Friday! Friday felt like the first reeeally big day of the convention. I managed to go to bed freaking early the night before, and sleep in until after 7am, so that was a win! By the time I was up and getting ready most of the guys had already ventured out into the world. Jonathan was at the Cosplay 5K, and Matt and Gui has headed to the convention centre. I didn’t have to be anywhere until after 9am, and had no desire to wait in the chaotic line to enter the convention centre. Derek was hoping to grab the sweet Metal Gear Mondo print, so he ventured into the line, unfortunately to no avail as by the time his spot in the line was entering the convention floor, all the doors had been opened and people were entering willy nilly anyways. So no sweet Mondo for us today.

It seems like it’s generally impossible to be able to get the exclusives offered at SDCC, as you either need to be randomly chosen, or you try to get in a line that is capped before you were even in the convention centre. The one silver lining to this is we have probably saved a whole pile of money!

Once I left the hotel room I scooted by the convention centre to see if I would have a better shot of organically just walking through the doors once they were all opened. I didn’t. So after hovering for a few minutes, and watching people be outraged that they had to stand in line with the masses, I moseyed on to my first appointment: HBO’s Watchmen experience.

So. Many. People.

I had stopped by Watchmen the day before and was told to come back the next morning during press preview hour. The person who I had initially talked to explained it in a way that left me thinking they were letting 30 people in at the top of each hour. That was totally inaccurate. In actuality the whole experience lasted about 2-3 minutes, so I don’t know where I had concocted my ideas about timing.

The activation was actually pretty freaking cool. It was really tiny, about the size of an elevator, and had doors that slide open to let you in. When you enter you stand in front of a screen which instructs you to move around the booth in order to calibrate the camera to your body.

Once calibrated, your own Dr. Manhattan transformation begins. You watch on screen as your body is electrified and then as your skeleton rebuilds into Dr. Manhattan. Through this process as you move around in real life you move around on the screen in whatever form you happen to be in. In my particular experience however I definitely was a wee bit confused and mostly just sooo still waiting for things to happen. It wasn’t until close to the end that I realized that I coulda been moving around a whole lot more! It was still pretty neat though and regardless of my own slowness, I’m glad I was able to get in there!

Following my transformation into Dr. Manhattan I met up with a grumpy, disappointed (about no Mondo), and very hungry Derek. We decided to head a little bit further away from all the action to find a restaurant that would be a little bit less crowded and hopefully not too expensive. We stumbled across a Mexican place that was suuuper delish! I had no idea what I was ordering but ended up with a sandwich full of yummy seafood.

Post food we had a much less grumpy Derek who was up for some activity! Word on the street was the line up for the Picard Museum wasn’t too insane so we decided to head that way, it also turned out that the lone was on a side walk that was totally shaded *the dreeeam*.

I am definitely not a Trekkie, and have never really been exposed to much Star Trek, I mean I know what it is And I know the Jean-Luc Picard is a played by Patrick Stewart, but other than that I got nothing. It was however still a really cool exhibit. It actually felt like a legit museum exhibition, with glass cases displaying different paraphernalia, and a little write up on the wall about the significance of each particular piece. Even as a none Trekkie I found it pretty interesting. It kinda made me wanna get into it with the upcoming show! (And it definitely got Derek invested, so I imagine I’ll at least watch some of it!)

By the time we got through the Picard Museum I was having a pee-mergency! We had been planning on heading over to the Detroit: Become Human fan meet up at a little pub we had been to a few nights before, and decided to expedite our stroll over there so I could have a pee ASAP.

While in the washroom I received a message that Bryan Dechart, who is the ‘voice actor’ for the character Connor in the game, had just walked into the place. (!!!!) I walked out into the pub and went to turn a corner immediately recognizing Bryan and a mystery girl sitting at a table getting prepped for fans to come in. Pretty danged exciting, I then used all of my will power, and knowledge of my awkwardness, to leave them alone and get back into the line up.

Once we got in we waited in line to meet them and grab signatures. If you’ve ever read my ‘I don’t know how to play video games’ articles, you’ll know that I am a BIG fan of Detroit: Become Human. I played the game all the way through a while back in a very short period of time, and then had to go back and play through the last few chapters a second time so I could get an ending where I didn’t accidentally kill Kara. I was secretly hoping that the super handsome Jesse Williams would be there, but was definitely not disappointed when we discovered the also super handsome Bryan Dechart was there! I feel so bad cause I’m not totally sure who the female actor was, but someone in line thought she was likely the main girl from the Eden Sex Club in the game. Regardless they were both super friendly, chatted with us for a minute, Bryan talked about how even his mom had played the game all the way through and done really well at it, and they took a selfie with us!

Next up we headed back to the convention centre, I to our Geekscape booth and Derek to the FunkoxSDCC booth for our one and only opportunity at getting SDCC exclusives. I was shocked and delighted to find out the Darryl McDaniels was at our booth selling and signing his DMC graphic novels. I was very confused when I walked up to the booth to find a huge crowd around it, and delighted when I figured out why! He even freestyled about hanging out at the Geekscape booth, such fun! He is supposed to come back to the booth Saturday so it’ll be fun to see what he gets up to next!

A little while later I met up with Derek again and we headed over to the Gaslamp district to catch the SYFY drum line. I had no idea what to expect from this but it was actually super fun! This group of drummers and general music makers and dancers took over the street playing drum line versions of popular music, while creating an awesome dance party. Then they invited members of the crowd up to do trivia competitions, hosted by Orlando Jones. It was super fun and so freaking random. SYFY is doing a really great job of creating a presence and a street party vibe both with this, as well as their trivia trolleys and karaoke bus.

We took a breather at the the hotel for a couple hours in the afternoon to catch up on writing and recharge both our batteries and ourselves. Then got ready to go out for the evening.

Due to Derek’s thoroughly preparedness we had scored general admission tickets to The Boys premiere party, where the first two episodes would be shown to an audience for the first time. This would be my first premiere party type situation and I was pretty danged I excited for it. However because it was generally admission, even though we technically had tickets it would still be a first come first serve thing. So, although the parted started sometime after 7pm, Derek assured me we needed to be in line before 5pm. Although I would usually roll my eyes and whine about this, I decided to be a good sport and go along with his plan. When we walked up to the Amazon Prime Video Experience activation I was immediately grateful for Derek’s habit of getting to places ridiculously early, as already there was a line up forming and chaos was about to ensue.

As we were standing near the entrance to the line up we over heard conversation between staff members discussing how many people would be let in and who would be controlling the line up etc.. Derek was luckily able to download the tickets onto his phone so we could prove we were legit and get into the line ASAP. When we got into the line at 4:45 it turned out there were approximately 150-200 people ahead of us already! We stood there for over 2.5 hours and made friends with the people in front of us, who turned out to also be Canadians, from Winnipeg! Initially I thought I would melt, and was so grateful for the umbrellas covering the line. Then the sun ducked behind the trees and immediately I wished I had brought a sweater! Luckily I didn’t have to be cold for too long as they had graciously provided blankets for the viewing, which took place in the open space of the Prime Video Experience area.

Caught this sweet Ghost Bustin’ ride while waiting in line, so… worth it!

The Amazon activation was the first one we had gone to during Wednesday’s press preview, and it has been my favourite one so far (although Pennyworth’s set up was wicked awesome too). So it was neat to see the open space transformed for the party.

The central structure was being used as the DJ booth, as well as another short The Boys performance, There were bars and food stands for people to enjoy, the open area had been filled with rows of seats for the screening, and The Boys activation was still being run for party goers to experience. Shortly before they began airing the first episode the stars of the show all filed into the activation area, and I really hope they got to experience it they was we all do, as I imagine it would be pretty trippy. It was very Meta as some would say.

Right before the show began there was an introduction by Eric Kripke, and all the cast was brought to the front of the stage for applause and pictures. It was all very exciting and pretty cool to be a part of. I was a little disappointed I didn’t get to rub shoulders with anyone big and famous (as far as I know), and especially disappointed that Seth Rogan (who is part of the providing team) wasn’t on site (as far as I know), but really those were just little things in the big scheme and the experience in all was absolutely super rad!

It was also an effective marketing strategy, cause I definitely want to see more of the show now! It’s such a neat premise to consider what it would mean if super heroes weren’t all happy sunshine and following all the rules. There were lots of laughs and a few shock and awe moments. I think it went over pretty well and I wouldn’t be surprised if it takes off!

We got back to the hotel around 11pm to a room full of sleeping people, and after trying not to wake anyone while stumbling around in the dark, I passed the eff out!

Carly Sullivan may not be a household name to some of you Geekscapists… but she should be! As one of the stars of SyFy’s new comic book adaptation ‘Happy!’, based on the hilariously deranged series by Grant Morrison and Darick Robertson, Carly is making a name for herself as a comedic force… and a big nerd that you’re sure to love! We talk about her origins in Florida, working through life hurdles and self-doubt and how Happy! came at just the right time! I also sit down with my good friend Tobin Addington to start the episode to plug his brand new podcast ‘The Contenders’, all about women in film! It’s a pretty packtastic episode so enjoy!

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Season 1 of The Magicians ended with a jaw dropping cliff hanger, but fans were able to learn more about the highly anticipated season 2 at Comic-Con and catch a glimpse of what is to come. You can watch all of season 1 on Syfy.com

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Sera Gamble, one of the writers, said of the main characters, “…they will all be back in one form or another.” If you have seen the season 1 finale, you know this statement can fill you with hope and dread at the same time.

Lev Grossman (the author of The Magicians books) moderated the panel and asked Gamble how the show got started. Gamble replied that it was actually Amazon that recommended his books to her. John McNamara, another writer for the show, commented, “I read it and it blew my mind.” He went on to say, “The scariest things in there are not the monsters but what people do to each other.” McNamara and Gamble then optioned the book with their own money to get the show started.

Grossman posed an interesting question to the actors on the panel, “Which of you auditioned for a different part?” Olivia Dudley, who plays Alice, said she auditioned for the role of Julia while Jade Tailor, who plays Julia, auditioned for Margo. Hale Appleman said he auditioned for Penny and said, “I would not have made a good Penny.” It is amusing to think of what the show would have been like if the actors ended up playing the roles they originally auditioned for.

Stella Maeve answered the question of what is the “hardest thing to do for your character” by saying, “For Julia, everything. These characters are flawed…hart to get into it.” She went on to say how it was difficult because many times she would not agree with her character and what she does. Summer Bishil felt it was, “grounding the hilarity between Margo and Elliot.” She added the writing helped and she focused on staying true to the script. Arjun Gupta, Penny, revealed, “taking Penny to a place where he was at a point of almost suicide.” Rick Worthy, Dean Fogg, humorously added, “In the pilot, initially I thought I died….Long story short…they found a brilliant way to keep me around.” Dudley talked about the physicality of Alice and how that affects her character. This was the “first time I got to play a character where everything is on the inside.” Before every take, she tenses up to remind herself that Alice holds it all in. Speaking of Alice, if you were wondering how drinking that “god spunk” was, she was able to make it herself and it was lychee. Jason Ralph, Quentin, rounded off the group saying it is challenging for him that his character thinks so fast.

Remember that Talor Swift song? Who could forget that magical dance number? Guess how much they paid for the rights to the song….$50,000! McNamara said that “the guy who wrote the check said, ‘Can we agree that we will never do this again?'” Ralph loved it though because “I got to be a pop star for the day”.

Maeve thinks that the fun thing about the books and the show is that they are “not afraid to make fun of themselves.”

Dudley went on to say, “We get to go to these worlds and comment on them, like a human”. That grounds the show because weird things happen and the characters actually acknowledge the strangeness. It is like they say what you the viewer are thinking.

Grossman asked, “What prop or wardrobe item from the show would you steal?” Worthy wants the dean’s office because there is “a lot of cool stuff in there.” He also likes the dean’s wardrobe and he loves the dean’s glasses! Bishil, just like Summer would say, “I would steal my stripper heels.” Appleman would “probably steal all of Eliot’s clothes and the Physical Kids’ house.” Dudley and Ralphy actually took home items! Dudley confessed she took home Alice’s glasses but “I brought them back.” Ralph took a jacket because it fit so well.

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It is easy to wonder how similar actors are to their characters. Sometimes the line between actor and character blur. Gupta admitted, “So many times I have called people by their character names.” In thinking about how he is like Penny, Gupta said, “I would like to think I am a lot nicer than Penny but I don’t know if people think that.” Grossman the authority on the subject, said, “Olivia, you are the most like Alice”.

