.

Laura Roslin – Battlestar Galactica: After the apocalyptic Cylon attack on the Colonies, Roslin remains the highest ranking surviving member of the Presidential line of succession, and is sworn in as President of the Twelve Colonies of Kobol. What makes Roslin so different to many of the women in power often seen in the media is that she didn’t have a clear political ambition. This unwanted ascension to the mantle of leader saw her grappling with her own instincts and qualities to reach her one goal: the survival of humanity.

Ellen Ripley – Aliens: After surviving the horror movie that was Alien, Ripley reluctantly joins a mission to investigate another potential infiltration. The second film in the franchise departs significantly from its predecessor, largely doing away with the horror motifs to contrast them with a war theme, casting Ripley as what many have hailed the first true action heroine. She continually comes up against male voices who seek to silence her, and is forced, in the end, to take matters into her own hands – once again for the good of all.

Leslie Knope – Parks and Recreation: In the everyday world of small town government, it might be difficult for some to imagine anyone kicking ass, but those people have clearly not encountered the sheer force of nature that is Pawnee’s Leslie Knope. From childhood, Leslie wanted to serve her country, and we see her doing that every single day. Despite her setbacks, including the small-minded town in which she lives, Leslie fights on to make the world better. What makes Leslie so special (well, one of the things), is her friendship with her boss, the hyper-masculine, anti-government Ron Swanson. Though their views stand at direct opposition, Leslie and Ron are always able to work together and remain friends – an optimistic model for how all leaders should behave.

Katniss Everdeen – The Hunger Games: Possibly the most influential heroine in recent memory, Katniss’ journey from peasant on society’s outer rim to revolutionary leader began when she volunteered as tribute for The Hunger Games to spare her younger sister from the same fate. As the world watched, Katniss defied the odds, and teamed up with her childhood admirer, Peta, to win the deadly competition. By subverting the ruling class’s expectations of her, Katniss became a marked woman – singled out for elimination by the government, and forced into a second Hunger Games. This act galvanized not only Katniss’ resolve, but thrust her into the spotlight as the face of a resistance movement to bring about revolution.

Part of old England died today when Patrick Macnee passed away. Macnee represented the classic aristocratic man, one who served his country in the Second World War, and later gave us performances that were always engaging, even if some of the productions themselves were or not.

Born in 1922 to parents who were fixtures of English high society, he enjoyed privilege as he came from aristocratic lineage, and was Eton-educated.

At the age of 20, he joined the Royal Navy during World War II, and went from an enlisted man to a sub-lieutenant within a year, patrolling the coast of the northern UK.

Battlestar

In the early 1950s, Macnee went to Canada, then the US, and appeared in various stage productions, eventually making his way into film. By the 1960s, he was well-known enough to be cast in The Avengers, not the Marvel comics, but rather a spy series with heavily mod stylings. It was an onscreen romp through a fantastical world of spies situated somewhere between the hallucinogenic Prisoner series and James Bond. While the original series paired Macnee’s character of Steed with a few different female leads, it was Diana Rigg who most people remember.

Later in the 1970s, when the show was resurrected, Macnee rejoined the series, but this time opposite Jennifer Lumley, who is now mostly remembered as the blonde 1960s-addled friend on Ab-Fab.

No matter whom he appeared with, Macnee was always the uber gentleman spy. Not a ladies man like Bond, trying to bed anything that moved, but rather a man’s man, who would do whatever was necessary to save anyone who needed saving.

NeverSayDie

He has been in many movies and TV shows, even appearing in one of the pivotal story lines in the original Battlestar Galactica. In doing so, he became the Sir Alec Guiness of the show for the time he was on, adding a level of acting that no one else was able to meet.

It is said that no matter what he was in, people on-set were drawn to him, that he made friends easily, and kept those friendships. In life, and on the screen, he gave us a hero to look up to, and a role model to be like. He will be missed, and the likes of him may not be seen for a long time.

Joseph Kahn is one of my favorite filmmakers of all time. The mastermind behind 2011’s Detention and pop culture staples like Backstreet Boys music videos, I always believed him to be a kind of Edgar Wright if Edgar Wright gave even less fucks. And you know how much I love Power Rangers.

