How did your brain even learn human speech? I'm just so curious.

Wash ,'Objects In Space'


Fan Fiction: Writers, Readers, and Enablers  

This thread is for fanfic recs, links, and discussion, but not for actual posting of fanfic.


Katie M - Jul 12, 2004 11:54:24 am PDT #8593 of 10000
I was charmed (albeit somewhat perplexed) by the fannish sensibility of many of the music choices -- it's like the director was trying to vid Canada. --loligo on the Olympic Opening Ceremonies

I can't help with Angel/Lindsey, but here's the link I posted over in Natter. It includes a list of recs pages, among other things.


Dana - Jul 12, 2004 12:08:22 pm PDT #8594 of 10000
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

For Angel/Lindsey, you want sisabet's "Last Stand in Open Country". The link isn't up on her site, I think because she recently remastered it, but it's available here.


Jars - Jul 12, 2004 12:55:32 pm PDT #8595 of 10000

Because - gah. Gah. Gah. One of my Top Shaggable Ginger Blokes, he is.

Yes. Damian Lewis may also be my favourite ginger, and I am very, very fond of gingers. Well, somebody has to be.

I wasn't so fond of Band of Brothers. I watched the first few but never really got into it. I first saw him in a one-off called Warriors a few years ago, which was some of the best tv I have ever seen as well as being very tasty. Ioan Gruffudd was also in it, so yes, very tasty.


Kathy A - Jul 12, 2004 2:30:49 pm PDT #8596 of 10000
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I loved Damian Lewis in Band of Brothers. But, the best looking guy in that series was the medic. Best impersonation of the real soldier was by the guy who played the Italian from South Philly, nicknamed Gonorrhea (Guarini? something like that)--if you watch the documentary We Stand Alone Together, you can see how the actor just nailed the performance, even though we're seeing the man 60 years later.


Connie Neil - Jul 12, 2004 8:04:18 pm PDT #8597 of 10000
brillig

I've discovered the most amazing Spike/Xander story. "Thirst" by Carolyn Claire. It should have been filmed in black and white by Rod Serling and shown in the great old days of "Twilight Zone."

[link]


Nutty - Jul 13, 2004 6:44:32 am PDT #8598 of 10000
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

guy who played the Italian from South Philly, nicknamed Gonorrhea (Guarini? something like that)

I don't remember the real person's name, but the actor is Frank John Hughes, who is from South Philly, so that would be part of why he was good at it. Actually I don't think he can turn that accent off.

The other guy who came from South Philly was played by a redhead with pale skin and came from, like, Edinburgh. Entertainingly head-spinny.


sumi - Jul 13, 2004 6:58:52 am PDT #8599 of 10000
Art Crawl!!!

IMDB says that Frank John Hughes is from the Bronx.

Shockingly there is no picture of Shane Taylor who plays the medic.


sumi - Jul 13, 2004 7:05:11 am PDT #8600 of 10000
Art Crawl!!!

Here's a small one.


Anne W. - Jul 13, 2004 2:57:24 pm PDT #8601 of 10000
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

I'm hauling this topic over from Boxed Set, since I think it'll generate more discussion over here. We were talking about Consuela's SG1 fic, "Tuscany," and she said that "happy is harder in a lot of ways."

I've noticed that this is the case. Also, it seems that most of the fics I'm seeing recced (speaking about reccers I trust, BTW) tend towards the dark'n'angsty. Sometimes I wonder why this is: is it because most of the people whose literary tastes intersect with mine prefer the dark to the light, or is it because there are fewer well-written light'n'happy fics out there? I have a hard time buying the notion that angst is somehow "better" than happiness in fic.

Thoughts?


Consuela - Jul 13, 2004 3:04:16 pm PDT #8602 of 10000
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Oh, it's the great dark!fic debate!

Heee.

Part of the problem for me is that story requires action, requires a driver. And, well, there aren't a lot of happy drivers that result in sufficient tension to give a story any kind of forward momentum.

So "Tuscany" works because it's so short, because it doesn't need a plot. Hell, it's not really a story in the classic sense, just a vignette. Keeping that tone in place during something longer, with an actual plot? Would be hard.

That's not to say that some people can't do funny stories, where the driver is some sort of silly thing that makes the story and the characters' responses funny (Yahtzee's "In Harm's Way" or BetanSurvey's "Shoulda Brought a Bag" come to mind). But I'm not that good at humor, myself. Sly wit, fine. But not comedy.