When asked what magical ability he would choose Ralph replied, “If you go by the rules of this world, you don’t just have one power. You’re a magician…you can just study a lot.” Grossman quickly replied that maybe Ralph is most like his character. Bishil shocked the panel by saying she would like to “turn poop into gold. It’s a daily thing…a lot of gold.” Ah Margo. The crowd loved her power choice.

There was a question from the audience about the spell casting and if it is choreographed. The action is described in the book, and serendipitously the finger tutting phenomenon happened right when they started making the show. It is rather cool to watch the character cast spells. Yes, they do have a choreographer.

Ralph was asked to pick between Olivia and Julia but he would not, though he had a nice response saying, “They both had specific times in his life.”

Gupta and Tailor are happy they are more in the show than in the books when asked what they like with the adaptation of the books.

For those wondering about the time loops, Gamble said, “I wouldn’t count out going back and looking at other time loops.”

Yes, we will find out why Elliot has two books. Not really a spoiler but makes a whole lot more sense after you have seen the show.

Ralph and Gupta were asked about their character’s relationship and Ralph feels they are “similar souls on a different path.” They are foil characters but they both want the same thing, magic.

If you wonder about how the show follows the books, Gamble explained, “We see the big plot points as spots on a map, and maybe we get there a different way than Lev and the book.”

If you aren’t already excited for season 2, they will have a centaur!

Here is a fun behind the scenes look at what is coming in season 2!

Also, here is the exclusive first scene of next season that they premiered at Comic-Con!

The Expanse panel at Comic-Con was held in the Indigo Ballroom which was full of enthusiastic fans for this new series. The Syfy channel series is based on the books by James S. A. Corey (the pen name used by the collaborators Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck) and has had numerous articles sing its praise. Currently, five of the nine episodes are available to watch on Syfy.com and the entire season is available for purchase on Amazon Prime. If you have not checked out this series and you enjoy realistic sci-fi, drama, intriguing stories, an ethnically diverse cast and a gritty mystery, you need to go watch it now!

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Adam Savage (best known for Mythbusters) moderated the panel. He opened by saying The Expanse is his “new favorite show” because it is real science. In this future, technology has not made everything perfect, and getting around the galaxy is a difficult journey. Also, Naren Shankar (executive producer) pointed out in this show, space and space flight were made to be a character. If you have watched the show, you will know they succeeded.

The Expanse has received a lot of recognition for its talented and ethnically diverse cast. Cas Anvar, who plays Alex, a Pakistani pilot with a Texan accent said, “That’s the beautiful part of the show…it doesn’t have racism. It has planetism.” Savage added that his wife was surprised to see what Anvar looks like after just hearing his Southern accent in the other room. In terms of diversification, actress Shohreh Aghdashloo said, “This is the best show I have ever been on” and actress Dominique Tipper said “same”.

The character of Joe Miller, played by Thomas Jane, gives the narrative a film noir feel. He is a detective on the Belt (the area relatively stuck between Earth and Mars) and he stumbles upon a missing person case that he cannot leave alone. Jane added that he feels he looks like the rat from Ratatouille that has drowned, which is a fair description because his character goes through quite an ordeal. Mark Fergus, one of the show’s creators and writers commented that, “Miller is like the uncle that won’t leave.” Jane pointed out that his character, Miller, “feels like an outsider but wanted to hang with these people.”

In regards to the special effects on the show, Shankar said they were not necessarily limited by what they could do but rather, “Your ambitions expand to what you have available.” This is not a show where there are crazy effects in the characters’ daily lives per se (there are definitely some amazing visuals though) because it is grittier and Fergus points out that you, “…get all the dramatic stuff back that has been lost with technology.” The characters are the focus, not the tech because the tech is commonplace to the characters (like a cell phone today).

Savage asked Dominique Tipper, who plays Naoimi (a woman who can hold her own against any man), “Does Naoimi bring out your inner badass?” Tipper replied “no” because it is part of who she is. However, she added (with her British accent) that when she watches the show at home sipping tea, and she will think about her character, “Wow that was a bit harsh”. When the cast was asked if they are like their characters, all of them chimed in saying that they are rather similar to their characters. Tipper cut in though saying, “I don’t know what you’re talking about. I am absolute fucking delight to be around!”

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One of the many complex characters on the show is Avasarala, played by Shohreh Aghdashloo, and she explained her character’s motives by saying that, “she had dedicated herself to her mission – Earth must come first” and that she wants to “make it a better place for our children’s children.” She went on to say this was the first time a character surprised her. Aghdashloo was asked by Savage, “How is it to be a female actress and get to say a lot of bad stuff?” She replied, “I am having a blast to be honest with you. I say a lot in the second season. What I love about this character is that she does not shy away from the truth.” One of the questions from the audience touched upon how brutal Avasarala is in the pilot and how that is different from the books. Fergus mentioned how they did not want the character to “be just an administrator. She has to get her hands dirty” and, in the pilot episode, that was an quick way to show her character and make you interested to know more.

One of the emerging leaders is Holden, played by Steven Strait, but unfortunately Holden is a bit of a slacker. Strait explained, “The more responsibility he has, it chips away at him…He refuses to pick a side and he becomes more gray. He can’t work only in black and white. By the end of season two, you will find he is a very different character from season one.”  One problem with Holden is that he is a bit distant and hard to connect with. Strait elaborated on how they tried to make his character relatable by saying that they “…wanted to keep Holden’s journey as realistic as possible…want to show him struggle with each level of responsibility that he takes on. He struggles a lot through it but that shows his humanity.”

Though The Expanse is based on a book series, Shankar commented that they “…are doing a unique adaptation” because they are staying true to the books. They are also incorporating the novellas and they will “change the timelines a little”, but the “authors keep them on track.” It sounds like a rather symbiotic relationship where both parties are working together and figuring out what works best for their medium.

One of the teasers but not really a spoiler for season 2 is that we will see more of the Mars perspective and we will see it right at the beginning of the season!

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Here is a fun video they screened about what it takes to act on this show!

https://youtu.be/T36JADaJh58

Check out the trailer for season 2

https://youtu.be/3gj8tRaFIfs

Briefly: We’re just over a month away from the highly anticipated premiere of the fourth (yep, fourth) Sharknado film, and Syfy has just revealed a long list of individuals who are set to make an appearance in the upcoming sequel.

Sharknado 4 will take place five years after the East Coast was ravaged in Sharknado 3. Fin, his family and the cosmos have been blissfully sharknado-free in the intervening years, but now sharks – and ‘nados! – are being whipped up in places (and ways) that are completely unexpected…

Sharknado fans were able to vote whether or not Tara Reid’s character, April Wexler, will return for the film, the result of which poll you can watch below.

As far as cameos go, there are a lot of them, including our pal Andre “Black Nerd” Meadows, and even WWE superstar (and former champion) Seth Rollins. Now I’m even more excited.

Here are the rest of the cameos:

YouTuber Andre “Black Nerd” Meadows as a Train Conductor
Comic Carrot Top as an Uber Driver
Chippendales Dancers as themselves
YouTube/Vine star DeStorm Power as a National Guardsman
Dolvett Quince of The Biggest Loser as a Trainer
Erika Girardi from The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills as Tech Frances
Comic Gilbert Gottfried as Today correspondent
Pro wrestler Seth Rollins as AstroTech Lopez
Steve Guttenberg as Car Owner
Hayley Hasselhoff as Supervisor Mary Jane and Taylor-Ann Hasselhoff as Pilot Shaylin
YouTuber iJustine as Supervisor Brock
MMA fighter Roy Nelson as Donnie the Paparazzo
Vanderpump Rules‘ Stassi Schroeder as Koening and Jax Taylor as a Guardsman
Paul Shaffer as himself

Sharknado: The Fourth Awakens premieres on July 31st, and I really can’t wait to see what Syfy has planned for SDCC.

Briefly: Back at last year’s SDCC, Eric had the opportunity to chat with Backstreet Boys’ A.J. McLean and *NSYNC’s Joey Fatone about the upcoming Nick Carter produced Syfy film, Dead 7.

The first trailer for the film has finally hit the web, and it confirms all of our speculation about the insane-sounding film: it’s going to be wonderful.

Dead 7 stars Backstreet Boys’ Nick Carter, along with A.J. McLean and Howie Dorough, *NSYNC’s Joey Fatone and Chris Kirkpatrick, 98 Degrees’ Jeff Timmons, and O-Town’s Erik-Michael Estrada, Jacob Underwood, Trevor Penick, and Dan Miller.

Anyone else ready for a trip to nostalgia-town?

You can take a look at the trailer below (or in higher-quality right here), and be sure to let us know what you think! Dead 7 premieres on Syfy on April 1st!

Briefly: I’ve heard nothing but good things about Syfy’s recently-premiered The Magicians, and the network has just announced that the series will return for a second season.

Just three episodes have aired thus far, and Syfy notes that during these three episodes, the series “averaged 1.7 million viewers, 853K Adults 18-49 and 910K Adults 25-54 (based on L3 data). The series is also strong among younger viewers, with Adults 18-34 growing consecutively over each episode, averaging 180% above Syfy’s prime time delivery in that demo.”

Those are some pretty nice numbers.

Starring Jason Ralph (Quentin Coldwater), Stella Maeve (Julia), Olivia Taylor Dudley (Alice) Hale Appleman (Eliot), Arjun Gupta (Penny) and Summer Bishil (Margo), THE MAGICIANS centers on Quentin, a brilliant grad student chosen to attend Brakebills College for Magical Pedagogy, a secret upstate New York university specializing in magic. He and his 20-something friends soon discover that the magical fantasy world they read about as children is all too real when they unwittingly invite a malevolent entity from the other side into their world. Also reprising their roles for season two will be series regulars Rick Worthy (Dean Fogg) and Jade Tailor (Kady).

The just-announced second season will again consist of 13 episodes.

Have you been enjoying the series over the past few weeks? Be sure to let us know what you think, and be sure to check out Eric’s NYCC interview with executive producers Sarah Gamble and John McNamara!

https://youtu.be/9TaNVrfwvKg

On paper, The Magicians sounds like Harry Potter. But when you actually read it, it couldn’t be more different.

Yeah, it’s a school for magicians and it’s about teen angst and there’s big nasty villain they have to eventually kill. But there’s not a heck of a lot of goofy wand waving or chocolate frogs at Brakebills. Written by TIME journalist Lev Grossman, The Magicians trilogy is coming to live-action TV adaptation on Syfy. The show has already made its premiere online but formally kicks off this week.

Back at the New York Comic-Con last October, executive producers Sarah Gamble and John McNamara spoke to the press about the challenges of adapting Grossman’s successful series, especially at a time when Syfy is seeking a total reboot of its brand of genre TV.

So, right off the bat, how much of the books are you guys covering in this first season?

John McNamara: Part of one and part of two.

Sarah Gamble: So, Julia disappears for a lot of book one. She’s back at the end of book one but she’s very changed. That’s not the same girl who was at the beginning of the story. So, we move those timelines to be current. Essentially she went off and did that stuff while Quentin was in his first year of Brakebills. So, when we talk about it with Lev, we say we’re sort of doing the Julia origin story, in a way, this season.

What has Lev Grossman been like throughout the process? How much as he been involved and how much has he left up to you guys?

John McNamara: This is going to be such a boring answer you’re going to go into a coma. He’s great, the process has been very smooth. There’s nothing. I would tell you if there was like, cause everything gets out anyway.

Sarah Gamble: He’s kind of an asshole, you know. He’s super generous.

John McNamara: He’s not a good actor so you know he’s not lying. He has one scene.

Sarah Gamble: He has a cameo. He’s great, so I don’t know what John’s talking about.

John McNamara: He’s good. He’s good. He didn’t say the lines as written, so I don’t know. He improvised a bit, which I thought was good.

What was the most unexpected challenge that you had in adapting these books into a series. Did you run into anything that made you go, “I did not expect I’d be dealing with this”?

John McNamara: Well, one thing was, the pilot was always a tough opening, for me, because, the first ten pages of the book you’re in Quentin’s head and the whole point is like, how do you pull that out and dramatize it? And we finally saw that Quentin, like he was someone who was depressed. Say, aww, we’ll just try him in a mental hospital, see what happens. I sent that to Lev, and he was like, “How’d you know?”. We were like, “What?”. He was like, “Yeah, we sent Quentin to the mental hospital. I just never wrote the scene.” So, we somehow guessed right. That’s what I mean by trail and error. We just kept guessing and sometimes Lev would say, “Woo hoo, no, no, no, no, no, don’t do that.” And other times he was like, “Wow, how’d you, it’s like you almost read my mind.” So it’s literally just trying stuff and trying stuff and trying stuff and trying stuff.