So imagine my surprise to see that Joseph Kahn created a short film, POWER/RANGERS, and it stars James Van Der Beek (“Holy shit, you’re the Dawson!”) and Katee Sackhoff. Yeah, STARBUCK motherfuckers.

Note: That’s the safe-for-work version. A NSFW cut is available on Joseph Kahn’s Vimeo.

For the past year, the filmmaker has been tweeting about working on a tampon commercial. He made Twitter jokes about how epic it would be. Turns out, it wasn’t a Tampax ad.

I have been a fan of the Power Rangers for over two decades. I have been watching since I was one. I didn’t even know speech or how my dick worked, but I understood people becoming karate dinosaurs to pilot giant robots. I can name every actor, describe Alpha 5’s Edenoi origins and how Masked Rider fits into this universe, and I could pick apart Kahn’s use of the Machine Empire.

So understand that when I say fuck the Power Rangers. This is about the current state Hollywood nostalgia and reboot fever, and it’s the most punk rock thing I’ve ever seen.

It’s incredibly violent. It’s gratuitous. It’s ridiculous.

That’s exactly the point.

From Joseph Kahn’s interview on HitFix:

One, as opposed to like taking something like Barney and doing your dark version of Barney, there’s at least a mythology there. The original mythology is really expansive and kind of silly in how many different…” Kahn collapsed into laughter. “I mean, these guys turn into dinosaurs. How do you take that seriously? But there’s enough of like a groundwork of the original source material that they based off this repurposed Japanese show that has like norms of anime and kung fu and all that stuff that appeals to me because I’m an anime and kung fu guy anyways. I just took pieces that I liked and then streamlined it and made a bare bones version and really expressed the versions that seemed like they naturally fit within the down-the-middle dark and gritty reboot.

 

And by the way, the dark and gritty reboot thing is such a cliché that the intention was not only to make it dark and gritty but make it even darker and grittier than you could possibly imagine, hence the brains, the blood and the violence and the sex.”

 

It’s not just Lionsgate but all of Hollywood, they all keep toying around with this ‘dark and gritty’ concept, and they’re all PG-13. I mean…. look at the gunshots. You have a guy going in there shooting a bunch of people and it’s just like puffs of smoke. There’s no repercussions to these gunshots, which to me is even more dangerous than when you actually show some blood. You’re teaching kids that you can shoot a gun and there’s no repercussions to it. 

I highlighted the most startling, noteworthy quote sentences in bold. It sums up so much about what we as public perceive violence in art.

Joseph Kahn doesn’t give a fuck about Power Rangers and that’s the best thing about this 14-minute short. This isn’t some fan jerking off to twenty years of mythology. This is a guy who saw it, took it, and ran as fast as he can with it. Kahn sees Power Rangers as the perfect tool to make a statement about Hollywood’s reboot fever, the sickness that has allowed a fifth Transformers movie and a loud Ninja Turtles film without actually leaving a significant footprint. He’s taking something so perceived to be ridiculous and cheesy and is stopping short of dropping buckets of blood right on it like Carrie, all because you know that’s the version we all secretly want to see.

From Joseph Kahn:

There’s nothing playful except for maybe the Hip-Hop-Kido thing. Maybe a few little like motivational character [things], interactions and stuff. Overall, it’s a very serious thing. The joke isn’t that you’re laughing at each particular scene; the joke is that we did this ‘fuck you’ thing in the first place. You’re going to look at it and you go wow I can’t believe they fucking did that.”

Fans of Kahn are familiar with his sensibilities, as both a filmmaker and commentator on the current state of pop culture. His 2011 indie hit, Detention, sums up his view in a kinetic ninety-minute movie. In fact, it was Detention that once made me believe Kahn would be the perfect visionary behind a 21st-century imagining of the Power Rangers, but his feelings on it have confirmed otherwise (in a quote further down).

