Sci-Fi on the Cheap 353
lowbudgetfun writes "NYTimes.com is reporting on the Sci-Fi channel's huge investment (28 films for $21 million) for original B movies. Includes quotes from B Movie hero, Bruce Campbell." I especially liked this line from the article: "Shot on budgets ranging from $1 million to $2 million, Sci Fi's movies are made in money-saving locales like Bulgaria, Romania and Missouri."
Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:4, Funny)
Article Text (Score:5, Informative)
B Movies Invade Your TV!
By LEWIS BEALE
"ATTACK OF THE SABRETOOTH." "Bloodsuckers." "The Man With the Screaming Brain." And, most indelible of all, "Mansquito."
A combination of outrageous genre concepts, low-budget filmmaking and sensationalized titles like the roll call above are all part of the Sci Fi Channel's attempt to establish a presence on Saturday nights, when a good number of potential viewers are out, asleep or watching reruns. The programming strategy has been a major success, with numbers that far exceed anyone's expectations.
"Alien Apocalypse," Sci Fi's biggest Saturday hit, attracted 2.7 million viewers in March. That may be a pittance for CBS or NBC, but it constitutes a major audience for a niche network. And besides, said Steve Sternberg, a television analyst at MagnaGlobal USA, "Friday and Saturday have become very weak nights for the broadcast networks," which, he explained, "have not been able to draw enough viewers with original entertainment series. Cable networks can flourish with much smaller audiences. Original horror and sci-fi movies seem like the perfect programming for Saturday night."
"They're good at the 'D' word, demographics," said Bruce Campbell, a star of B movies who also wrote, directed and starred in the "Screaming Brain" film, to be shown in September. "I think they're micromarketing," he said, "which in this fragmented world makes sense. They're saying, 'Who's at home on Saturday night?' "
The answer might be surprising. Nearly half of Sci Fi's audience is female, and in the highly sought-after 25-to-54-year-old demographic category, Sci Fi is the No. 4 basic cable network on Saturdays, behind TNT, USA and TBS.
Sci Fi's foray into Saturday night mayhem began in 2002, when network executives realized that cheap, independently made genre pictures, an important element of their programming mix, were hardly being produced any more. So, said Tom Vitale, the Sci Fi Channel's senior vice president for original movies "We had a choice of recycling older movies or going out and trying to create original movies ourselves. We went back to these producers who made genre movies, and asked them if they wanted to make them with us."
People like Ken Badish jumped at the chance. Mr. Badish's company, Active Entertainment, will have produced nine Sci Fi movies by the end of 2005, high-concept features like "Mansquito" (experiment gone awry creates man-mosquito hybrid!), and "Alien Lockdown" (government science produces horrific slime thing!).
The most important element of a Sci Fi film, Mr. Badish said, "is a topical film that has relevance to our audience."
"In a film coming up," he added, "stem cells are key to the plot; in another, it's mad cow disease. Secondly, there's a good story. Like we're shooting a 'Jaws'-kind of movie featuring a giant squid. We make a reasonable use of C.G.I., because the audience wants that escapist thing. And we add emotional content, so the audience can feel for the characters."
Often that amounts to borrowing shamelessly from works like "Alien," "The Fly" and "The Thing" and then adding ideas gleaned from Scientific American or Wired.
Shot on budgets ranging from $1 million to $2 million, Sci Fi's movies are made in money-saving locales like Bulgaria, Romania and Missouri. They're cast with B-list celebrities like Luke Perry and Stephen Baldwin, with the occasional big-picture actors - Sean Astin and John Rhys-Davies of "Lord of the Rings" - making an appearance. The network pays $750,000 for domestic TV rights, and the producers make their money back through international and DVD sales.
But are the films any good? Critics have not found much to praise, though some seem to have tried pretty hard. Virginia Heffernan of The New York Times said "Chupacabra: Dark Seas" (monster runs amok on a cruise liner!) was "founded on broad clichés, overacted and clumsily blocked." But she added that the casting of serious actors like Mr. Rhys-Davies and Gianc
MOD UP plus comments (Score:4, Insightful)
Someone mod this up so those of us without NYTimes logins can read.
The critics' disfavor doesn't seem to bother the folks behind the films, who have no pretensions to high art. Bonnie Hammer, the Sci Fi Channel president, likes to refer to the pictures as "popcorn movies for those who love the genre," adding, "Viewers come for the ride; it's a guilty pleasure." Jeff Beach, whose Unified Film Organization has made 20 films for the network, calls them "high-concept action-adventure movies with elements that are fun, whether a creature or a disaster."