Like intuitively knowing what works and what didn’t.

John McNamara: Intuitively implies constant success and in fact, we used to, it was eighty percent failure, to get the twenty percent we felt right.

Sarah Gamble: Yeah.

John McNamara: Re-writing is really about right where it’s at. Nothing comes out perfect the first time.

Syfy is trying to get back into the genre game in a big way. The Magicians is at the forefront of their initiative. Is there an extra pressure from the network on The Magicians for putting Syfy back on the map?

John McNamara: If there is, they’ve kept it to themselves.

Sarah Gamble: I don’t know if there is, if it’s possible to do extra pressure on top of just the normal pressure of just watching the first season. I think you’re at max but I do think there’s excitement about it, and there’s desire at the network to put out a certain kind of show and you feel that. They’ve been great.

When The Magicians came out, it was hailed as the next-gen Harry Potter. It basically is Harry Potter, but far more world-weary. There’s drugs, alcohol, a lot of sex — which by the way, the fox sex. Is that going to happen?

Sarah Gamble: Yeah. Oh yeah. I got an email just a little while ago saying the foxes are in the province.

John McNamara: Guess what foxes don’t do? They’re like writers, they don’t do what they’re told.

This audience that has grown up with Harry Potter, and like Quentin they’re probably in grad school themselves. So, was it just a matter of time for a project like this to happen? You mentioned before there were a ton of roadblocks getting this greenlit.

Sarah Gamble: Maybe so. I do think that there is, there are multiple generations of adults who grew up with these canonical fantasy series and it just like, it affected their lives, I mean it’s in their DNA, right? It’s in my DNA from from growing up and reading all that stuff and I think the thing that Lev get right in the books, because the homage to some of these other fantasy stories is very knowing on his part, but he doesn’t just add the adult stuff of sex and drugs. He also deconstructs the metaphor. Good and evil are not as black and white. The idea that you have a destiny is not as clear. He makes all of the things more adult. So I actually think there’s a lot of grit and there’s a lot of depth for people.

John McNamara: [Lev] once said, when we were talking was, there are no Dumbledores in real life so there are no Dumbledores in my books.

I noticed that there’s a distinct lack of mentor figure in The Magicians. Even Star Wars has mentors. Was it difficult guiding the show without Quentin having a human GPS to tell him where to go?

Sarah Gamble: No, it’s fun!

John McNamara: No, actually, I couldn’t write if he had a GPS because I think they’re bullshit. I think that our mentors end up being very flawed people who fuck you over as much as they help you. You know, and I like go back to my favorite show of all time, Star Trek. Who was Captain Kirk’s mentor? Nobody. He’s on his own man. That’s why he’s drinking so much.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T0a2B71qs8

The Magicians premieres January 25 on Syfy. The first episode is available now on YouTube.

Briefly: Well this looks awesome.

Back at San Diego Comic-Con, Shane and I were treated to lunch by a creepy, semi-pushy religious woman who said that our meal would be taken care of, and all that we needed to do was thank our new saviour Karellen.

We were confused as hell, and it wasn’t until we saw dozens of these ‘followers’ walking the streets (and anti-Karellen protesters on the other side of it) that we realized it was an incredible guerrilla marketing campaign for something.

Turns out that something was Syfy’s upcoming miniseries, Childhood’s End, based on the novel by Arthur C. Clarke.

Childhood’s End follows the peaceful invasion of Earth by the alien Overlords, who promise to eliminate poverty, war and sickness – ushering in a golden age of peace, health and security for all of humankind. But why do the Overlords insist on hiding their appearance – and what do they ultimately want from Earth? While much of the world enjoys its newfound utopia, some suspect there’s a price to pay. As the truth about the Overlords’ intentions are revealed, humanity will discover its actual destiny may actually be a nightmare, instead of a dream.

Childhood’End will run on Syfy from December 14th – 16th, and it looks freaking awesome. Take a look at the trailer below, and let us know if you’ll be checking it out!

Oh my God, they’re back again. And they’re going to fight zombies in Dead Seven.

The Asylum, the loose cannons behind Z Nation and the Sharknado franchise, are producing Nick Carter’s (of Backstreet Boy fame) Dead Seven, set to air on Syfy sometime next year. Coming along for the ride is his fellow boy band brethren A.J. McLean and Joey Fatone (of *NSYNC), cementing this project as kind of… historic. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones never got together, but these guys finally have. For a zombie movie. It’s truly the golden age of television.

The project confirms my suspicions that these guys have always been kinda nerdy. It’s easy to forget that boy bands were boys. Comic books, horror movies, and video games are in every dude’s diet. These influences went over my sister’s head; she’s the true Backstreet fanatic and why I know their entire discography in my sleep. But she and the rest of every ’90s hormonal teenager zeroed in their focus with the boys and only the boys, which prevented them from seeing the bold nerdiness right in their face. The Gaston Leroux and Bram Stoker that was aped in “Everybody (Backstreet’s Back)” to the crystal-clear Ridley Scott aesthetics in “Larger Than Life”, these boys secretly gave teenage girls slick whiffs of sci-fi and fantasy without them realizing it.

Meanwhile, Joey Fatone of “rival” pop group *NSYNC (Surprise: they were and are all friends, the rivalry was manufactured by fandom) was an out-and-proud nerd, and slipped it in whenever he could. Like in the “I Drive Myself Crazy” video.

Now, years later as their touring schedules have gotten a tad lighter, they’re finally pursuing passion projects without cheesy record label images holding them back. Like Marvel and DC doing one massive project to shake the world, Nick Carter and A.J. McLean (and, later we learn, Howie Dorough!) of the Backstreet Boys and Joey Fatone of *NSYNC are teaming up like gangbusters for what is bound to be one bonkers movie.

At this past San Diego Comic-Con, I sat down with AJ McLean and Joey Fatone to talk about Dead Seven, their favorite horror movies, and to get to the bottom once and for all if there really was a rivalry between the two titans of ’90s-era teen adolescence.

https://instagram.com/p/47_0lLAN3d/?taken-by=ericthedragon

Is this your first time at Comic-Con?

AJ: This is my first time actually coming to Comic-Con. And I never geeked out before today. I got to meet Bryan Cranston and I’m the biggest Breaking Bad fan you ever met.

I saw that Instagram photo.

A.J.: When I got to meet him … there’s this huge line wrapped around, like double wrapped to meet both [Seth Green and Bryan Cranston] and our manager got me hooked up and I’m like, “I don’t want to piss anybody off because these people have been waiting really long so I don’t want to start a riot at Comic-Con.” [laughs] As soon as they were done signing autographs, Bryan turned around and we talked for a minute and we took a quick picture. Nicest guy in the world.

I didn’t watch Malcolm in the Middle so for me I only know him as Walter White. So it’s like when I see him, I’m like, “Oh my God, it’s fucking Walter White,” It’s so cool. That has been my geek-out moment of my entire life. Now I know what it’s like for our fans when they’re waiting patiently to meet us and if they do or they don’t, but this is fucking rad, this is so much fun. I’m excited to be a part of this, Nick asked me to do this a while ago. I know it’s been back and forth, we didn’t know if it was actually was going to happen and then Nick came to me one day and said Asylum is on board, now Syfy, and here we are talking about Dead Seven and things are moving.

It’s moved quicker that you could imagine?

A.J.: It has moved quicker, yes … When Nick asked me we were half way through our tour and he’s like, “I’ve got this script this idea, this company I know wants to do it, would you be interested?” I’m like, “Of course.”

We’re always out to help each other and to support each other in any individual endeavors whether it’s a solo album or a movie. I told Nick, I have one stipulation. I have to be a villain I can’t be a good guy. That’s my only way that I’ll do it. He’s like, “Perfect.” So I get to be one of the two main villains.

Joey: I get to be the drunk! [laughsType-cast.

Is it your first film?

A.J.: It is my first film. I grew up in acting, and theater, and movies, and TV when I was a kid but as far as…

Joey: Puppets.

A.J.: Puppets, all that. Oh, no puppets, oh yeah. Someday I’ll do Avenue Q. This is my first actual film, yes. I thought I’d be worried about learning lines and what not. I actually did some research online and I found out Vince Vaughn, whenever he studies for any kind of role, he doesn’t learn the lines. He goes on set and he yells out, “Line!” and he says it because he wants the initial reaction to be real and then he ad-libs everything in the middle. So I’m like, “If I don’t have time to learn my lines, I’ll just do that.” [laughs] It works!

Judy Dench doesn’t learn her lines either.

Joey: There’s a lot of people do a lot of different methods. Sometimes I’ve heard people have buds in their ear and they have cue cards … The best part about it is you don’t have to learn the whole thing all the way through. Just little sections of when you shoot a film so you know the scene, or how many pages. Like three or four pages.

A.J.: If we can memorize songs and dance moves, this should be nothing. So for you it’s old hat.

Joey: It’s all, trust me you’re start flubbing up things and it’s the most simple things sometimes.

A.J.: Of course it is.

Joey: Your brain starts playing mind tricks on you.

A.J.: I can’t wait for the outtakes, that’s going to be the fun part.

I’ve always suspected you guys to be huge nerds. The “Larger Than Life” video and “Everybody (Backsteet’s Back),” you’re all monsters and aliens. I remember ‘N Sync had the video where you guys were action figures. How do you feel about finally getting to express yourselves in this kind of way that you haven’t been able to before?

Joey: I think it’s great. It’s awesome. It puts us in a different light and a different element and you know what it’s like one of those things where … I think for use we can’t lose. In a sense, we’re having fun. We’re not taking it, “Oh, my gosh, this is very dramatic. We’re method actors.” It’s fun and that’s the thing. That’s the same thing when you were saying about Nick called me up about four or five different times going, “Hey, hey, hey; you want to do the film? Read the script. You want to do it? Come on, come on.”

I’m like, I said, “Yeah, let me took a look at it. I’d love to be a part of it,” something like that. We’ve never done anything together collectively as whether or not *NSYNC or BSB or whatever. Just us as normal regular people collaborating with each other. I think that’s something that’s going to be interesting and exciting about it because it puts us out of our element. It’s something that we’ve never done before. As this kind of group in a sense. I think it’s just going to be fun. It’s going to be exciting.

A.J.: I’m excited, this is going to be something fresh and new for me. I’m really proud of Nick, he’s been a huge fan of sci-fi for years and for him to finally have one of his dreams come into fruition, I’m super, super proud of him, so he’s super stoked about it.

Joey: What’s great is we get to learn from each other. All the stuff I think when we do shoot and everything I think it’s going to be exciting to learn from each other. We’ve hung out but we’ve never really hung out so we’re going to be together for a couple of weeks.

A.J.: Couple of weeks and apparently rumor is that, I’m not sure if it’s budget or what but we’re supposed to be doing our stunts! [laughs] Shooting our own fake weapons, so it’s a good thing that we just finished a two and half year tour so I got time before the next album to break bones and get some bruises.

How do you feel about having Nick as your boss? Is that a new dynamic for you?

A.J.: There’s going to be no boss, he’s not telling me shit.

Joey: He’s not the boss, hell no. He’s not the boss of me.

A.J.: I think it’s going to be fun just to watch him really have an avenue for his creative juices to shine. He’s always been that kid that doodles. He’s amazing [with his] drawings. It’s because of his little doodling that we did a comic book years ago with Stan Lee. He’s just, he’s like a big kid. He’ll always be that way. I think this is going to be like playtime for him. Obviously, it’s time to step up to the plate, it’s going to be serious when the camera’s were on but … All of us are going to have fun with this. This is not like Oscar-winning material, this is meant to have fun.

Joey: This ain’t rocket surgery.

A.J.: No, it’s just to have fun.

The Asylum have established themselves for knowing exactly what they are and being proud of it. Given that is the fact and that it’s going to be Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC, is there going to be any sort of knowing and nods to that fact?

Joey: I don’t think so.

A.J.: I don’t think so, no.

Joey: The way the script is pretty much written as far as there’s no jokes, or puns, or anything like that. The thing about Asylum, what you were talking about earlier … they’re great because the company’s so great about them is they’re they’re risk-takers in something like that. For somebody to go, for Nick to come up to Asylum and go, “Hey, I got this idea and this project. We’re going to have a couple musicians be actors and this and that, whether or not they’ve acted before or not. Let’s throw some paint on the wall and see what sticks kind of thing.” They embrace that kind of stuff and that’s what’s great about it.