Side note: Have you seen Detention? It’s Scott Pilgrim vs. the World on a sugar rampage. Go watch it right now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4PFz9gIKKM

This is why Kahn remains one of my favorite filmmakers. Behind his excellent visual eye and artistic direction, he’s a pop culture-obsessed freak but remains disenfranchised by the system. He’s a music video director. Never mind he’s directed Eminem and Shakira. If filmmaking was war and Hollywood directors are dictators, music video directors are the Somali pirates.

Seriously, go see some of his work. His music video for Taylor Swift’s “Blank Space” is one of the most badass things I’ve ever seen, and there is not one ounce of sarcasm in that statement.

That’s why he’s the perfect son of a bitch to thumb his nose at Hollywood right now. He’s been there, he’s been shat on, and this is him telling the world not only is he the best at what he does but also you can go fuck yourself if you don’t like it.

He sent this short film out into the world with just one tweet. That’s how much he’s laughing.

My only regret is that Kahn actually chose Power Rangers. He could have done My Little Pony, but MLP doesn’t have the absurdity of kung-fu dinosaurs. It’s cognitive dissonance for me. I’m one of the most passionate fans of the property you’ll meet; last night, I sacrificed sleep on a work night to watch the premiere episode of Ninninger. And this morning, I’m feverishly typing this up as quickly as I can.

One of the most hurtful things I heard this morning wasn’t from Kahn, it was from longtime Power Rangers director Isaac Florentine.

From Drew’s interview at HitFix:

I spent some time with Isaac Florentine at ActionFest one year, and we talked about “Power Rangers.” He was there at the start of things, and listening to him talk about it, art was not on anyone’s mind. I get that there are people who genuinely loved the show when they were kids, and that they would love to see something new. Their fondness for this thing is not the point of Kahn’s film. Instead, it’s more a matter of talking about how these things get squeezed and bent and molded into something new.

Isaac Florentine is also a balls-crazy filmmaker who directed the amazing Ninja: Shadow of a Tear last year. I’ve always wanted to ask him if Power Rangers taught him anything that made his movies like Shadow of a Tear so awesome, because Power Rangers can be awesome if you’re in the right headspace and he himself has done some of the best, most memorable episodes (the “King For a Day” two-parter, in Power Rangers Zeo). But reading that broke me.

Don’t get your hopes up if you think Joseph Kahn is trying out for the upcoming Power Rangers reboot film. He’s not.

“The irony here is that I wouldn’t even want to make “Power Rangers: The Movie’ for real. Like if I had to make a ‘Power Rangers’ movie, this is it. It’s 14 minutes long and it’s violent and this is what I have in me. If they offered me the 200 million version, the PG-13 version, I literally wouldn’t do it. It’s just not interesting to me.”

It’s currently 9:30 AM. I’ve been reading Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing on the train to work, so between that and all my feelings about my favorite filmmaker using my favorite thing in the world as a sock puppet to mock Hollywood has left me exhausted.

Check out more of Joseph Kahn’s work here.

UPDATE: Completely overlooked this. Producer Adi Shankar (The GreyDredd) details why he chose Power Rangers. #orlando4pink

Battlestar Galactica’s Richard Hatch joins us on this Geekscape to talk about BSG, keeping it alive all these years and ending a solid sci-fi TV show on a high note! He also tells us about his new series ‘Loadout: Going In Hot’ and whether or not he’s played online! We talk about what are some of the most overrated movies in recent history and try and figure out why ‘The Hunger Games’ became such huge hits! Also, are there any possibly positive takeaways from the recent Sony hacks? It’s all on this episode of Geekscape!

Read Eric’s interview with Richard here!

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Golden Globe-nominated actor Richard Hatch is a legend among sci-fi fans. He is cemented in the hearts and minds of two generations with his starring role as the heroic Apollo in the original Battlestar Galactica and the radical Tom Zarek in the critically-acclaimed reboot series. Now, Hatch continues his legacy in totally new territory.

The intersection of video games and film is rocky. They just can’t get along. I await the day to read the inevitable book about Hollywood’s ineptitude in turning the epic worlds and frantic action of video games into rich cinema. Yet, ever since Mortal Kombat: Legacy, I’ve begun to suspect it is in the online video culture and community where the people who actually care about video games can work in all stages of production, from pre to post. I enjoyed Mortal Kombat: Legacy and have been looking forward to seeing how the mediums — video games and online filmmaking — evolve together.

