Showing posts with label blade runner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blade runner. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Blade Runner, The Making of a Classic: The Starlog Project, Starlog #184, November 1992

The Rifftrax boys aren’t known for loading up their DVDs with lots of extras, but on their latest release, Maniac (a truly Z-grade flick, BTW), they include video of their recent appearance at San Diego Comic Con. After riffing on an instructional short video (all about how to purchase food), they took audience suggestions for a movie they should do this year. Audience members lined up behind a microphone, each one stating the nominated film and their reasons. Amid a flurry of such candidates as Zardoz (“Sean Connery in a diaper!”), one audience member suggested they riff on Blade Runner.

The audience was sort of stunned, its reaction a mix of gasps, groans, and silence (for you kids, that means they collectively thought, “WTF?”), and the Rifftraxers quickly dispatched the person who suggested the film. Blade Runner, you see (and you probably already know, since you’re the type of person who actually reads a blog post about an 18-year-old science-fiction film magazine), is a classic.

The Ridley Scott adaptation of a Philip K. Dick story wasn’t widely known before its release. There had been a bit of talk in the months before it came out; in one interview, star Harrison Ford was asked about the movie for which he was reported to be bald (fans were reassured that he wasn’t going to be bald; instead, the story required a very short haircut). But when the movie came out in 1982, it blew people away with its visual imagery of a multicultural, dark, and dirty megalopolis of the future. Moviegoers rewarded it by staying away in droves, and it flopped at the box office. Don’t blame me; I saw it with my brother and some friends at a drive-in theater (for you young ’uns, a drive-in theater was an outdoor parking lot where they showed films).

The film would live on, helped in no small part by the fact that every six months or so, Ridley Scott would release another version of it. (Okay, I’m exaggerating with that “every six months” bit, but we own the blu-ray Ultimate Collectors Edition, which features no less than five different versions of the film.) With this issue, Starlog puts Blade Runner on its cover again, 10 years after the film was originally released. It would once again feature Blade Runner on its cover for the movie’s 25th anniversary; but that’s issue #359, and we’re quite a ways away from it. For now, this issue, which includes interviews with many Blade Runner creators and participants, will do quite nicely. But I suspect that Starlog will have to come back from the dead so it can feature Blade Runner’s 50th anniversary in 2032, which would kind of make it the zombie magazine featuring the zombie movie – two creatures that wouldn’t die.

Starlog #184
88 pages (including covers and four un-numbered pages)
Cover price: $4.95

On page seven of this issue, the magazine announces a new kind of in-person relationship with readers: Starlog the Science Fiction Universe is the name of a new retail store opened up in Ridgewood, New Jersey. Featuring everything you’d expect from the publisher of Starlog, Fangoria, and Comics Scene, the store sells magazines, posters, videos, comics, toys, models, and more. Publisher Norman Jacobs soon expanded the stores in a nationwide franchise and even spun it off as a publicly listed company. I still remember visiting the Starlog store that was located in a suburban Aurora, Illinois, mall when I lived in Chicago in the 1990s. (I bought a couple old Starblazers videos.) But the venture would not last, as much as I thought it was a neat concept. After expanding nationwide and even in the United Kingdom, the whole thing went bust, but not before it endured some legal brouhahas (see here and here). By the late 1990s, the Starlog Franchise Corp. had new leadership and was no longer selling science-fiction stuff; it had transformed itself into a candy retailer. Can’t make this up.

In other new productions, this issue Starlog announces the upcoming publication of three new one-shot magazines: Dracula: The Complete Vampire (which was a great publication, in my opinion), the official posterbook for The Addams Family (the animated TV series, not the movies), and the official Star Trek: The Next Generation FX Makeup Journal. And in one last production note about this issue of Starlog, there are four additional color pages in this issue that are not numbered; all four are filled with ads, but many other pages also feature ads and they are included in the page-count, so I’m not sure why these aren’t. Big deal, I know.