When people said the same thing with Sharknado, they’re like, “Yeah whatever.” They did a third one, I mean come on. It’s popular because I think people love an outlet and love that kind of hokey-ness but it’s fun. Even though there’s legitimate actors in that show so I think it’s just going to be fun to put it to the table of what we have to offer. 

A.J.: Movies like this can turn into cult phenomenons and that’s what Sharknado happened to be. It’s like, I never thought I would really like it. I watched it, I’m like, “Okay, this is ridiculous but I’m still watching it and I think it’s awesome.” I think this could turn into one of those type of cult phenomenons that there’s going to be a group of fans, both obviously Backstreet and *NSYNC fans but even fans of that type of genre. Fans that are fans of the westerns, zombies, post-apocalyptic Mad Max vibe. There’s fans for all of that and this has all of it in one movie so it’s going to be interesting.

What could you tell us about the story, and about your characters specifically?

Joey: My character, Joey, he’s more of the comic relief I would say. I mean look at me, I’m funny looking enough to begin with. I’m kind of like the drunken-ish party-goer, kind of don’t care, ready to take on the world kind of thing. He’s not afraid of anything.

A.J.: Your character kind of reminds me of Doc from Tombstone. Just that kind of Val Kilmer-y like, “I just don’t care, whatever, we’re going to have fun.”

Joey: Let’s do it.

A.J.: Drinking, do it, oh by the way just shot 3 guys, I’m good. I can’t wait to see how you bring this character to life, it’s going to be awesome.

Joey: I’ll be drunk the whole time.

And his name is Joe?

Joey: Yeah, his name’s Joe. Character’s name is pretty much Joe as far as I know unless they rewrote the character name differently but that’s what I read.

How much of a fan are you two of the genre? What are your favorite horror movies?

A.J.: I’ve been a horror fanatic my whole life. Actually one of the first films I ever shot was a movie called Truth or Dare: A Critical Madness and it was a horror film. Very Jason Voorhees-esque. When it premiered I couldn’t even watch the first eight minutes of the movie because it was all sex and I was like, 8, so I had to wait until that was over and then I could go watch the movie. For me it’s like, I grew up with American Werewolf in London. I thought it’s just a classic, it’s still to this day parts of it freak me out.

The transformation sequence.

A.J.: The transformation is the best to this day, because now it’s all CGI.

Joey: John Landis.

I met his son outside on my way to this interview.

Joey: [laughs]

A.J.: As far as like recently, I love movies like The Collector. Some of the brand new reboots like Texas Chainsaw is great. Any of the classics, like the ’80s ’90s movies for me, anything Friday the 13th, Freddy. The only one I don’t like is It. I’m a huge Stephen King fan but I’m terrified of clowns. Anything with clowns, not happening. To this day, not happening.

Joey: To me, Freddie Kruger, that kind of stuff, I’m with the old school. Same thing. There is a horror film called Funhouse. The campy ones where Goolies or Sleepaway Camp.

A.J.: Goolies, Critters.

Sleepaway Camp is awesome.

A.J.: Critters was one of my favorites. Critters was just great, that guy with the face that could change. That was awesome.

Joey: Puppet Master.

A.J.: Puppet Master! Oh that’s my frickin’ mom’s favorite.

The zombie wave is pretty high right now. Are there any other zombie mash-ups you would like to see or want to do yourself?

Joey: Which ones have they haven’t done yet? [laughs]

A.J.: My mom’s a really big fan of that new TV show, iZombie, which is kind of a cool twist on the zombie outlook.

Great show!

A.J.: But for me I think it’d be cool to see something with like, zombies and almost like… This is my own personal creation because I’m a huge Friends fan, the biggest Friends fan ever. If you could do like a TV sitcom with a group of six characters. Three of them are zombies, three of them are not. One of the ones that’s not wants to be a zombie so he keeps begging one to fight them.

Joey: Kind of like The Odd Couple, but zombies. [laughs]

A.J.: Yeah, but like zombies and I think it’d be hilarious. I think it’d be fun.

I just want to acknowledge that we got the Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC here. This is like Marvel and DC coming together.

Joey: All of five of us! [laughsWe’re representing each, so yeah, it’s like DC and Marvel.

This is a huge deal and I’m just curious to know who reached out to who for the project.

Joey: Nick called me. Yeah, that’s how it went down but it’s always funny because people always think they’re some sort of rivals or any of this kind of stuff and everything else. But it’s so funny. It’s always interesting because when I joke or bust chops about something, they know about it. Nick will know about, A.J. will know about it and all of a sudden the fans will rip me a new ass. It’s hilarious.

Then I laugh and then I call him and I’m like, “Hey, look what I said, blah, blah, blah,” and they’re like, “Yeah, I know, I can’t,” and we laugh about it and it’s never been that way. There’s never been animosity, there’s never been anything like that. They’ve always just because they were five guys, we were five guys, it was always thought, “Oh, well there’s always tension.” We had the same manager for quite some time.

A.J.: There’s never been tension. Chris Kirkpatrick and Howie both went to college together. We were in the same town together growing up. There’s never been rivalry. I think the press and media needed to fuel it and try to start a fire and the fire just fizzled out. It kept fizzing out.

Joey: Now we’re setting the record straight by doing a film together.

Is there any time we’ll see any of the other people from that era? Like Britney, Christina?

A.J.: Howie’s also in the film.

Joey: I’m the only *NSYNC-er as of now, but you never now. That’s actually, that’s kind of Nick’s vision is to bring some other people in that genre and it was his thought and his vision was to bring people that have never really done a lot of film but that were in the music in the ’90s and in the 2000s. To find out where that happy medium is and to see who we can get to play and have fun with it.

Because when you do something like this people are kind of scared. They don’t want to fail or they don’t want to go, “Well, that’s a piece of crap or whatever.” Like I said, Asylum probably did Sharknado and people were like, “I ain’t doing that.” All of sudden now people are calling him about, “Hey, remember you asked me for the first one? You think I could come in the second one or the third?” It’s that kind of thing and like for us like I said, we’re to the point in our lives and our careers that we’re able to do something like this. Nick, obviously, brought it to the attention to Asylum and they love the idea and I think it’s going to be fun because for us it gives us an outlet in something different that we’ve never done before. Especially with us being together. Hey it may work, it may not but I think the think is we want to have fun in doing something like this.

A.J.: It’s fun, it’s going to be a blast.

Is there anything you are anxious, nervous about?

Joey: I think just anxious about just getting it and rolling.

A.J.: Yeah, just figuring to when we’re going to start and where we’re shooting. We were just upstairs and Nick was like, “Oh, did you hear where we might possibly be shooting?” I’m like, “I thought it’s all going to be L.A.” He’s like, “No, Alaska!” [laughs] “I’m like, “You do realize in summer it’s daylight all day every day, all night. Good luck with that.” Obviously, I’ve got to go wherever the movie but I can’t wait it’s going to be a blast. Nick’s got me in the frickin’ gym training my ass off right now.

What do you want to do next?

Joey: After we shoot this I’m going to hopefully take a little time off. I actually just finished My Big Fat Greek Wedding II, we just shot that. That’s going to come out next year, March 25th I believe. They actually didn’t give a date which is crazy but they’re doing it. It’s pretty interesting, they got the original cast and everybody together and now I’ve just been taking it easy. Taking a little break.

A.J.: I wish I had a break but no. I’m finishing up my first solo record and then, hopefully, touring top of the year and then Backstreet’s going back in the studio again probably mid fall to make our ninth album. Gear up for a brand new tour next year. The next Backstreet cruise is in May of next year.

Joey: The cruise.

A.J.: The cruise! This is our first Mediterranean cruise and then on top of all that I’m coming out with a clothing line, so there’s a lot of things. It’s urban street wear clothing. It’s myself and 3 of my buddies; we’re all a bunch of sneaker heads, Dunny Life is the name of the brand so that’s going to be our fun little thing.

My sister’s been on that cruise for a couple years straight. Will we be seeing the Backstreet and *NSYNC cruise together?

Joey: [laughs]

A.J.: You know, we’ve actually talked about it, I know I talked about it with Lance. I know we’ve mentioned it a couple of times in passing.

I’d go.

A.J.: I think it’d be fun, I mean who knows.

Dead Seven will air on Syfy in 2016. Check out our interview with Nick and Lauren Carter here, and The Asylum producers later!

Note: This interview was conducted in a press room roundtable. Not all questions were mine, but all have been edited to retain an easy-to-read flow while retaining its integrity.

We here at Geekscape are massive fans of Constantine, and we’re doing our best to support the littlest DC Comics show that can. Arrow and The Flash might be the cool jocks of the class, but Constantine is that really nice but kind of quiet person that might be expelled if he doesn’t study more.

The latest rumor concerning everyone’s favorite occult detective is a really fascinating one: The show might be rebranded as Hellblazer and air on Syfy.

From Cinelinx:

Despite the low numbers, NBC’s Constantine show has a very active and rabid fan base.  When word about the series’ production halt came about, the internet was flooded with #SaveConstantine posts and hope for the future.  Sadly, things haven’t been looking all that good.  Recently NBC announced a wave of show renewals for their channel and the DC Comics show was nowhere to be seen.  So is all hope lost for this show?  Maybe not…

 

I’ve heard from a couple of sources now that NBC doesn’t really want to give up on Constantine and are actively searching for ways to keep the show going.  Let me preface the next thing I’m about say with this: the sources have made it clear that this is an IDEA/possible plan being bandied about.  So it’s not 100% and may not come to pass, but it is one of the more popular ideas being put out there right now amongst the show-heads.

 

Still with me?  Okay.  The idea here isn’t so much to keep Constantine going on NBC but to move it to the Syfy Channel (where the marathon they ran of the show did very well) and rebranding it as Hellblazer.  The new channel would give them a little more freedom to explore some of the darker aspects of the comic and appeal to a broader fanbase.

It’s still only a rumor and not an actual thing that’s going to happen, but let’s speculate because this is the internet and that’s all we do: it’s a great plan. Constantine clearly has dedicated fans willing to follow it into hell (HAHA, get it?). #SaveConstantine trends each time an episode airs. It’s like chanting “WE WANT SOMETHING” when that something is standing right there with their arms up.

Syfy has already aired Constantine with a marathon a few months ago, so this wouldn’t be the weirdest and biggest change ever. In fact, Syfy (when it was Sci-Fi) aired Heroes reruns to help build the audience for NBC.

And just how much cooler is the Hellblazer title than Constantine? Both names are evocative and unique for sure, but Hellblazer is far easier to understand and is just so rad.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQauGK0AeS4

Basic cable is a great place for a show like Constantine. The show hasn’t shied away from the grosser aspects that John Constantine involves himself with. Last night’s episode had John inspect a corpse with an exposed chest. Despite having seen every nasty zombie and horror media, and even some actual medical procedures here and there, I got pretty squeamish.

Still, on basic cable where shows like The Walking Dead thrive, material like Breaking Bad explored the darker reaches of the human psyche, and The Americans can do some of the most brutal stuff ever seen, Constantine might be in better company. Let’s keep up with the high school metaphor: Constantine is that same nice kid but is like, super into punk, prog metal and gross stuff that turns you off. Putting the show on basic cable is like him going to a concert where he can hang out with others just like him instead of getting weird looks from everyone else in class.

Furthermore, it can benefit Syfy. Almost everybody had a laugh at the channel’s expense when its president admitted they missed the genre-TV train that everyone is on board now. Game of Thrones, The 100The Walking DeadArrowThe Flash, all of these are massively popular shows that could have done well for Syfy but now are nowhere near an inch of them. Syfy had momentum after the groundbreaking Battlestar Galactica reboot, but then they tried to attract a wider audience and lost focus. Now they’re Sharknado.

(If you blame WWE’s presence you can go fuck yourself, pro wrestling is a weird and awesome subculture that all geeks should love. Check out WWE NXT, Lucha Underground, or New Japan Pro Wrestling which is offering its stuff this month for free.)

Syfy is slowly but surely trying to win back viewers. While geeks aren’t normally into reality programming, having shows like Face/Off or Heroes of Cosplay are modest efforts that show that reality TV isn’t just for the uber-rich to be dumb asses. I’m a huge fan of Dominion, an apocalyptic series about humans warring with heaven’s angels. Z Nation, their zombie series, is starting to get an audience which has legitimately surprised me. Defiance is doing well, and 12 Monkeys is getting buzz like crazy. Then there’s Helix, which a friend told me he didn’t expect to like, and Ascension was a cool experiment.