Edge of Reality’s third-person shooter Loadout, available on Steam and just released for the PlayStation 4, is the latest game to receive the web video treatment. Directed by Vincent Talenti and produced by Wayside Creations (the studio behind Fallout: Red Star), the short is set to premiere on Machinima Prime and just might further the venn diagram of film and video games in the way I hoped.

At the center of that hope? Apollo/Tom Zarek himself, Richard Hatch.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8wRRIBMAqc

Obviously you are no stranger to the sci-fi genre, but what expectations did you have going into Loadout? Was there anything you were surprised by when the cameras started rolling?

Richard: The way the industry is going today, a lot of new business models and new ways of creating projects and distributing them and so on, and these days they’re finding new ways of going directly to the audience. Even Blood & Chrome played first online as opposed to TV. So, I didn’t know quite what to expect because I didn’t know Machinima, I didn’t really know Wayside Productions. But I loved the script. I loved the story. I loved the character. I loved the fact it’s something that really has been missing in the sci-fi genre for quite some time. Nothing out there is kind of on the level of a really fun sci-fi show like Firefly. And, [the script] had that wonderful dialogue, wonderful chemistry, and so I already knew somebody was talented. Someone had written a really, really creative, fun script. I love the character Gaz.

So, yeah, I showed up. And then I discovered, among other wonderful things, a really professional crew, a director that really knew what he was doing, knew how to communicate with everybody, and something that I would call a really laid back set. And just the way they filmed the whole thing, I was very impressed how it was laid out logistically. We weren’t [like so many productions] way over time, people didn’t know what they were doing or confused. Everybody knew what they were doing. It was a professionally run production and I got to be a part of a really, really talented cast and crew. We had a lot of fun shooting. I wasn’t sure quite what to expect.

What can you tell me about Captain Gaz? How different is he from your other roles, like Apollo or Tom Zarek?

Richard: Apollo was really that straight-forward guy that would watch your back. The kind of guy that holds down the fort, that’s always gonna step into the fray and save the day. He was kind of a true blue hero, you know? Straightforward, honest, has integrity. And the kind of guy that women can’t handle. [laughs]

And Tom Zarek, of course, the wounded idealist who ultimately realized he couldn’t get anywhere playing by fair rules. And yet he wanted to make a positive difference. So he liked to play the chess game, he was very smart and cage-y. But it was all for good purpose. He was never trying to destroy or take away the good things. He wanted to fight for what he thought was getting lost once again, which in this case was democracy in a kind of post-9/11 circumstance. Democracy can’t be pushed to the side. So he was a pretty intense guy, you know?

And I think the difference with Gaz, is really, for me, it’s not like playing jokes trying to be funny. It’s quirky characters being real and believable that creates very funny circumstances. It’s very much like Galaxy Quest, where the characters play them straight and yet each of those characters were so quirky and funny that just seeing who they were lent itself to a lot of comedy. And Gaz is an over-the-top captain who tries to hold this quirky, crazy crew together and outsmart all the big bad guys with bigger ships, more money, more guns, who try to take away their commerce. Because they’re trying to deliver. It’s their only way of surviving with this broken down ship. And Gaz has this misogynistic, love-hate relationship with his ship. He yells at it, he screams at it, he cajoles it, he makes love to it, it’s the number-one most important relationship in his life. And he would never give up this broken down ship for anything no matter how new and shiny somebody might present a new ship to him.

But, like I said, he can be volatile, but at the same time, maybe a little bit like James Cameron, he’s always trying to keep everything together to keep everybody moving forward. Because he knows that the commodities they’re carrying means they can live another day.

Kind of like Firefly.

Richard: Yeah! And I loved this character. He’s hilarious, but he’s honest, he has a lot integrity, he’s a bad ass with a gun, but at the same time he has to manage these wild, crazy, smart, brilliant nerd characters, each one with a unique skill and talent and trying to keep them all on the straight track and get through the day. He’ll do whatever he’s gotta do.