The rundown: On the cover, it’s a collage of Blade Runner photos, but on the contents page, they’re using the same photo that appeared on the cover of Starlog #58. In David McDonnell’s Medialog column, there’s a short note that Ridley Scott says he’s working on a sequel to Blade Runner, plus there are a couple photos by Norman Jacobs of his brand-spanking-new retail store in New Jersey (the only photos credited to Jacobs during the entire run of the magazine, if I’m not mistaken; that trivia will get you far in life, I promise).

In Gamelog, Michael McAvennie reviews a number of role-playing games; Communications letters include lots of readers slagging on Alien3, plus one reader from Russia telling us how happy he is to be able to legally subscribe to Starlog there now that the Soviet Union is no more, and Mike Fisher’s Creature Profile features ED-209; classic Twilight Zone releases are highlighted in David Hutchison’s Videolog column; the Fan Network pages include, as usual, Lia Pelosi’s ongoing directory of fan clubs and publications, and the listing of fan conventions; Booklog reviews Dark Sky Legion, Black Steel, Ray Bradbury Presents Dinosaur World, Raft, Chains of Light, and Captain Jack Zodiac; and in his From the Bridge column, Kerry O’Quinn goes on a roller coaster journey.

It! The Terror from Beyond Space was a movie that became a comic book, and this issue writer Mark Ellis tells Tom Weaver all about the four-color version; and veteran correspondent Lee Goldberg interviews writer/producer Robin Bernheim about Quantum Leap, though she also talks about other programs she’s worked with, including Star Trek: The Next Generation, Remington Steele, and Houston Knights, which she calls a “crappy show.”

Randy and Jean-Marc Lofficier contribute five articles that comprise the Blade Runner cover story: an interview with writer and executive producer Hampton Fancher, who says the story is about “that discover of [Deckard’s] own soul, falling in love with the thing he had to kill”; co-writer David Peoples, who says “it’s a detective story all right, even more than it is SF”; designer Syd Mead, who informs us that “originally, the film’s ambience was going to be cold, but they found out what the cost was going to be to ship all the sets to Michigan or Wisconsin to get them to freeze. So, instead, it became misty, hot, with sweltering rains.”; production designer Lawrence G. Paull, who said the look of the film “was a combination of what I had said, Ridley [Scott]’s input and Syd [Mead]’s own ideas” (Paull was nominated for an Academy Award for art direction for his work on the film); and Ridley Scott, who says that when it comes to designs in his films, “I get inspiration from Moebius all the time! I think Moebius is possibly one of the greatest comic strip artists ever!“.

In non-Blade Runner articles, Stan Nicholls talks to the lesser-known half of the supermarionation fun couple, Sylvia Anderson, who discusses the creation of fan classics such as Thunderbirds, Supercar, and Fireball XL5; Tom Weaver contributes a talk with actor William Schallert, who talks about his roles in The Man from Planet X, Twilight Zone: The Movie, “The Trouble with Tribbles” episode of Star Trek, and others; Stan Nicholls interviews novelist Stephen R. Donaldson (The Gap seris, A Man Rides Through, etc.); Marc Shapiro checks in with the stars and creators of Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventures, a very short-lived TV spinoff of the famed/infamous Bill & Ted movie comedies; and editor David McDonnell talks journalistic pursuits of Blade Runner, going back to his days working with Jim Steranko at Prevue (his haunt before joining Starlog).
“One of the things that has happened in the years since Thunderbirds is that it has gotten rather tainted by whining on a personal level. With [former husband and former business partner] Gerry, I mean. I object to that. I think it should be kept professional. We’re no longer husband and wife, but we were professional partners, and I would like to keep that going.”
–Sylvia Anderson, interviewed byStan Nicholls: “Dance of the Supermarionettes”
For more, click on Starlog Internet Archive Project below or visit the Starlog Project's permanent site.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The Starlog Project: Starlog #58, May 1982: Blade Runner and Spock

A great issue. Blade Runner on the cover, John W. Campbell's classic short story reprinted, more death-of-Spock commentary, spaceship blueprints, and more. On the Starlog merchandising side, we have the announcement on page 59 of the first edition of the Starlog Scrapbook, a collection of photos from science-fiction TV and films. The cover photo is the same Star Trek photo (showing Spock and Kirk in front of a warping Enterprise) used on the cover of Starlog #30, except the photo is flipped from left to right.