Constantine would be an amazing fit. It can perform exactly how it does now and not concern itself with cancellation, and it pretties up Syfy in their mission to become must-see TV. Everybody wins.

http://youtu.be/ntqjeVq2qyA?list=PLe1meJtylm2UmSTzEFbP-k6wS5Z2Ms1FQ

Except maybe not. You should know that I think this is a great move, but a move to Syfy is something of a defeat for nerd culture. Constantine is one of the most popular comic book characters of all time, so if his show — on broadcast TV, which rubs elbows with Jimmy Fallon and SNL — moves to the network that the mainstream associates with weird stuff they would never watch, it seals the fate of Constantine to remain a niche property.

Think of it this way: Green Arrow was a D-string superhero barely known by the mainstream, but a well-made TV show on an accessible network allowed him to become a household name. So how is it that Constantine, who was voted the third most popular comic book character of all time by Empire magazine and once was portrayed by Keanu Reeves, can’t attract the same audience?

We talk often about how nerds have taken revenge. Everybody sees the Marvel movies, your whole family gathers for Game of Thrones, you and your friends get excited for The Walking Dead, and comic conventions are bigger than they ever have been and are no longer an easy joke. San Diego Comic-Con is so huge, the city depends on it every year to stimulate their local economy. For the entertainment industry and certain cities, geeks are needed.

giphy

Constantine‘s very premise is as grand and big as something like Doctor Who but its punk heritage gives it a sharp edge. Should it be popular, Constantine could open the doors for more similar media. What happens when it’s rejected?

One little weird show getting moved to a more appropriate network isn’t the death knell for who we are. Far from it. But it’s a stark reminder that we haven’t penetrated the culture as much as we thought we have.

As of right now Constantine is still an NBC show and a move to Syfy isn’t even hinted at. Keep up with Geekscape and we’ll let you know more as soon as we do. Until then, #SaveConstantine.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nwtt4Eapeyk

Briefly: Well, I can’t exactly watch it, but it doesn’t mean that I’m not excited about it.

Syfy has just debuted the first 9 minutes of its anticipated 12 Monkeys adaptation. The series’ follows the journey of a time traveler, Cole, from the post-apocalyptic future.  Using a dangerous and untested method of time travel, Cole arrives in the present day on a mission to locate and eradicate the source of a deadly plague that will eventually decimate 93.6% of the human race. Will Cole be able to save the fate of mankind or is mankind bound by fate? Taking place in the ravaged future of 2043 and the present day (2015), 12 Monkeys explores themes of destiny, fate, love and the possibility of second chances.”

I loved the film, and I’m definitely down for this adaptation (let’s just hope it doesn’t stink).

You can take a look at the preview below (bearing that you’re in the USA), and be sure to let me know how it is! 12 Monkeys premieres on January 16th!

What wonderful news! Interesting, but still wonderful.

The SyFy Network (It’ll always be Sci Fi to me baby!) is joining forces with David Goyer & Ian Goldberg to create a TV Series based around the doomed planet.

Krypton joins the SLEW of other DC based television shows coming out. Constantine, Gotham, Supergirl, Titans, Lucifer, Arrow, The Flash, iZombie and Global Frequency. Did I name them all? Good.

No word on WHEN the show will air, but this kind of feels like a cash grab at this point. Let’s hope if it’s bad, it dies a quick death.

Source: Deadline

Geekscape sat down with the executive producer, and series creator, Kevin Murphy, and Defiance cast members Grant Bowler (Nolan), Julie Benz (Amanda Rosewater), Stephanie Leonidas (Irisa), Tony Curran (Datak Tarr), Jaime Murray (Stahma Tarr), Jesse Rath (Alak Tarr) at Comic Con last week to talk about the show’s second season.

Spoiler Warning: There are some in the article below.

 

COMIC-CON INTERNATIONAL: SAN DIEGO -- "Defiance Press Room/Panel" -- Pictured: (l-r) Julie Benz, Grant Bowler, Stephanie Leonidas, Jesse Rath, Jaime Murray, Tony Curran, and Executive Producer Kevin Murphy -- (Photo by: Evans Vestal Ward/Syfy)
COMIC-CON INTERNATIONAL: SAN DIEGO — “Defiance Press Room/Panel” — Pictured: (l-r) Julie Benz, Grant Bowler, Stephanie Leonidas, Jesse Rath, Jaime Murray, Tony Curran, and Executive Producer Kevin Murphy — (Photo by: Evans Vestal Ward/Syfy)

So the big news everyone was talking about is, of course, that Mia Kirshner’s Kenya is returning to the show mid-season. After her seeming murder by Stahma Tarr (Jaime Murray) at the end of last seasons, Kenya’s fate as been surrounded in mystery. While the details of her return are fuzzy, she will be back, returning in the Aug. 7 episode.

Meanwhile, the Tarr family drama will continue, with Datak running into more legal troubles.

“I think that, in the end, Stahma loves Datak. But in season one, she was trying to control events subtly, from within the strictures of her society. I think in season two Stahma is starting to get used to being an active, outward part of the town, and the business.” said Murray. “But in the end, her and Datak have been through too much, and are too entwined emotionally, to ever leave each other.”

Season two, which skipped forward nine months from the season one finale, has certainly shaken up the show, adding new characters and unraveling the lives of others.

“Amanda is really going through a lot.” said Benz, now a brunette, in keeping with her character’s darkening story line. “Losing Kenya and the mayorship was a big blow. She’s using drugs, there’s the whole device implanted in the brain issue. She’s gone a lot darker and has a lot of issues she has to deal with.”

Amanda Rosewater isn’t the only character dealing with dramatically changed circumstances.

“We definitely shook up the world of Defiance as much as we could.” said Murphy. “And for season three, it’s going to be even more of an upset.”

Defiance still has not been confirmed for a third season as of yet, however Murphy has said it will cover the Pale Wars and what happened to each person during that time.

Check out the Comic Con exclusive season two trailer here and let us know what you think in the comments!

Fans of Sharknado (or at least, fans who love to hate Sharknado) and other Syfy original programming will have plenty to see next weekend at the San Diego Comic Con. 

Syfy (does anyone else read this as sphy-e?) is hosting five panels at the Con: Sharknado 2, Defiance, Dominion, Helix and Ascension.

Sharknado 2

Actual Poster. Not actual size.
Actual Poster. Not actual size.

Sharknado 2 is the sequel-that-social-media spawned (after the twitterverse blew up over Sharknado) and the panel will feature Ian Ziering, Tara Reid, Vivica A Fox, Kari Wuhrer, Judah Friedlander and Director Anthony C Ferrante. Join them to discuss the “social media and pop culture storm of the century.” Special we-shouldn’t-have-to-say-it-but-better-safe-than-sorry note: Functioning chainsaws are not allowed at the Convention.

The Sharknado 2 panel will be on Thursday, July 24th, from 7:15 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. in room 6BCF (that’s a real room number. Honest).

Sharknado 2 will premiere on the Syfy channel on July 30th at 9/8c.

And in case you have no idea what a Sharknado is, here’s the trailer for the sequel:

Syfy will also have panels for it’s original television programming. Which it totally has. It’s not all WWE wrestling and Sharknado’s on Syfy  channel, you guys!

Dominion

Dominion is a new show premiering on Syfy this Fall. Guns, angels and  actual guns. Awesome.
Dominion is a new show which premiered this summer. Guns, angels and actual guns. Awesome.

Dominion premiered on Syfy on June 19th, and airs on Thursday at 9/8c. It’s set after Armageddon, and mankind’s last bastion of safety is the City of Vega, which was Las Vegas (there’s a sin metaphor here somewhere). It takes place after the events in the movie Legion,  where the war between Heaven and Hell has wrecked earth, and Mankind is pitted against Angels and Demons to survive. The panel will feature the series stars Chris Egan, Tom Wisdom, Roxanne McKee, Alan Dale and Anthony Stewart Head, as well as Executive Producer Vaun Wilmott.

The panel is on Friday, July 25th. from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in room 6DE.

Helix

So many pretty people, looking serious and doing science! We're so excited! The cast of SyFy's new show, Helix. Courtesy of SyFy
So many pretty people, looking serious and doing science! We’re so excited!
The cast of SyFy’s show, Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy

Syfy will also be featuring a panel with the cast of Helix, so we can ask all those burning questions. Like “How did you get a second season?” and “Where exactly are you in the Arctic where it’s equally night and day all the time?”

The second season will premiere sometime in Winter 2015.

And, if you want to know what we really think about Helix, head over to our 10 Things Wrong With Helix article.

Kyra Zagorsky, Mark Ghanime, Jordan Hayes, Neil Napier, and Executive Producers Ronald D Moore and Steven Maeda, will be on the panel, which will be from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m.  at the Hilton Bayfront Hotel in the Indigo Ballroom.

Defiance

Syfy's Defiance is now in its second season.

Syfy’s Defiance is now in its second season.

 Defiance returned to Syfy this summer for its second season. The show, which follows a group of diverse cross-section of humans and aliens attempting to live together on a terraformed Earth in the small frontier town of Defiance.

The popular multi-platform show is bringing its stars to Comic Con for a panel on Saturday, July 26th, from 1 pm to 2 p.m. at the Hilton Bayfromt Hotel in the Indigo Ballroom (hey, you can go for Helix and stay for Defiance!). The panel will feature Grant Bowler, Julie Benz, Stephanie Leonidas, Tony Curran, Jaime Murray, Jesse Rath and Executive Producer Kevin Murphy.

Defiance airs on Thursdays at 8/7 c and check out the season 2 trailer below:

Ascension

Ascension
Ascension, Syfy’s new Six-Hour Miniseries

Ascension marks Syfy’s return to the six-hour mini-series, which will debut in November of this year.  Ascension  follows a covert space mission, launched in 1963, that sent hundreds of people on a century long voyage to find another planet that humanity could survive on. The journey reaches its halfway mark when a murder on board causes the ship’s population to question the mission and their purpose.

Syfy’s Ascension panel will feature Tricia Helfer, Brian Van Holt, Andrea Roth, and Executive Producer Philip Levens, and will be from 3:15 to 4:15 p.m. on Saturday, July 26th,  in room 6DE.

Here’s a look at the (intriguing) trailer:

http://youtu.be/QpDVwfiLNRM

What do you think, Comic-Conners? Which panel is a must for you? All of them? None of them? Let us know in the comments!

Briefly: Sharknado 2: The Second One, the highly anticipated sequel to last year’s so-bad-that-it’s-amazing Syfy original, Sharknado, finally has a full trailer.

In the sequel, “a freak weather system turns its deadly fury on New York City, unleashing a Sharknado on the population and its most cherished, iconic sites – and only Fin (Ian Ziering) and April (Tara Reid) can save the Big Apple. Vivica A. Fox, Judd Hirsch and Mark McGrath also star.”

Sharknado 2: The Second One will premiere on Syfy on July 30th. The first film (and the newly announced sequel) had a huge presence at last year’s San Diego Comic Con, so it’ll certainly be interesting to see what the network has planned for this year’s convention!

Take a look at the trailer below, and let us know if you’re excited! If you’re looking for more Sharknado, check out Geekscape #299, featuring Sharknado screenwriter Thunder Levin.

Briefly: Just last month it was announced that a third Sharknado is already in the works, and now SyFy has announced its first ever Sharknado Week.

Clearly a play on Discovery’s insanely popular Shark Week (which begins on August 10th), Sharknado Week will begin on July 26th and run through August 2nd. Sharknado 2‘s highly anticipated premiere will fall on July 30th.

According to Variety, other content will include “Mega Shark vs. Mecha Shark,” “Sharkmania: The Top 15 Biggest Baddest Bloodiest Bites” and “Sharktopus vs. Pteracuda.”

Will you be checking in to Sharknado Week? Are you looking forward to the sequel’s premiere? Sound out below, and if you’re looking for more Sharknado, check out Geekscape #299, featuring Sharknado screenwriter Thunder Levin.

http://youtu.be/iwsqFR5bh6Q

Briefly: The first Sharknado sequel won’t premiere for a few more months, but Syfy has already revealed that a third film will follow.

No information about the third film has been revealed, but it will premiere in Summer of 2015.

Sharknado 2: The Second One will premiere on Syfy on July 30th. The first film (and the newly announced sequel) had a huge presence at last year’s San Diego Comic Con, so it’ll certainly be interesting to see what the network has planned for this year’s convention.