I think this is a very good point. There are many among us who will bemoan the fact that the shlock that the Sci-Fi Channel puts out makes our favorite genre look bad. Remember that it's not called The Thoughtful Science Fiction Channel, it's the "Sci-Fi" Channel. It's supposed to be a watered-down "lite" version of science fiction in the same way that "lite" cookies bear only a passing resemblance to a delicious full-fat treat. Yes, the movies they are making are terrible but look at what's out in theaters these days. It seems half the movies are horror films. That entire genre is largely a collection of poorly-executed guilty pleasures used by younger demographics as an excuse to get out of the house and indulge in a guilty pleasure. But, as has been cited on slashdot many times before, the movieplex is becoming an increasingly unpleasant experience. Sci-Fi Channel is simply providing an alternate venue for these low-quality thrillers. I think the Sci-Fi Channel has got a great idea. Now, I'm sure as hell not going to watch any of this crap myself. But that doesn't stop me from being impressed that Sci-Fi has finally started to get its act together.
GMD
Wow, none of that is science fiction (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow, none of that is science fiction (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wow, none of that is science fiction (Score:3, Insightful)
Then again, there's "Attack of the Sabretooth"
*cringes*
Cheers!
SB
Re:Wow, none of that is science fiction (Score:4, Interesting)
But yeah, Firefly was an exceptional, if short-lived series. I remember how confused I was when I first tuned into it
What I also found impressive is that the actors really seemd to be into their roles from day one. Remember the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation? I really couldn't stand it
I did loosen my wallet last year and bought the boxed DVD set of all the episodes, including a couple of unaired ones. Did my own marathon: took a couple of days off from work and watched them front to back, in the proper order. Such a cool show. Can't wait to see the movie.
Re:Wow, none of that is science fiction (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know where "Harrison" came from. I need to get out more.
Re:Article Text (Score:4, Informative)
I love Bruce Campbell.
Re:Article Text (Score:2)
Goody-goody two shoes!
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:2)
Just trying to figure out who it's harsh to....
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:2)
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:2)
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:2)
Re:Wait! I'm from Missouri! (Score:2)
Outsourcing to rural america (Score:2, Interesting)
I would boast about them.... (Score:2)
Although Mansquito was awesome in its sheer stupity.
Re:I would boast about them.... (Score:4, Funny)
No, Mansquito was awesome due to the offalistic explosion of awfulness that inhabited the plot and burst out at random intervals.
Ever been to St. Louis? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ever been to St. Louis? (Score:3, Funny)
MST3000 (Score:4, Funny)
Re:MST3000 (Score:4, Interesting)
Chip H.
Re:MST3000 (Score:4, Insightful)
Bad Attitude (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bad Attitude (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bad Attitude (Score:5, Funny)
Q: What's the difference between one dollar and one lev?
A: One dollar.
Re:Bad Attitude (Score:2, Funny)
Wow, didn't know the bulgarian economy was that strong!
Re:Bad Attitude (Score:2)
The real funny part is Missouri.
Re:Bad Attitude (Score:2)
I Wish (Score:5, Insightful)
I also wish that they would throw some of that money at JMS, and let him make "The Memory of Shadows" for TV.
They should also focus less on topic such as ghosts and horror movies. IMHO these do not qualify as real scifi.
It did pick up firefly (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I Wish (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I Wish (Score:2)
Re:I Wish (Score:2)
How many shows have they even picked up? The only ones I know about are SG1 and Sliders, and the biggest thing about Sliders is that quite a few of them were big-budget movie stars, AND the show was already reaching the end of popularity after many successful seasons. They couldn't afford them.
This is not exactly a good thing (Score:5, Insightful)
I enjoy a good number of B-Movies (and even a few C and D-list films), but I get worried when the predominant type of movie being produced is deliberately low-brow and sets the bar so low in fact, a first year film student could trip over it.
The idea that SciFi can be well-written and produced with some care is hard for many people to accept these days, as all they see is schlock put together on the cheap as fast as humanly possible to give the channel in question a quick cash infusion
In a day when even comic books and fantasy novels are taken seriously by the masses due to the amount of effort put into adapting them to the screen, it nearly brings a tear to my eye to consider that the bargain-bin product coming from The SciFi Channel is pretty much the cream of the crop these days.
I really don't know what I would do if a studio announced they were hiring an extremely adept filmmaker and screenwriter to put The Foundation series into theatres.
Probably cry.
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:2, Interesting)
The idea that SciFi can be well-written and produced with some care is hard for many people to accept these days, as all they see is schlock put together on the cheap as fast as humanly possible to give the channel in question a quick cash infusion
I posted some comments above [slashdot.org] which address some of your statements. But I'll take this moment to make another point: I don't think most people are really ready for serious science fiction right now. I understand that sounds very elitist. What I mean is not
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:2)
But that's exactly what's wrong with the dreck SciFi channel produces. It's not entertaining at all. I have no problem with cheap, no problem with unrealistic, no problem with low-brow stories. The problem is they're boring. I've never been able to sit through more than 15 or
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:5, Insightful)
See, here's the thing though... I like star trek: TNG. Why? Because, it suggests that sometime in the future, mankind will unite, currency will be replaced by an understanding of needs and a willingness to participate in society, all the earth will stand as one. A place where we explore, not invade, a place where we bring peace, not capitalism to other cultures.