Loadout distinguishes it from other games by purposefully being like a Saturday morning cartoon, but for adults. It’s like a Looney Tunes from hell. The short film, Going in Hot, will it match that tone?

Richard: You know something? I think it will. It’s a very, very, I think well-put together pilot. They accomplished so much in so little time you see [the characters]. They’re trying to get in to deliver a load and they’re getting fired upon, everybody is trying to take them down, all the big bad corporate guys with the bigger ships are trying to stop them, and you know something? Nothing stops these guys. It’s the little guy against the big guy. It’s like, “Frak all of you, we’re going in hot, we’re gonna make it, we’re gonna do it, I don’t give a shit what you think.” And they keep finding a way to do it! So it’s really, really fun.

According to the filmmakers, Loadout: Going in Hot aims to present via cinema key gameplay elements. How difficult was it bringing those video game elements to life, and have you played the game?

Richard: I have not played the game, but I am going to play for the first time next Tuesday. And, you know, I’m gonna go in and kinda get a chance to see what the game is all about. But I like the fact that I didn’t play the game. Because I got the script, got the character breakdown, and a live-action version of a game, you’re gonna take that character and you’re gonna flesh it out. It’s going to expand, it’s not just going to stay frozen in time. Because a live-action flesh and blood character is going to be more dimensional. So our job as an actor, collaborating with the writer and director, is to flesh out and breathe life into these characters, and I like the fact that I was able to do that coldly from the script and the character breakdown and all the elements that were written in the script. And it will be interesting to go play the game and see what the differences are.

But I think there’s always going to be some differences, and hopefully you’re going to bring more exciting elements into the live-action version. And maybe the live-action version hopefully influences further renditions of the game. I think the two are starting to affect one another.

You have a huge audience from your time in Battlestar Galactica, but — and forgive me for this, I’m asking for my mom — do you meet anyone who recognizes you from Dynasty?

Richard: Not very often. [laughs] I think they’re all dead.

My mom is still around and is a huge fan!

Richard: I’m kidding, I’m kidding. It’s just, it’s been so long ago, it almost feels like another life.

What has been the most exciting thing doing Loadout? What can we look forward to whether we’re fans of the game or haven’t even heard of it?

Richard: I think what’s exciting is, instead of having a successful movie or television show and throwing out a half-assed game, here you have a successful game that people love, and here they’re doing a live-action version which is the reverse of what they used to. And I like that. It means we can take elements of the game that are so successful and can translate them into a live-action, living, breathing production where we can expand upon the characters and the situations. We can bring more comedy. More intensity. More excitement into that world. And remember, when you create a world, it kind of gives people a backstory. They get emotionally connected to the characters, and to the situations. And when they play the game, They already have that back story in their imagination. They’re already in a more self-immersive relationship with the game. And it will make the game so much more fun to play and going back and fourth between the game and the live-action version.

I think the two will really support each other. It’s what they tried to do with Defiance but unfortunately they tried to do something with a story they hadn’t succeeded at yet and then they threw out a game at the same time. I think they were trying to do too much. Here, you already have a game that was kind of been out there, fans know it, they’ve played it, so that’s already secured.

As someone who has been working in sci-fi films and TV for many years, did you ever see video games reaching this kind of mainstream appeal and reaching to the cinematic medium?

Richard: I think it has always been going in this direction, from the time  I did Battlestar, we had real computers on our bridge in the original and we were already playing games during lunch.

Nice!

Richard: We were already starting to enter that world. And then it was only a matter of time before the technology and the sophistication of where it’s going that you can really bring all these elements together. I think what they realized is [in the past] that you can have the most sophisticated game technology but wrap around it a story. Just some story to tie everything together. Now, games can have really great stories and you can actually have a story and build that game so that the story and the game really become self-immersive and people really relate to the characters and the relationships and the chemistry of it all, and they’re able to enter a world and be a part of it. It’s a very exciting time.