In the sequel, “a freak weather system turns its deadly fury on New York City, unleashing a Sharknado on the population and its most cherished, iconic sites – and only Fin (Ian Ziering) and April (Tara Reid) can save the Big Apple. Vivica A. Fox, Judd Hirsch and Mark McGrath also star.”

Are you excited for a third film? Are you even looking forward to the first sequel? Sound out below, and if you’re looking for more Sharknado, check out Geekscape #299, featuring Sharknado screenwriter Thunder Levin.

Sharknado

Source: AdWeek

Briefly: Sharknado 2: The Second One, the highly anticipated sequel to last year’s so-bad-that-it’s-amazing Syfy original, Sharknado, just got its premiere date.

In the sequel, “a freak weather system turns its deadly fury on New York City, unleashing a Sharknado on the population and its most cherished, iconic sites – and only Fin (Ian Ziering) and April (Tara Reid) can save the Big Apple. Vivica A. Fox, Judd Hirsch and Mark McGrath also star.”

Sharknado 2: The Second One will premiere on Syfy on July 30th. The first film (and the newly announced sequel) had a huge presence at last year’s San Diego Comic Con, so it’ll certainly be interesting to see what the network has planned for this year’s convention.

Are you looking forward to the sequel? Did you enjoy the original? Sound out below, and if you’re looking for more Sharknado, check out Geekscape #299, featuring Sharknado screenwriter Thunder Levin.

Sharknado

Brieflly: Since Syfy’s latest drama Helix isn’t faring too well with fans, maybe this news will keep you interested in the network:

DMZ, the DC series by Brian Wood and Riccardo Burchielli, is being adapted for television. Not familiar with with the property? Here’s the synopsis for the series, which ran monthly from 2005 – 2012:

In the near future, America’s worst nightmare has come true. With military adventurism overseas bogging down the Army and National Guard, the U.S. government mistakenly neglects the very real threat of anti-establishment militias scattered across the 50 states. Like a sleeping giant, Middle America rises up and violently pushes its way to the shining seas, coming to a standstill at the line in the sand — Manhattan or, as the world now knows it, the DMZ.

 

Matty Roth, a naïve young man and aspiring photojournalist, lands a dream gig following a veteran war journalist into the heart of the DMZ. Things soon go terribly wrong, and Matty finds himself lost and alone in a world he’s only seen on television. There, he is faced with a choice: try to find a way off the island, or make his career with an assignment most journalists would kill for. But can he survive in a war zone long enough to report the truth?

The critically acclaimed, award winning series, sounds interesting as hell, and it’s got some very successful producers already attached. Andre and Maria Jacquemetton, former Mad Men executive producers, and Gravity producer David Heyman have all joined the project.

There has been no work on a premiere date, or any actors at this time, but we’ll be sure to fill you in as we learn more. Were you a fan of the comic? What do you hope to see from a series? Sound out below!

DMZ50

Source: Deadline

SyFy’s newest show, Helix, from Ronald Moore—he of Battlestar Galactica fame—gave us great, great hope that, finally, there would be another well-written, well-plotted, hardcore science fiction show on SyFy. The zombie-not-really-but-yeah-zombies plot gave us pause, but we went into the pilot with great hopes.

So many pretty people, looking serious and doing science! We're so excited! The cast of SyFy's new show, Helix. Courtesy of SyFy
So many pretty people, looking serious and doing science! We’re so excited!
The cast of SyFy’s new show, Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy

We watched the second episode, bruised but still optimistic—after all, pilots always have more than their fair share of bumps and detours—but by the end of it we were grimly planning what other shows we could DVR if we cancelled Helix.

Episode three had pitfalls, but the last half hour was dark, dynamic, twisty-turny, riveting television. That last thirty minutes redeemed the show enough to give it one more week’s worth of space on the DVR.

Still, the show has issues. Though well-acted (in that Ronald Moore deeply-serious-tones-and-circular-discussions-followed-by-an-ultimatum kind of way) and beautifully shot, the show seems to view disease control procedures, scientific research and well, predictable behavior as troublesome ideas best left for other, less cutting-edge shows to deal with.

Which leaves us with our ‘ten things wrong’ with list. Because nothing gets us yelling back at our TV more than blatant misrepresentation of scientific protocols.

(oh, and, because we have to: spoilers below!. Duh.)

cast_daniel_aerov_138818253919___CC___685x385
Daniel Aerov (played by Meegwun Fairbother) as the Head of Security on SyFy’s new show, Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

1. The adopted-orphan-now-head-of-security dude: WTF? Daniel Aerov (played by Meegwun Fairbother) seems monumentally unfit to be the head of security. Utterly unable to actually catch anyone, he keeps running into sick people, and then does everything he can to make sure they get loose and cause the most amount of mayhem and panic they can. Examples: When patient zero escapes in the first episode, does he shut down the whole facility? No. Does he immediately initiate disease containment protocols? No. Remember, this is a guy who is supposedly equipped and informed enough to be the head of security at a state-of-the-art medical research lab, and even if we posit that argument that he is deliberately doing things wrong on some secret order of his boss/foster father (cause that’s not a conflict of interest) he does them badly. Not so much nefarious as bumbling.

And let’s talk about the RFID chip thingy he boasts so much about in the first episode:

2. The RFID chip thingy. Touted by Aerov for a good five minutes in the pilot, this handy little piece of tech is apparently immediately forgotten about by everyone at the lab UNLESS someone wants to try to get into some ‘spooky’ lab and can’t. Can we just point out that the number one thing in an infectious disease outbreak is containment? If we were a CDC scientist given that little gem (to be clear, Aerov very clearly states that ALL employees have one and that it can be remotely controlled to allow or restrict access—also implied is a sort of tracking system) our first order of the day would be to revoke ALL access and lock everyone in their rooms for a few hours while we figured out what the hell is going on.

ALSO, in the realm of tech-we-invented-but-didn’t-really-figure-out-how-to-use, when patient zero escapes into the vents (more on that later) and cuts off the hand of a security guard (with a bone saw!) to use his RFID chip to access rooms, not one person says: TURN OFF HIS RFID CHIP.

And later, when they lose even more people, no one says, hey, if the RFID chip receives a signal, can we track it??

Dr. Peter Farragut (Neil Napier) in SyFy's new show Helix. Courtesy of SyFy.
Dr. Peter Farragut (Neil Napier) in SyFy’s new show Helix. He totally doesn’t need to be quarantined. Pfft. He’s Fine.
Courtesy of SyFy.

3. LOSING PEOPLE. Seriously. The first two episodes were basically a CDC instruction manual on how NOT to quarantine people with a rare, unknown disease which causes paranoia, violence and a compulsive urge to spread said disease.  And they didn’t just lose people once or twice. They essentially lost every single one, sometimes MULTIPLE TIMES. Which allows for any number of walking-down-hallways-tossing-blame-around conversations where nothing ever gets resolved or changes or affects what people do next. They screw up, they have a tense conversation, then they go out and do the exact same thing again, and repeat the cycle.

Here’s our understanding of basic quarantine (and remember, we got our degree in theatre, so this is just broad strokes):

a. Quarantine infected and possibly infected in DIFFERENT ROOMS than each other and the general population

b. Have one team working on identifying the disease while another works on patient histories to determine cause of infection, transmission type, and rate of infection.

c. List known symptoms and treat as needed until vaccine/drug therapy can be created or discovered while keeping the infected/possibly infected separate from the general population.

What our team did was this:

a. Find three dead bodies COMPLETELY DISSOLVED INTO BLACK GOO, which we never see again, and do nothing.

b. Find one living person with black blood and LOSE HIM (they took off his restraints and wandered away, because clearly the CDC quarantine protocol must state: “if patient looks to be calm, assume that that state will never change and feel free to go about your business”).

c. Spend the next 25 minutes talking about their relationships. Admittedly, some of that was over test-tubes and centrifuges, so I guess they could be doing science while talking about which of them was going to take sexy-older-doctor Alan Farragut (an even-more-than-usual-gravely-voiced Billy Campbell) for whirl.

Oh, have we mentioned yet that for a show set in a science universe, with three strong, science-y woman, the pilot STILL failed the Bechdel test? Just thought we’d share that tidbit.

Dr. Doreen Boyle stumbles across an infected patient (the the other doctors lost) in SyFy's new show Helix.  Courtesy of SyFy.
Dr. Doreen Boyle stumbles across an infected patient (that the other doctors lost) in SyFy’s new show Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

When the ONE person on the team actually trying to do science (Dr. Doreen Boyle, played by Catherine Lemieux), discovers one of the escaped patients (after the infected attacks her), it takes her TWENTY MINUTES to get upstairs and tell the rest of the team. AND, even though a crazy, super-contagious, violent man is out and about in the air ducts and apparently IMMUNE to poison gas, no one tries to find her, or warn her, or even wonder where she is (note: it was twenty minutes real time. It was, like, hours in Helix time).

When more people get infected with this disease that makes you paranoid, violent and compelled to spread it, they group them ALL together and allow the not-so-sick to watch the sicker get even sicker and then—shocker—the not-so-sick freak out and stage a revolt not once, but twice, the second one being successful. And now there are four infected, contagious, violent people out and about and what do our heroes do? Get tranq guns, shut down every door on every level and do a floor by floor search? Ha. No. Why do that? Let’s talk about our feelings some more.

Dr. Alan Farragut (Billy Campbell) arguing against the use of stun weapons in SyFy's new show, Helix. Courtesy of SyFy.
Dr. Alan Farragut (Billy Campbell) arguing against the use of stun weapons in SyFy’s new show, Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

4. Tranq Guns: There aren’t any. Really? In a lab using animals for test subjects? Even if there aren’t any animals, I’m pretty sure there’s some sort of drug hanging around that will put down an elephant if given enough cc’s. But nope, despite many (many, many, many) conversations about the sanctity of life and the compassionate treatment of the infected, nobody even brings up tranq guns. Stun Batons, sure. Cause a crazed, paranoid, freakishly-strong infected not-zombie is just who you want to get nice and close to while also sending a bazillion (note: not actual amount of current) volts through them. That sounds like an EXCELLENT plan.

5. Shooting Infected People: Ok, so they’re super violent. And a little scary. But the disease is blood-born. Blood born! So don’t shoot them when they’re a few feet away from other people. BLOOD BORN CONTAGTION, PEOPLE. And Farragut’s self-righteous ‘we don’t shoot the sick’ was stirring and all that but he left out the ‘BLOOD BORN CONTAGION YOU IDIOT’ bit

Doreen Boyle, Major Balleseros (Mark Ghanime), Alan Farragut (Billy Campbell), Julia Walker (Kyra Zagorsky) and Sarah Jordan (Jordan Harprer) get ready to do some science on SyFy's new show Helix. Courtesy of SyFy.
Doreen Boyle (Catherine Lemieux), Major Balleseros (Mark Ghanime), Alan Farragut (Billy Campbell), Julia Walker (Kyra Zagorsky) and Sarah Jordan (Jordan Hayes) get ready to do some science on SyFy’s new show Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

6. Your Science is Bad, And You Should Feel Bad: Six samples—three ‘control’ and three ‘infected’–does not a statistic make. The two women scientists (finally not having a conversation about a man) who are (we have been repeatedly told) the absolute smartest, brightest, best-at-what-they-do-in-the-world, decide that the rapid response test with a total of SIX samples is obviously fool-proof.

Even when Julia Walker (Kyra Zagorsky) knows she’s been infected, and still passes the test, nobody doubts it for a second. There are so many problems here. Sample size is one thing, we could almost give the show that out of necessity; but the blithe ‘I tested it on three guards for a control’ comment—how are they a control? There are escaped, contagious people out and about, intent on spreading the disease, and we’re just going to assume that the first three guards you talk to aren’t sick?

 And, when Julia discovers she is actually infected (as she coughs up black blood), she doesn’t immediately think “well, crap, the test is wrong” which is almost understandable because she’s just realized she’s a dead woman walking, but NEITHER DOES ANYONE ELSE. Literally a room full of scientists who are supposed to be the WORLD’S best and no one goes, ‘um, wait a minute…’

Also, why was it even a thing about who was going to get tested and who wouldn’t amongst the CDC people? Shouldn’t EVERYONE get tested? Haven’t they ALL been exposed?

 These are not happy people, people! Courtesy of SyFy.

These are not happy people, people!
Courtesy of SyFy.

