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Meme time

Nov. 25th, 2004 03:08 pm
selenak: (Darla - Kathyh)
[personal profile] selenak
From [livejournal.com profile] buffyannotater.


1. Name a favorite show that you began watching because someone else recommended it. How important is that show to you?

I think the only ones I discovered on my own were the Star Treks, Babylon 5 and Highlander. Everything else – the Jossverse shows, Blake’s 7, Farscape, American Gothic, and now Alias – came by recommendation from various friends. It’s one of the most appealing aspects of fannish life, this sharing of enthusiasm(s). I love (or in the case of Alias like) all of these recommeded shows, but Joss Whedon's three shows - Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly - are what I fell in love with more than with any other rec.


2. Name a tv show or book or movie that you persuaded someone else to try

Lots. BtVS and Angel, Farscape and Firefly, Blake’s 7, DS9 and Babylon 5. I’m also big in the business of Sandman advertising. I think at the moment I’m most proud of having pimped the last, best hope (i.e. B5) and DS9 to [livejournal.com profile] andrastewhite. This already produced wondrous amounts of lovely B5 fanfic starring my favourite ambassadors, and will undoubtedly result in DS9 goodness as well.


3. Name an episode of TV show, a movie, or a book that you changed your mind about after reading a post or review or hearing a friend talk about it. How did they change your mind? Did you like it and now have mixed feelings? Did you hate it, and now like it?


Right now, I can only think of Chimera. (A DS9 episode.) In a manner of speaking. I loved it when first watching it, and named it as one of the examples of a Sci-Fi medium successfully depicting a romantic and sexual relationship between two different species in an essay called “Loving the Alien”. (Or not.) This caused [livejournal.com profile] londonkds to write an entry of his own specifically about this episode, showing that it can be read as having an extremely homophobic subtext. I still don’t think that was the intention, but I do agree the episode lends itself to such a reading, as well as to the one I myself applied.

(I didn't warm up to Farscape or BTVS immediately, and certainly the enthusiasm of my friends contributed to me sticking around long enough to get hooked, but that's another matter.)


4. Do you read reviews before buying a book, DVD, or seeing a movie or tv show? If so, how do the reviews influence your choice? Or do you tend to veer away from reviews and test it for yourself?


That depends. With tv shows, there was a period where I did that extensively. Then I switched to no spoilers, which proved to be ever so much better, but if there were spoilerfree reviews, I still read them. In the case of movies, I read reviews trusting that the reviewer will not reveal every last detail of the plot to me, and give me a general impression of what he/she thought this film is like. Depending on the film in question, and whether I’m emotionally invested already in the subject, director, scriptwriter, actors or any of the above, this can be decisive on whether or not I watch the film, yes. As for books: some positive reviews have made me curious about books I might have otherwise missed, but so far no negative review has stopped me from reading one.

Otoh, reading reviews after watching the film/episode in question often has caused that "what show/movie were they watching?!?" feeling....

5. Are there any movies or tv shows or books you would never admit to watching or reading, because you fear how others will regard you? (This is a tough question to answer for obvious reasons.)

Not really. I mean, I’ve read books – and occasionally still read them – which aren’t ever going to make it on my recommendation lists, and I am aware they are extremely deriative. (Case in point: The Dragonlance Chronicles and the Star of the Guardians. Liked both, am not going to tell you to read either. ) But if I felt ashamed, I’d hardly admit it. Or... wait! I found something embarassing. In the 80s, I watched most of the tv soap opera Dallas.
***

In other news: my Alias/X-Men crossover, now titled "Ferry Tales" - what can I say, I have a soft spot for bad puns - is up, and I just saw [livejournal.com profile] artaxastra posted the next part of her Aneid fic!


      
Londo Mollari is love
brought to you by the isLove Generator


....but in purple, he is stunning!

Date: 2004-11-25 11:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] londonkds.livejournal.com
I can't believe I've never asked you this before, but are there any decent German-language SF fandoms that we should be campaigning to get subtitled or translated?

Date: 2004-11-25 11:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com
Alas, the days since Fritz Lang made cinematic history with Metropolis are long over. We had a mildly amusing Star Trek rip-off called Raumschiff Orion back in the late 60/ early 70s. We also have what must be one of the longest running pulp fiction serials, a weekly Sci-Fi saga in written, not tv form, which started in the 60s and is still enduring, called Perry Rhodan. That one had some interesting ideas and stories every now and then and actually did get translated for a while. (There was an abysmal film vaguely based on it, shot in Italy. Should it ever turn up on your tv one late night, ignore it. It's horrible and has nothing whatsoever to do with the book(s).) I don't know whether it still gets translated.

But there is nothing I'm really enthusiastic enough about to enlist your help as a campaigner. Now, if we're talking fantasy (novels), or novels in general, that's another matter...

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