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I don’t mean to dwell on Battlestar Galactica, but you were nominated for a Golden Globe in your portrayal of Apollo, you campaigned for years to get a revival done, and then you build a new audience in Tom Zarek. Years removed from the show, what do you fondly look back on? When you think Battlestar, what memory puts a smile on your face?

Richard: You know something? First of all, obviously the first time I ever met Lorne Greene on the first day walking on the set of the original Battlestar, watching film crews from all over the world never having any clue how big this project really was, the most expensive TV show in history at that time. And the next most powerful moment, after I met Lorne Greene and realized he was a real human being and he was going to play my father and from that moment that I met him, I realized I was home free. Because we had an instant relationship. That was a very powerful moment, to meet someone I grew up with on Bonanza. Never thought in a million years I thought he’d be playing my father on a TV show.

And the second most powerful moment, as Tom Zarek, was coming on the set on the first episode, after thirty-five years walking on a Battlestar Galactica set, with Ron Moore showing me around the landing bay, all these big ships, and meeting the cast. And sitting at the table across, was Edward Olmos. It was kind of a deja vu, coming back after thirty-five years and being in the Battlestar universe again. It was truly the most emotional days I’ve ever had.

Do you have anything coming up your fans can look forward to in the future? Anything to keep the Tom Zarek fanatics happy?

Richard: [laughs] Yeah! I’m starring in a steampunk film with Malcolm McDowell called Cowboys & Engines, which is going to premiere at the Landmark Theatre, in West Pico in Los Angeles. I’m directing a movie called With Arms, about a Vietnam vet who walks away from the war, and one of the big things I’m doing is a groundbreaking Star Trek indie film with one of the most talented actors and crew I’ve ever seen. It’s gonna be on the scale of a studio film, never before attempted, called Axanar. You can go online and check out the 20-minute Prelude to Axanar, where I play General Karn, and it is the battle between the Klingons and the humans and the rest of the Star Trek federation universe. It’s exploring a time frame that has never been explored in Star Trek canon. And, honestly, the production value is epic, the visual aspects are epic, and the director to me is a young Ridley Scott. We’ve already rented studios and they’re going to be building sets. We start filming the actual movie probably starting around March.

See Richard Hatch now in the brand-new short film Loadout: Going in Hot, based on the third-person shooter Loadout from Edge of Reality. The Star Trek fanfilm Prelude to Axanar can be found here.

You can keep up with Richard Hatch by liking him on Facebook. Also be sure to listen to him on this week’s Geekscape podcast!

Back in September I interviewed one of the founders of HawaiiCon, GB Hajim, about this new and fun convention! Tickets, tours and hotel bookings are now available and from 2/13-2/14 there is a special sale on passes!

HawaiiCon Valentine’s Day Sale!

What better way to treat your most favorite fan in the galaxy than to take them to the most exclusive convention – HawaiiCon! On February 13th & 14th only via this special link ( http://goo.gl/PtQ0Fi ) you can get a free companion pass with the purchase of a pass with hotel package. HawaiiCon is scheduled for September 12, 13, and 14, 2014 right on the beach at the Hapuna Beach Prince Resort.

The list of celebrities is unprecedented for a first year convention: Most of the cast of Stargate: Atlantis are scheduled to appear for a 10 year reunion, Claudia Christian and Patricia Tallman from Babylon 5, Richard Hatch, Michael Hogan and Kate Vernon from Battlestar Galactica, Esme Bianco from Game of Thrones, and voice actress Cree Summer (Drawn Together). Super genre writer-producer Jane Espenson will be on panels and running a writing workshop. For an extra special event, HawaiiCon will be hosting the 78th birthday bash of Walter Koenig, the original Chekov from Star Trek with some special guests. Panelists and workshop experts include world renown Mars mission scientist Bobak Ferdowski, Hawaiian cultural experts, cosplay designers, robotics teams, astronomers, and aerospace experts.

More info about tickets, tours and hotel bookings are available via www.hawaiicon.com

Follow HawaiiCon on FaceBook at: facebook.com/HawaiiCon and Twitter: @HawaiiCon

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Briefly: We’re just one week away from the highly anticipated premiere of Battlestar Galactica creator Ron Moore’s Helix, and Syfy has just debuted the first 15 minutes of the pilot for your viewing pleasure.