Starlog #58
70 pages (including covers and fold-out inside front cover)
Cover price: $2.50

Past controversies in the pages of Starlog have often included much huffing and puffing, angry words, broken friendships, much tears and shattered glass (well, you get the point). But the controversy over whether the character of Spock should be killed off in the new Star Trek movie is of a different sort; it's a matter of story integrity, studio money, and emotional bonds fans had built toward the character over the previous decade and a half. David Gerrold dives right into it this month in his column, and he does a great job of exploring the meaning and implications of such a move.

The rundown: Harrison Ford's Blade Runner character, Rick Deckard, is once again gracing the cover of Starlog, but this time, unlike issue #52's cover, the photo isn't blurry (moody, yes); the foldout inside front cover features a full-page photo and a two-page blueprint of The Altares, a spaceship from Gerry' Anderson's The Day After Tomorrow (by Martin J. Bower and Stephen Corbett); Kerry O'Quinn's From the Bridge discusses overcoming your own doubts so you can pursue your dreams; Communications letters include an Australian's thoughts on Star Trek, support for Bjo Trimble's pro-space columns, a comic strip by Ken Montgomery, a contrarian view of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and more; short news items in Log Entries include Atari's new games, Obi-Wan Kenobi will be in Revenge (yes, still Revenge) of the Jedi, people working on space colonization, William Shatner (Hooker) and Leslie Nielsen (Police Squad) are headed to television, and more; and Barbara Krasnoff pens a Spotlight page devoted to the Robotorium store in Manhattan.

Steve Swires interviews Bill Lancaster, screenwriter of John Carpenter's The Thing; James Van Hise interviews veteran voice actor Walker Edmiston; Van Hise also interviews Blade Runner screenwriters Hampton Fancher and David Peoples; Ron Miller's Futures Past explores "The Evolution of the Spaceship: Part One"; a two-page spread revisits Battlestar Galactica with some color and black-and-white photos (and a rumored third attempt to make the series work); the centerfold is a two-page Starlog poster showing Galactica's Captain Apollo from the original movie; Ed Naha interviews designer Syd Mead on his Blade Runner vehicle designs (an article illustrated with many Mead images, as you'd expect); David Gerrold's Soaring explores the meaning of Spock's death in the Star Trek movie; part one of the reprint of John W. Campbell Jr.'s "Who Goes There?" -- the basis of John Carpenter's The Thing remake --is illustrated by Nicola Cuti and sprawls across seven pages; David Hirsch describes the background of the Antares spaceship shown on the inside front cover; James H. Burns looks at some holographic creations of Michael Frankel; Wendy Rathbone and Della Van Hise provide an April Fool's (the May issue was on sale in April 1982) edition of Star Trek bloopers; more April Foolishness in Bjo Trimble's Fan Scene, which features Robbie the Robot dancing (today, we'd put him on Dancing with the Stars); Quest features the work of three readers (a model maker, a writer, a cartoonist); and Howard Zimmerman's Lastword talks about the secrecy behind E.T. (more on that in a few issues) and the John Campbell short story in this issue.
"It was Ridley's vision ultimately that we were serving. I think it's terrific and important that Philip K. Dick likes the end result -- I mean it's his baby. Without him there's none of this. This is where it comes from. It's terrific that he was happy, but he really gave me much more credit than I deserve."
--David Peoples, screenwriter, interviewed by James Van Hise: "The Blade Runner Screenwriters: Hampton Fancher and David Peoples"
To view previous Starlog issue descriptions, click on "Starlog Internet Archive Project" in the keywords below.