Maybe TNG isn't as Sci-Fi as the elitests would like, but it's comforting in a time of uncertainty.
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
See, and this is why people refer to it as "science fantasy".
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Only because there's no other option. Offer us some Klingons to fight instead and just watch all mankind unite in harmony!
Actually I think the TNG vision is a bit depressing. It implies that true socialism is impossible until we invent the replicator...
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, that's true. You forgot fusion power and autonomous robots. Then we can have socialism.
Anything short of that and there is still scarcity. You can't have socialism with scarcity, it's against human nature. People like to have things, even if it means others going without.
If you disagree with that, shut down your computer right now, pack it up, and go sell it. Sen
Re:This is not exactly a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Get a grip, only 3000 people died on Sept 11. Forty million or so in WWII, upwards of 5 million in Vietnam; not to consider the deadly ever-present threat of nuclear war for most of 1950-1990 at least. As for economic uncertainty; try the Great Depression for size. All those periods prod
are we talking scifi, or drama? (Score:3)
enjoy a good number of B-Movies (and even a few C and D-list films), but I get worried when the predominant type of movie being produced is deliberately low-brow and sets the bar so low in fact, a first year film student could trip over it.
Most first-year film student movies I have seen have been worse than anything that makes it near regional TV, much less national.
The idea that SciFi can be well-written and produced with some care is hard for many people to accept these days, as all they see is sc
Re:are we talking scifi, or drama? (Score:2)
I enjoy Stargate Atlantis as well. Airs back to back with Battlestar Galactica on Friday. It would be fun if they could stick Firefly in there (if Fox ever lets it go back to TV) once Stargate SG-1 is too played out.
Re:are we talking scifi, or drama? (Score:3, Informative)
Schedule [scifi.com]
Type "firefly" into the search box and hit return. The signal returns this coming Friday - in order, even *grin* but they aren't airing all the DVD episodes, apparently. (why I don't know)
SB
Sturgeon's Law (Score:3, Informative)
Know your sci-fi: Sturgeon's Law [jargon.net] - Sure, 90% of science fiction is crud. That's because 90% of everything is crud.
I smell a rat! and It'll be on budget for 1.5M (Score:5, Insightful)
On top of this, SciFi is cutting out the Stargate opening credits [gateworld.net] to get more advert time. I know *I* want sci fi to stay 'on air' so i can keep watching Stargate and BSG, but I feel like I'm getting the poo from a 1 million Genetically modified monkeys on typewriters thrown at me with these movies.
PS. Dear SciFi. the idea of mutant screenwriting monkeys is available for a modest sum.
Re:I smell a rat! and It'll be on budget for 1.5M (Score:5, Funny)
Well, my idea is to combine two Steven Spielberg movies: dinosaurs attacking and killing humans (Jurassic Park) with aliens attacking and killing humans (War of the Worlds). See, there are these dinosaurs who have been hanging out in the Amazon and now they've gotten pissed off about the destruction of the rainforest and they're gonna take over. But just as they go on the rampage, alien robots come down from space, and they want to take over the planet too!
So the dinosaurs and aliens start fighting, but then decide that's pointless. They decide to settle their differences with a contest: a kill-a-thon. Whoever can kill more humans during 24 hrs. of carnage and rampage can rule the entire planet. Dinosaurs plus robots? It's like Spielberg, squared... minus his directing ability of course. There are two running body counts on the screen, one for dinosaurs and one for robots.
Title: "DINOSAURS VS. ROBOTS"
Budget: 2 million.
Plus, I already have a concept for the sequel: it's called "DINOSAURS VS. ROBOTS... VS. ZOMBIES!".
already been done (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I smell a rat! and It'll be on budget for 1.5M (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Monkeys, typewriters (Score:2)
Damned meddling kids
Re:Monkeys, typewriters (Score:2)
Doesn't Look Cheap Enough (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Fantastic (Score:4, Funny)
Oh Tom Servo... (Score:2)
Work in eastern Europe is cheap (Score:2, Informative)
So much to say (Score:5, Interesting)
First of all, some Brucelore... In Albuquerque, "The Man With the Screaming Brain" showed this weekend, and then is showing again in a couple days, with Bruce being present but those tickets all sold out long ago, so... if you snoozed, you losed. Also, Bruce will be at Page 1 Bookstore autographing his book. Of course, I'm sure he's on a whirlwind tour and visiting other cities, so wherever you are: pay attention and you'll get to meet the man, the myth, the legend.