I haven’t had a chance to watch the sneak peek myself yet (it has been a very busy day), but from everything we’ve seen so far, the show looks (and sounds) very cool.

In any case, take a look at the first 15 minutes of Helix below, and let us know if you’re looking forward to the full premiere!

http://youtu.be/CviEeDRBr6w

From Executive Producer Ron Moore (Battlestar Galactica), Helix is an intense thriller about a team of scientists from the Centers for Disease Control who travel to a remote research facility to investigate a possible outbreak. Once there, they find themselves embroiled in a life-and-death struggle that could spell mankind’s salvation – or annihilation.

On the main stage at the 2013 Comikaze Expo, I got a chance to sit down with actor and director Edward James Olmos and talk about Battlestar Gallactica, Miami Vice, Blade Runner and more! As a surprise addition, actor Michael Hogan joins us to talk about playing Colonel Tigh to Olmos’ Captain Adama and doing voice work on Skyrim and Mass Effect!

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And listen to the full conversation here:

It looks like Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome is finally headed to television!

 

No, it (sadly) didn’t get picked up for more episodes, but the series that premiered last year on Machinima has been stitched together and will be air as a two hour movie on February 10th at 9PM.

 

New scenes will also be included in the SyFy premiere, so even if you think you’ve seen it all, you haven’t! Nine days later, on February 19th, the complete edition will hit Blu-Ray everywhere.

 

Can’t wait? Check out the first episode of the series below, and follow the links below that for the rest of Blood & Chrome.

 

 

Episodes 1 & 2.

 

Episodes 3 & 4.

 

Episodes 5 & 6.

 

Episodes 7 & 8.

 

Episodes 9 & 10.

Machinima has just released the final two highly anticipated episodes of Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome.

I’ve been a HUGE fan of the miniseries so far. It’s amazing to get a better look at the first Cylon war, and learn more about the character we all loved so much in 2004’s Battlestar Galactica reimagining. Everything ends today unfortunately, as Blood and Chrome was not picked up beyond this point. We’ll miss you Bill.

Check out the episodes below, and as always, please share your thoughts! So say we all!

Episode 9:
In the aftermath of the deadly Cylon ambush, Coker threatens Becca, forcing Adama to a heated standoff.
Episode 10:
Becca discovers a startling new development that will affect the future of the human race. Meanwhile, Coker’s life hangs in the balance as the team holds out hope for a rescue, and Adama has a disheartening realization about the war effort and his place in it.

Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome is set to air on Syfy in full this February, with a home video release following a few weeks later. Or, you can watch the whole thing on Machinima right now!

Machinima has just released episodes 7 and 8 of Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome. As fun as the ride has been these past few weeks, we now have just seven days until it ends.

The series has amassed over six-million views during its short lifespan, which is a testament to the fact that FANS ARE WATCHING. Of course, I just wish there was more content in the works.

Check out the episodes below, and as always, we’d love to hear your thoughts! Battlestar (and The Walking Dead) composer Bear McCreary is also participating in a Reddit AMA today, so you might want to check that out too!

So say we all!

Episode 7:
Waylaid by a ferocious storm, Adama, Coker and Becca reluctantly follow their eccentric savior, marine recon sergeant Xander Toth (John Pyper Ferguson), to shelter in an abandoned ski lodge. Adama and Coker finally find some common ground and secrets about Becca’s mysterious mission are revealed.
Episode 8:
The tentative safety of the ski lodge is abruptly shattered as Cylons breach Toth’s defenses. With Becca and Toth nowhere to be found, Adama and Coker face off against their deadly robotic pursuers. Becca makes a horrifying discovery about the Cylons’ agenda on Djerba.

What was I most looking forward to this Friday? Not shopping, as I’m all the way up in Canada. I just couldn’t wait to see what Bill Adama did next in the fantastic Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome. 

Unlike most shows that air on Fridays, Machinima wasn’t about to let this one get in the way of new content, and has just released episodes 5 and 6. Watch them below, and as always, let us know what you think!

