Would Dollhouse, or what we know if it so far, be cyberpunk?
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Of course, Jillian snarkily said it was as if someone a filmed Shadowrun campaign...
A poorly-run Shadowrun campaign, don't forget that part.
And she didn't even see the episode with the dudes with the implants...
Oh lord. I shudder to think.
Wow, this was a great bit of reading.
In Search of Dracula: The History of Dracula and Vampires, Radu Florescu
I have a signed copy. We were close friends with his son (same name) and family when we lived in Romania.
Lucia di Lammermoor gets my vote as "Opera Most Easily Made Into A Hammer Film." Wasn't the aria used in Fifth Element from Lucia di Lammermoor? So there's a goth--cyberpunk axis.
Would Logan's Run count as cyberpunk TV? It's not so much the Mad Max breakdown of society as what happens after, but after they go on the run they seem to hit some cyberpunk.
The pilot movie of "V" was, but the series NSM.
"Everybody Loves Raymond," totally cyberpunk.
Poemtry: I actually think Wallace Stevens "Blackbird" series is goth, and not just because of the word "black." Is there a genre called "Zen Goth?"
I think some of the suggestions are more Gothic than goth, but as I happily (morosely) span both, I can't complain.
I actually think Wallace Stevens "Blackbird" series is goth, and not just because of the word "black." Is there a genre called "Zen Goth?"
I JUST taught that poem in a PD on Tuesday. I can see only two or three in the series of thirteen vignettes that are goth. Like the biblical verse one (Haddam) NSM. But the only thing moving is the eye of the blackbird? maybe. The connecticut glass coach and the equipage, definitely.
Speaking of goth and black birds, Ted Hughes' book Crow is quite goth indeedy.
"Everybody Loves Raymond," totally cyberpunk.
HA.
Wasn't the aria used in Fifth Element from Lucia di Lammermoor?
It is indeed. (Of course I have it favorited in YouTube - it most awesome.)
thank you! I've always wondered about that.
the aria used in Fifth Element
I was so happy with that until they decided to go techno with it.
I just saw this on Neil Gaiman's blog, and I thought it might produce some interesting conversation. It's Entertainment Weekly’s list of the 100 most important books since 1983. The list seems kind of random to me. I’ve only read about 10 of the books, but I have a bunch more of them on my shelves.