7. Quarantine Attempt Number 2: For their second attempt at a quarantine, Farragut et al find the abandoned level R, which once housed all of  Umbrella Corporation Arctic Biosystems, and which everyone says (at least twice) is really big and completely empty.

We would like to point out that the Level R geography is apparently Hogwartsian: nothing is ever where it used to be, and rooms and staircases and whole sections can move about. For example, the cold fusion room, which is the FIRST ROOM we see as being on Level R, is later not on Level R when they first send the violent infected there for their third attempt at quarantine, but then it is on Level R when the infected break out.

NOTE: What is the point of a quarantine room where the violent, paranoid, compelled-to-infect-others patients have ready access to the door?? Shouldn’t there be a least some sort of sally port?? Especially since they’ve already escaped twice…

 At first it seems like, after three days of idiocy, we’re actually going to get a real quarantine. Seal of the stairs, make the elevator the only access point, put the infected there and the uninfected go about their business (though we do have to bring up, one more time, why not just LOCK THEM IN THEIR ROOMS WITH THE RFID CHIP???). So they bring everyone at Arctic Biosystems down to level R (sorry, sorry, but we have to point out, again: why not lock everyone in their rooms, do the test, and then send anyone infected down to Level R? Once everyone has been tested, release the lock. Just…seriously).

Dr. Farragut (Billy Campbell) pushes through the rampaging crowd of people on SyFy's new show Helix. Courtesy of SyFy.
Dr. Farragut (Billy Campbell) pushes through the rampaging crowd of people on SyFy’s new show Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

 So they bring everyone down to level R and the do the rapid response test and then PUBLICLY call out who gets to stay locked in downstairs with the group of people who will become paranoid and violent and who gets to go back to their nice, clean rooms with windows and everything. And, hey, shocker, some people are not happy about that.

Also, they don’t isolate people, even though they’ve already seen how bad it can get when infected are keep with each other, and even though Level R apparently has lots of empty space. No, they just leave a bunch of people infected with a disease that makes them violent, and paranoid, and compelled to infect others,  in one giant warehouse-y type room.

Then, they lose another infected person. This is the third time now…AND they had put her in the same room with another patient, who she apparently killed?? Why do they keep putting these people IN THE SAME ROOMS TOGETHER? And when the guards open the door (for ….some reason) out she scampers, all bloody-eyed and leaking black blood.

It's not pretty. Courtesy of SyFy,
It’s not pretty.
Courtesy of SyFy,

Of course our favorite security chief runs into the main room full of already tense, sick, angry people and loudly announces that there’s a blood thirsty, infected, killer on the loose on level R.

Why would he do that?

So of course there’s a stampede to get off the level, and Farragut—he of the ‘we don’t shoot our patients’—has to shoot the rampaging infected girl, and then the CDC people somehow manage to get off level R and an agonized Farragut commands them to ‘lock it down.’

We thought it was locked down? Wasn’t that the point? That the infected were locked in there? That access was limited? Couldn’t they still send food, etc. down there? It just doesn’t make any sense!

And of course, the people in Level R immediately devolve into Lord Of The Flies-esque behavior (complete with leaving dead bodies just lying around the hallways, ‘cause that’s sanitary), because that’s what people do at the slightest possible provocation.

Clearly evil. Mark Ghanime as Major Sergio Balleseros on SyFy's new show Helix. Courtesy of SyFy.
Clearly evil.
Mark Ghanime as Major Sergio Balleseros on SyFy’s new show Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

 8. Evil Military Man Does Terrible Things and No One Notices. If everyone could just stop being so concerned about who may-or-may-not sleep with Doctor Farragut, or who did-or-did-not sleep with each other, they might actually start to wonder about  Major Sergio Balleseros (Mark Ghanime) who is clearly up to NO good.

ex 1: A random Arctic Biosystems scientist manages to walk out the front door, after a quarantine has been initiated? Send Balleseros after him and then NEVER EVER ask if he found him, and if he did, where is the scientist?

ex 2: Only two people know about an infected monkey, one of whom is Balleseros, and the monkey disappears? Couldn’t possibly be because Balleseros is a BAD GUY.

ex 3: Threaten to tell the world about the bad things Arctic Biosystems is doing in front of Balleseros and the next thing that happens is the satellite dish blows up? Who would possible want to investigate that? Why even have a conversation about it? I mean, clearly, if security genius Aerov thinks there’s nothing weird about a satellite dish BLOWING UP than everything must be kosher, right?

So. Many. Problems. I may need to monologue soon. Courtesy of SyFy
So. Many. Problems. I may need to monologue soon.
Courtesy of SyFy

9. Everybody Has Problems, But My Problems Are Worse Than Yours: We get that drama needs, well, drama, but sometimes a deadly contagion should really be able to take center stage. Not so for our heroes, however, because every single one of them has a BACKSTORY, and it’s AFFECTING THEM. God. Why can’t people understand??

So far, in just three episodes, (and only counting major characters) we have:

a. An ex-husband (Farragut) who is still in love with his ex-wife (Julia), who cheated on him with his brother (ew).

b. An ex-wife  (Julia) who is still in love with her ex-husband’s brother (ew) but isn’t above lobbing cheap shots at the ex-husband for not ‘seeing her’ enough, which apparently is a good enough reason to excuse her cheating on him with his brother.

c. The hot-shot super-smart-multiple-PhDs-but-not-a-lot-of-social-skills-doctor Sarah Jordan (Jordan Hayes) who has a crush on Farragut and views Julia as inferior because she clearly wasn’t good enough to keep her man (seriously?) AND is hiding the fact that she has a deadly brain tumor (which apparently can be diagnosed on sight by any decent oncologist… but none of the other CDC doctors who are trained in diagnosis even notice) and has run out of her drugs so decides to get high on some morphine instead.

d. The unnerving head of Arctic Biosystems, Hiroshi Hatake (Hiroyuki Sanada), who clearly is creeping after Julia right from the first episode but on one else notices (ew again) and is clearly hiding many, many things from, well, just about everyone. he also has super-weird silver eyes. Oh, and he has the smallpox virus just hanging out in his basement

e. The brother (he of the cheating on/with) who is Patient Zero and dying, is still in love with Julia, but so tortured by it he fled to the Arctic to avoid it; and oh, if that wasn’t enough, Brother Farragut and Doctor Farragut had a drunk, abusive dad that Brother Farragut protected Doctor Farragut from. (Based upon the number of TV characters with this particular backstory, one out of every 2 homes must have an abusive parent in it).

This is what happens when you don't protect your air ducts, people! Peter Farragut (Neil Napier) attacks Julia Walker (Kyra Zagorsky) and infects her with the mystery disease on SyFy's new show Helix. Courtesy of SyFy.
This is what happens when you don’t protect your air ducts, people!
Peter Farragut (Neil Napier) attacks Julia Walker (Kyra Zagorsky) and infects her with the mystery disease on SyFy’s new show Helix.
Courtesy of SyFy.

10. The Air Vents: Why are there GIANT air vents that go EVERYWHERE, throughout this contained facility where people are carrying out research on some of the most deadly airborne viruses known to man. So sure, large, unfiltered, non-hermetically sealed air vents are JUST what you’d find there.

Even if, say, we were willing to believe the living areas had large air vents (okay…) they would not connect to the lab levels; and certainly the air vents in the lab levels, where all of this super dangerous research was happening, would essentially be super-filtered every step of the way, creating a hermetically sealed environment in each lab. Right? We mean, that’s just basic how-to-keep-bad-things-out-of-the-air protocol, right?

Wrong. Giant, metal, unfiltered, un-HEPA’d air vents throughout every level of the facility.

Oh, but they can lock the vents tight and push poison gas through them. Why?? What did they think were going to get into the vents?? Why did they spend all that money on ‘fill the vents with poison’ equipment instead of filters, etc., which would keep people (things?) out of the vents in the first place??

We’re not saying they couldn’t use the vents; we’re just saying, this stuff needs to be explained. Especially on a ‘hard science’ show.

What do you think of Helix? Love it, hate it, haven’t seen it? Let us know in the comments!

Helix airs on the Syfy Channel on Fridays 10/9c. Catch up on episodes at SyFy.com

Comikaze is this weekend! It’s been a long time coming… and nobody knows Comikaze better than the cast of Syfy’s ‘Fangasm’, who served as Comikaze interns this past spring! This is a really solid episode as we discuss issues like Cosplay is not Consent with Molly McIsaac, what got us into being geeks with Kristin Hackett and Paul Perkins and Marvel VS DC with Mike Reed! Also, what REALLY went down between Sal and Dani when the cameras weren’t rolling? Plus! Guest co-host Andrew Duvall brings his girlfriend Lisa Best by the show to talk about their new web series ‘The Apartment’! And I definitely have a Fangasm!

The next game in the Batman Arkham series hits next week with ‘Batman: Arkham Origins’! But this time there are some changes! Developer Rocksteady Games has given way to Warner Brothers Montreal and both Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill have been replaced as Batman and The Joker! Luckily, I think we’re in really good hands, as new Batman voice actor Roger Craig Smith can attest to on this episode as he talks about becoming the Dark Knight, the difference in playing him as opposed to Captain America on Disney’s ‘Avengers Assemble’ and how he got into voice over work to begin with! There’s also a ton more, include a call from ‘Airwolf’ writer David Gorden to talk about the new comic’s release and guest co-host Andrew Duvall from SyFy’s ‘Fangasm’!

Courtesy of Syfy Channel
Courtesy of Syfy Channel

The concept for SyFy’s newest reality series, Fangasm, is simple: Follow seven interns as they spend a summer working in Stan Lee’s ComiKaze Expo offices. If the title, Stan Lee’s involvement or the word ComiKaze didn’t clue you in, the seven interns are definitely members of the comic book fandom.

And they truly are. We quickly meet our interns—Andrew Divall, Sal Fringo, Kristin Hackett, Molly McIsaac, Paul Perkins, Mike Reed and Dani Snow as they arrive at the ComiKaze headquarters in Los Angeles after a very brief “geek background check”. The show is formatted like your typical reality show, with ‘confessional’ one-on-ones; backstory tidbits; challenges (handed out by Geekscape friend Regina Carpinelli, co-founder and CEO of Comikaze); and house drama.

The cast is cute in their fandom, but, while they are highly representative of the fan culture, they are not, necessarily, fully representative of the geek culture (where’s the board gaming?). They belong on the Venn diagram, sure, but they are not the totality, as evidenced by an early division among Marvel VS DC lines.

fan 4

Yes, That Just Happened

And maybe this challenge of trying to encompass everything that makes us geeks is inherent in the “identity crisis” that the show runs into in some segments. At times, it’s incredibly sincere, like when a cast member expresses his dream of meeting Star Trek’s George Takei (and just wait until the heartfelt ending). At its worst (and we did like the the show), Fangasm struggles to fit the cast into a story-driven reality format, as evidenced when the guys are tasked with lighting a gas grill. Are we being asked to relate to a show that makes fun of us?

Ultimately, does the production know what to do with its seven interns? We spent most of  our time wondering: is this a celebration of the geek? Or a one-hour long practical joke put together by the mean girls to show during the pep rally? Are we supposed to be contemptuous of them? Because it surely feels like that’s the show’s theme. For a culture that prides itself in being all inclusive, Fangasm spent a lot of time labeling its cast mates as “other”. Sorry, that we’re not The Jersey Shore.

A prime example is the girls-of-comics segment (put on during the National Geek Day celebration). It was mind-blowingly misogynistic, sexist, exploitive and insulting. The full thirty-seconds spent on “Supergirl” shaking her bikini-clad behind at the camera—why? What did that prove? If a cast member had been tasked with doing something like this, we could have explored our own geek crisis, to be accepted, but on our own terms.  But as onlookers, the cast was split along gender lines, with the boys asking for dollar bills and the girls looking horrified. The entire segment seemed there as some sort of ‘look, geeks can be hot, especially when they dress/dance like strippers!’ and McIsaac’s follow up concern to the dancing felt swept under the rug in the name of just having fun. Again, do we want our culture to be accepted by all just so they can re-appropriate it into something it was never intended to be? Are the cast members only present so they can be poked with sticks? Fangasm has to decide.

Stan Lee's Comikaze Expo
Stan Lee’s Comikaze Expo

But…ComiKaze! Stan Lee! George Takei!