Adama dogfights Raiders while the Battlestar Osiris tries to hold off a Cylon Basestar.

Miss anything? Check out past episodes here and here!

How are you feeling about the show so far? Wish it had been picked up for a whole season?

Blood and Chrome is set to conclude on December 7th. It will also air in full on Syfy sometime in February, with a Blu-Ray release shortly after.

Last Friday we got an awesome look at the first Cylon war in Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome. Today of course is Friday again, and Machinima has released the story’s next two chapters. Make sure to catch up with the first two if you missed them last week!

I was a huge fan of 2004’s Battlestar Galactica reimagining (for the most part), and was very excited when Blood and Chrome was announced. I still don’t know what SyFy was thinking when they didn’t pick it up for a full series, I’m sure it would have been a boon for ratings.

Check out the episodes below, and let us know what you think! Are you enjoying Luke Pasqualino’s portrayal of Adama?

‘Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome’ takes place in the 10th year of the first Cylon war. As the battle between humans and their creation, a sentient robotic race, rages across the 12 colonial worlds, a brash rookie viper pilot enters the fray. Ensign William Adama, barely in his 20′s and a recent Academy graduate, finds himself assigned to the newest battlestar in the Colonial fleet’ the Galactica. The talented but hot-headed risk-taker soon finds himself leading a dangerous top secret mission that, if successful, will turn the tide of the decade long war in favor of the desperate fleet.

They’re here! Just yesterday we posted a cool new clip from the pilot of Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome, and now we can watch the whole episode (and a second one too)!

Check them out below, and let us know what you think! Don’t you wish this was picked up  for a whole season?


Episode 1: Ensign William Adama (Luke Pasqualino), barely in his 20′s and a recent Academy graduate, finds himself assigned to the newest battlestar in the colonial fleet: The Galactica. He quickly clashes with his co-pilot, Coker Fasjovik (Ben Cotton), a war-weary officer with just 47 days left on his tour of duty. In pursuit of the intense action that the Cylon war promises, Adama can’t wait to enter the fray.


Episode 2: Adama and Coker’s supply mission features a surprise: their cargo is the beautiful and enigmatic scientist Dr Becca Kelly (Lili Bordan). The routine mission quickly becomes deadly as the small crew pilots their Raptor into Cylon territory.

New episodes will release each Friday until the finale on November 30th.

We’re less than 24 hours from the premiere of Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome, and Machinima obviously wants us to be excited for it (and boy am I excited).

Just a few days ago they released an impressive new trailer for the miniseries, and today Machinima Prime uploaded a fantastic new clip. Check out the scene below, and let us know what you think!

Are you planning to check out Blood and Chrome? Were you a fan of the 2004 series?

If you’re not sure what the show will be about, here is the official synopsis:

An all-new chapter in the Battlestar Galactica saga, Blood and Chrome takes place in the midst of the first Cylon war. As the battle between humans and their creation, the sentient robot Cylons, rages across the 12 colonial worlds, a young, talented fighter pilot, William Adama, finds himself assigned to one of the most powerful battlestars in the Colonial fleet: the Galactica

Well I had no idea this was happening so soon. Machinima today released a new trailer for the upcoming Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome. They also announced that the miniseries would premiere on their YouTube channel THIS FRIDAY!

I was a huge fan of the 2004 Battlestar series (well, on and off in the later seasons), and I was very excited at the prospect of seeing William Adama fight in the first Cylon war.

Syfy of course passed on a series after seeing the pilot, but will air it in its entirety after it concludes on Machinima. However it turns out, I’m excited to get back into this world, even if it’s only for a short time.

Again, the first chapter of Blood and Chrome will hit Machinima this Friday! Are you planning to check it out?

Is it a robot, an android, a cyborg, a mechanoid? Heidi and Stephen get to the bottom of this question while also discussing their favorite mechanoids from pop culture and their feelings on the impending Robo-Apocalypse.

Creepy humanoid robots:

http://www.geminoid.jp/en/mission.html
http://mashable.com/2011/03/04/lifelike-robot/
http://mforum.cari.com.my/viewthread.php?tid=635499

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