Monday, April 5, 2010

The Starlog Project: Starlog #55, February 1982: Blade Runner, Time Bandits and Quest for Fire

It's extra-treat time again, as Starlog for the third (and final) time includes a bind-in record with an issue of the magazine. This time, one side of the vinyl 33-1/2 rpm record features excerpts from the Starlog Records LP First Men in the Moon, and the other side features excerpts from an upcoming (and, I think, the final) Starlog Records LP, The Avengers. Also this issue, the magazine's former space art advisor, Ron Miller, joins its lineup of columnists. Meanwhile, do you like all the color in the magazine? Enjoy it ... while it lasts.

Starlog #55
68 pages (including covers)
Cover price: $3.50

Time Bandits, the great Terry Gilliam film is a ... what? Dark fantasy? Science Fiction? Historical romance? Whatever. It's one of his finest, and it's got pride-of-place on the cover and contents page this issue.

The rundown: In his From the Bridge column, Kerry O'Quinn has a response to people who worry about violence in science-fiction media; Communications letters include a library that is subscribing to Starlog, praise for Lawrence Kasdan and Harrison Ford, pleas for Spock's life, descriptions of Starlog staffers' lunches, and more; short news items in Log Entries include a preview of the muppetastick Dark Crystal, publication of a book on Scrooge McDuck, CBS bought rights to Star Wars: A New Hope -- but couldn't get The Empire Strikes Back, rumors about Star Trek II (called at this point "The Uncharted Continent"), plans for a Universal theme park in Florida, and more.

Part two of James Van Hise's look at the Star Trek bloopers reel takes up a page; an unbylined page has info about the music on the bound-in record; James Van Hise interviews Philip K. Dick about Blade Runner; David Gerrold discusses writer's block in his Soaring column; Ed Naha returns to Starlog's pages with a look at the new Quest for Fire movie (Naha's been keeping mostly to Future Life for the past couple years, so one might surmise that this article was originally intended for that magazine, which had just ceased publication); the winners of the Starlog fifth anniversary contest are listed; Bjo Trimble keeps up the pressure by urging support for the space program in her Fan Scene column; Kerry O'Quinn and David Everett interview studio executive Alan Ladd, Jr., who talks Alien, Star Wars, and Blade Runner; Don McGregor finishes his two-part interview with The Greatest American Hero's Robert Culp; a three-page feature showcases color photos from Time Bandits; David Hirsch interviews UFO's Ed Bishop; David Hutchison goes on location with Doug Trumbull to talk about his movie Brainstorm; Ron Miller's Futures Past column debuts, with a look at Hugo Gernsback's 1911 SF novel Ralph 124C41+; the science-fiction paintings of Stephen Schwartz are featured in Quest; and in Lastword, Howard Zimmerman belatedly presents his third-annual Zimmerman Awards (which, among other things, awards That's Incredible the "most mind-boggling weekly SF-TV series" prize).
"I asked for a copy of the latest screenplay [for Blade Runner] and they sent it over last week. This is the February '81 version by David Peoples. Now there's no problem. Now I can quite sincerely say that I am terribly enthusiastic and it won't be just the special effects because there will be a coherent storyline. There's an excellent storyline. Peoples did a terrific job."
--Philip K. Dick, author, interviewed by James Van Hise: "Philip K. Dick on Blade Runner"
To view previous Starlog issue descriptions, click on "Starlog Internet Archive Project" in the keywords below or visit the Starlog Project's permanent home.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

The Starlog Project: Starlog #52, November 1981: Blade Runner Comes into Focus

In merchandising news this month, on page 65 of this issue, you can order your very own Starlog baseball cap (or separately you can order the Starlog iron-on patch). That's right, no new magazines, no new books or film ventures. A cap; a nice but not ground-shaking new development. Much like this issue itself: good SF movie/TV/art coverage, but it isn't going to knock your socks off. Still, because Blade Runner takes center stage for the first time, I've always considered this issue to be a special one nonetheless. And I never did get to order a Starlog cap.