In the end, the positives definitely outweigh the “concerns”, and the show does have a lot of fun moments (and the castmembers are all pretty likable, even “Macho Geek” Sal, who we get to know the least and is seen doing push ups twice during the show (is he our ‘Situation’?). And the internship at Comikaze definitely looks fun, a huge expo where all things geek, nerd and comic book are celebrated. And, again, there were many truly sweet moments in the show in which you really root for the cast members, especially in the last few minutes, when George Takei makes a special appearance.

The casts’ genuine appreciation for what they are doing—working with Stan Lee!—and their support of each other speaks to all the best things about the geekdom. The producers have done a great job of picking our representatives. The seven interns deserve every opportunity that this show will give them; and hopefully the show can appreciate them as much as they seem to appreciate each other.

Fangasm is produced by the creators of Jersey Shore, 495 Productions, with Executive Producers SallyAnn Salsano and Joel Zimmer. It premieres on the SyFy channel on Tuesday, September 24th at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

Rating: 3/5

Briefly: This sounds like a great watch, and some fantastic coverage for Stan Lee’s Comikaze (which we, of course, are HUGE proponents of).

This September, Syfy is set to introduce a new docu-series (is that a nicer word for a reality series?) that follows seven geeky superfans on their quest to obtain an internship with Stan Lee.

Fangasm spotlights seven very different people whose niche uber-obsessions run the gamut from comic books and collectibles to science fiction and fantasy to cosplay and live action role playing. Living together and working together at Stan Lee’s Comikaze Expo, Los Angeles’ largest pop-culture convention, the cast must contend with each others oversized personalities and conflicting passions as they vie for a opportunities within Lee’s organization. Because when different passions come together – you get a real big bang. Fangasm debuts Tuesday, September 24 at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT on Syfy.

These roommates stop at nothing to prove their fan-cred to each other, debating everything from favorite superheroes, Star Wars vs. Star Trek, and even what they would do in the event of a real zombie apocalypse. And while the claws do come out, this hilarious and loveable group is ultimately bound together by a shared joy of fandom.

Over the course of the season, the eager group dives into their internships at Comikaze as it prepares for the upcoming Comikaze Expo – the comic, gaming, anime, sci-fi, fantasy horror and general pop-culture expo held each November in Los Angeles. The massive convention is a year-round business, run by Lee, Regina Carpinelli (who guides the interns as their supervisor) and Cassandra Peterson (better known as Elvira Mistress of the Dark). The pressure is on for the interns, who all have high hopes of earning an actual job with the organization. Throughout the summer, they are thrust into a myriad of assignments, both in the field and at the Comikaze Expo headquarters. They pitch comic book ideas to Lee, clean a storage space belonging to Elvira, and pull out all the stops to plan for the star-studded Comikaze launch party. Along the way they get to meet the original Mr. Sulu himself, George Takei, a truly emotional and dream moment for one of the interns.

Sounds pretty awesome, huh? Fangasm is set to premiere on September 24th on Syfy, and Comikaze 2013 hits LA on November 1st! Tickets for the convention are on sale now, and if you enter the promo code GROOVY (because Bruce Campbell WILL be in attendance), you’ll net a sweet discount. Be sure to let us know if you plan on watching Fangasmand read more about each contestant below!

comikaze

ANDREW DUVALL – 27 – Valdosta, GA (Hometown) and Los Angeles, CA
Andrew always dreamed of being the Captain of the Starship Enterprise, but instead he works for Enterprise Rent-A-Car. When he’s not in his Star Trek uniform watching Star Trek marathons he can be found playing Magic: The Gathering. Sometimes he’ll do both at once. Andrew is self-aware in the best possible way, and loves making people laugh.

DANI SNOW – 26 – Burbank, CA
Dani was raised on the original Star Wars movies and the works of Tolkien. Reading Harry Potter and watching Lord of the Rings did not make her popular, but after high school she blossomed socially, and gravitated towards fellow geeks. She’s played a pirate at a Renaissance Pleasure Faire, and tours the convention circuit with The Damsels of Dorkington, a comedy troupe. She now spends her days doing special effects makeup on short films, performing comedy whenever she can and using her Harry Potter knowledge at her job to help identify copyrighted material online for the franchise.

KRISTEN HACKETT – 23 – New York, NY
Kristin is a single and sexy comic book fangirl living in New York City. She loves that the city she lives in is also the dwelling place of her favorite superheroes, namely Spider-Man and Nightwing. Her three passions in life are blogging geek culture, comics and fashion. With All-American good looks she is often hit on by jocks and meatheads; however, she’s only attracted to super dorky and nerdy guys. Her passion for comics and graphic novels is evidenced by her massive collection and commitment to travel the country to attend every comic convention possible, which she covers for her websites. She admits she is a hoarder when it comes to collectibles, and she was even compelled to create a giant spreadsheet for her collection of 600+ graphic novels. The obsessions are only overshadowed by her closet full of custom cosplay outfits. A graduate of the Fashion Institute of Technology, Kristin enjoys designing and creating her own costumes.

MIKE REED – 22 – Ybor City District of Tampa (Hometown) and New York, NY
Mike considers himself the ultimate comic book and superhero fan. He loves all DC comics and wants to live his life like Superman. He’s an active cosplayer and founded his own group called Team Avalanche, making amazing costumes and putting on shows across Florida. Even though he’s a nerd, he has quite the charm on the ladies. By night he will go to the club with a confident swagger, and by day he will sport spandex. Though he just received an amazing promotion at his job, he’s willing to quit for the opportunity to be an intern for Stan Lee’s Comikaze.

MOLLY McISAAC – 24 – Soldotna, AK (Hometown) and Seattle, WA
Molly is determined to show the world that not all fangirls are “the comic book guy.” A self-proclaimed fashionista and cosplay queen, she blasts away nerd stereotypes by being incredibly social and fond of the nightlife. Steadfast in her feminist beliefs, Molly is often labeled a “difficult woman” or “kind of crazy,” but it’s just because she’s incredibly confident and not afraid to be loud if she doesn’t agree with someone or something. This makes dating difficult – especially since she only likes successful, professional geeks! But her social views do not mean her geeky interests fall to the wayside: she’s particularly fond of anime, comic books, cosplay, video games, and LARPing. With incredibly sharp wit, an army of fanboys, and a secret belief that she’s more intelligent than most people, Molly is a powerful force to be reckoned with.

PAUL PERKINS – 22 – Sacramento, CA
Getting this internship would be a double win for Paul. In one fell swoop he’d have a job and move out of his parent’s house. It’s every true nerd’s dream! Paul is passionate about all things comic books, sci-fi and Yu-Gi-Oh tournaments. He is a huge film buff with a massive collection of over 2,000 movies. While Paul is opinionated and outspoken, when it comes to girls he crawls right back into his shell. He lacks confidence around women, which he says is part of the reason he hasn’t had a girlfriend in over four years – that and the fact he likes to dress up as a Marvel superhero.

SALVATORE FRINGO – 25 – Amsterdam, NY
Salvatore is not what you’d call a shy geek. He’s loud and vocal about what he loves, and what he loves are superheroes. While he’s a huge fan of the heroes of the Marvel Universe, he doesn’t discriminate against any characters because of their publisher. He may not be a gifted engineering genius like his comic book idol Tony Stark, but he does teach kids how to create their own superheroes, all while he dresses like Iron Man. He thinks of himself as a new breed of geek because he’s “attractive, funny, cocky…but with a sweet side.” He’s hoping that sweet side will be sweet enough to land him his real life Pepper Potts.

It’s Shark Week! So of course we have to have ‘Sharknado’ writer Thunder Levin on the show to talk about the biggest TV hit of the summer! Among the things we’ll be covering: where did the idea come from, why writer Sharknado but not ‘Shark Storm’ and the revelation of Ian Ziering as a big time action hero! Was anyone prepared for the Sharknado craze (could they ever be!?!)? Also, what’s with all of the remakes and comic book adaptations and it is killing the movie going experience? Is VOD the new VHS? What’s the story behind ‘Mutant Vampire Zombies in the Hood’ and how can we bring it back?!?

 

Briefly: Just hours before Sharknado screenwriter Thunder Levin appears live on Geekscape #299 (check it out here), Syfy has revealed the official title for the surprising smash-hit’s impending sequel.

Ready? You’ve never heard a title this clever.

The Sharnado sequel, which will release in July of 2014, is called Sharknado 2: The Second One.

Speaking with Entertainment Weekly, Thomas Vitale, executive VP of programming at Syfy stated that “Since Twitter played such a huge role in the success of the original movie, we wanted to use that platform to ask our fans to name Sharknado 2. This response is another reminder of how Sharknado has become a pop culture phenomenon. We want to thank all our viewers for their wonderful contributions to keeping up the shark-mentum.”

Pop culture phenomenon is right. Since Sharknado‘s original airdate on July 11th, not a single day has passed in which I haven’t seen or heard someone talking about the film.

Let us know what you think of the title, and don’t forget to watch tonight’s Geekscape with Thunder Levin!

Sharknado

Source: Entertainment Weekly

Just reported from our friends over at Deadline, the signature show for the SyFy network will be coming to a close. The good news is that the fifth and final season will be a sort of closer, or an ender if you will. It will be abbreviated and finish up the story. From the news break:

“Warehouse 13 has been an incredible signature series for us,” said Syfy President of Original Content Mark Stern. “We are grateful to the loyal and passionate fan base and know that Jack Kenny, his gifted creative team, and outstanding ensemble cast will give them an amazing finale season.” Saul Rubinek, Eddie McClintock, Joanne Kelly, Allison Scagliotti and Aaron Ashmore star in the drama from Universal Cable Prods.

So all good things must come to an end, I am just bummed that the most adorable actress on TV (Allison Scagliotti ) wont be on any more to make me go “Awwww”.

Warehouse 13

Defiance fans, you’re getting another season!

The series premiere was the second most watched episode in Syfy’s history, and ratings have been strong ever since, so this awesome news isn’t the least bit surprising.

Season two will consist of 13 episodes, with production beginning this August. I (disappointingly) haven’t started the series (or tie-in game) yet, but based on viewer reception and the previews that I’ve seen, it should be a fun ride.

Read the full press release below, and let us know what you think of the show!

New York, NY – May 10, 2013 – Syfy has renewed its groundbreaking series Defiance, giving a 13-episode second season order to the critically acclaimed hit that has catapulted Syfy to the top cable drama spot in the time period among adults 18-49, adults 25-54 and total viewers for three consecutive Mondays.  Season two of Defiance, produced by Universal Cable Productions, will begin production in Toronto in August for a 2014 premiere, returning as the anchor of Syfy’s Powerful Monday’s block of primetime original series.
 
Redefining the transmedia experience, Defiance has distinguished itself with an unprecedented partnership between Syfy and Trion Worlds, by creating the first-ever true convergence of television and online gaming.  To date, the game has garnered more than 1 million registered accounts while making gaming history as the first online open world shooter to launch on three platforms simultaneously.  As the collaboration between show and game continue into a second season, players will have the opportunity to further influence the world of Defiance.
 
Kevin Murphy (Desperate Housewives, Caprica, Hellcats) resumes his role as executive producer and showrunner. Smallville’s Darren Swimmer and Todd Slavkin return as executive producers for season two and Michael Taylor serves as consulting producer.
 
“Bringing the rich world of Defiance to life has been in incredible team effort.  We couldn’t ask for better partners than Kevin Murphy, his amazing cast and crew, and Trion Worlds,” said Mark Stern, President of Original Content for Syfy and Co-Head of Original Content for UCP. “We can’t wait to see where they take us in the second season.”
 
Set in the near future, Defiance features an exotically transformed planet Earth, its landscapes permanently altered following the sudden – and tumultuous – arrival of seven unique alien races.  In this somewhat unknown and unpredictable landscape, the richly diverse, newly-formed civilization of humans and aliens must learn to co-exist peacefully.  Each week, viewers follow an immersive character drama set in the boom-town of Defiance, which sits atop the ruins of St. Louis, Missouri, while in the game, players will experience the new frontier of the San Francisco Bay area.
 
The audience for its April 15 premiere was the second largest series premiere in the network’s history among adults 18-49, making it the biggest in nearly nine years in that coveted demographic, based on Live +7 Data. The premiere also delivered almost 4 million viewers (3,834,000) and has quickly become Syfy’s highest-rated original series this year in adults 18-49, adults 25-54 and total viewers.  It has also received unprecedented attention as a transmedia event in partnership with Trion Worlds’ MMO game.  Airing Mondays at 9pm, Defiance stars Grant Bowler, Julie Benz, Stephanie Leonidas, Tony Curran, Jaime Murray, Graham Greene and Mia Kirshner.

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.