Starlog #52
68 pages (including covers)
Cover price: $2.50

The cover features the long-anticipated Ridley Scott movie Blade Runner, adapted from Philip K. Dick's story Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. It's great to see it get such prominent placement, but it's a shame that -- for a movie that featured such astounding visuals -- the cover photo is rather grainy and out of focus.

Now, the rundown: Kerry O'Quinn revisits some recent science-fiction conventions in his From the Bridge column; in the Communications pages, letters include comments on militarized space, David Gerrold's column about drug abuse, Escape from New York, and more -- most noteworthy is Harlan Ellison's letter taking to task Sean Connery for his treatment (in issue #50) of a film journalist who dared to question the quality of Outland; in Log Entries, short news items include a sneak peek at Swamp Thing, a report on the making of the Hubble Space Telescope, a preview of National Public Radio's fall lineup, a peek at the sitcom Mr. Merlin (whose young co-star Zach -- Clark Brandon -- looks a heck of a lot like the star of The Powers of Matthew Star, Peter Barton), veteran writer Sam Peeples is rewriting the script for the Star Trek sequel, Isaac Asimov announces a sequel to his Foundation series and Arthur C. Clarke announces a sequel to 2001: A Space Odyssey, and more.

James Van Hise takes us behind the scenes and on the set of Blade Runner; David Gerrold's Soaring column explains some of his philosophical ideas behind story structure; Alan Spencer interviews Heartbeeps director Allan Arkush; Susan Adamo reports on the release of Distant Stars, an illustrated collection of stories by Samuel R. Delany; Samuel J. Maronie interviews Peter Barton, the hero of The Powers of Matthew Star; James H. Burns interviews Julian Glover (from The Empire Strikes Back, For Your Eyes Only, and Space: 1999); Mark Mutchnik visits New York's Museum of The Surreal & Fantastique (and the article is illustrated with a couple big H.R. Giger paintings); in part two of Steve Swires' interview with William Shatner ("I Am Kirk"), the actor swipes at Harlan Ellison for the latter's critical review of Star Trek -- The Motion Picture: "We don't seem to be that far apart. I don't quite agree with his adjectives, though. They're a little strong, but then so is Harlan Ellison -- he's little and he's strong"; Swires also previews the comedy The Creature Wasn't Nice; Helen Sargeant pens a short story about weird goings-on at the Starlog offices in the Quest pages, which also includes some Barry Jones model-making and comic strips by Ken and Paul Montgomery; David Hutchison's SFX section looks at the work of special effects animator Peter Kuran (Dragonslayer, The Empire Strikes Back, Galaxina); and Howard Zimmerman ends the issue with a look at the changing face of science-fiction television.
"Returning to the tube is ABC's Greatest American Hero, now joined by CBS' Mr. Merlin (a comedy) and The Powers of Matthew Star on NBC. ... [T]hese three shows point to another trend in the making. Ralph, Matthew and Merlin all have powers that are activiated by thought -- the powers of the mind. It seems as though TV is forecasting an end to the investigation of outer space in favor of exploring inner space. If these three shows prove successful, we may see shows featuring psychic cops, telekinetic gurus and the Jean Dixon Predicts hour."
--Howard Zimmerman, editor, Lastword
To view previous Starlog issue descriptions, click on "Starlog Internet Archive Project" in the keywords below.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Blade Runner, Redux


So the next issue of Starlog magazine will feature a report on Blade Runner's 25th anniversary and director Ridley Scott's final, final, final version. I'm actually excited about this.

And, okay, the new Flash Gordon looks cute, too.