Second: about B movies. In the last few years I've become aware of some local low-budget filmmakers, and I even got to be a zombie extra a little while back. (Maybe calling these "B" movies is a stretch, as they would go ape at the thought of a budget anywhere near the magnitude of a million dollars.) Of these people's work, one thing I've noticed is this: you can't show this stuff on TV. People, you are not seeing the "cream of the crop" on SciFi channel, because the best cheap movies have sex in them. No, they're not porn, but they're not prude either. (Oh, and they tend to be gorier than what even American TV tolerates.) Now, don't get me wrong: these movies aren't great. But they're better than the SciFi channel stuff, and they'll get some sincere laughs out of you if nothing else. Find your local cult video store if you have one, and start talking to people. Find your local filmmakers, and check out the crazy shit they're doing. SciFi channel's movies will bore you to tears after you do that.
Third, about micro-marketing. I amazes me that TV execs are actually asking questions like, "Who's at home on Saturday night?" That is so twentieth century. I have had my Tivo for nearly five years now! Is routine time-shifting (by "routine," I mean even more effortless than VCRs which have been around for decades) still not commonplace? If not, it's making me wonder if I can make money selling fully configured MythTV boxes or something, because people who watch TV need this technology whether they know it yet, or not. ;-) Timeslots, what an obsolete concept.
Re:So much to say (Score:2)
Yes, they are porn. More sex than you can show on TV = porn, even if you don't write it that way. (Note that FX has a show that's practically all about sex, and several times has shown sex, albeit on a PG-13 style with everything covered.)
Re:So much to say (Score:2)
I met The One True Bruce at Page One last time he zipped through ABQ. Helluva nice guy, that Bruce. I, of course, was a jibbering dork. (Nice to see things haven't changed.)
Economics and politics (Score:2, Interesting)
What's hilarious is your ingorance (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Economics and politics (Score:2, Interesting)
This map of the most recent census data (for 2003) shows an interesting divide: Blue States are those whose median income for a family of four exceeds the U.S. median of $65,093, while Red States are those whose median income is less than the U.S. median:
US Map Income
Note the eerie similarity with the 2004 presidential election map:
Source:
http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2005/05/me dian_income_d.html [typepad.com]
Red States Feed at Federal Trough, Blue
Important (Score:3, Insightful)
$21 mil (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:$21 mil (Score:2)
There's No Logic To The Monsters... (Score:3, Insightful)
Slashdot Editors (Score:4, Funny)
support the indies! and they profit (Score:3, Insightful)
it is also way cool because they get to give money to unknown people to create these movies. there is a lot less risk. i think the coolest effect of this is that they will bankroll projects that may never happen otherwise. some of the movies might suck, but that happens anyway. even brilliant filmmakers have to start somewhere. this can be the launch pad to a lot of writers, directors, actors etc etc etc. it keeps more people working on new stuff.
by making 28 films for $21million they realized they are making a far safer bet than making 3 $7million movies. they also are going right on TV and i guess to DVD. they also have the ability to promote them endlessly to their core fans. they will own the broadcast rights forever. it's a brilliant business model.
To the NYTimes, Missouri IS Bulgaria (Score:2)
Re:To the NYTimes, Missouri IS Bulgaria (Score:4, Insightful)
Had it occured to you that thats a GOOD thing for your economies?
Perhaps all the wailing and gnashing of teeth over the comparison is brought about solely because of the inferiority complex you are imposing on your self?
Re:To the NYTimes, Missouri IS Bulgaria (Score:3, Interesting)
In other words, I'd suggest that implying that red-state conservatives want a theocracy, be free to engage in incestuous relations(for
St. Louis (Score:2)
Master Blasters (Score:2)
Re:Master Blasters (Score:3, Informative)
That's been tried. "Salvage One", from 1979.
fuzzy math (Score:2, Funny)
fuzzy math, or your fuzzy reading? (Score:2)
Maybe SciFi will concentrate on scifi now (Score:2)
The SciFi Channel fails it (Score:4, Interesting)
They remade BattleStar Galactica into a Space Opera, more emphesis on Opera than Space. Cyclons look and act human now, they stole^H^H^H^H^H^Hborrowed that from "The Terminator". A few characters got their gender changed.
SciFi had a chance to pick up "Space: Above and Beyond" one of the best SciFi shows made on network TV, and they refused.
Stargate SG1 wasn't lame enough, so they made a Stargate Atlantis, and now they recognize the lameness and are trying to change the actors with some who were on FarScape in an effort to jumpstart the show. Yet it jumped the shark long ago.
Now SciFi is buying movies that I can rent for $1 at the local video stores because they are B-Movies that hardly anyone wants to see, so they got marked down. Some are two for $1. At least the video rentals of those movies won't be edited for TV with all the good parts taken out.
Sci Fi Channel != Scifi (Score:2)
Topical, My Shiny Metal Ass! (Score:5, Insightful)
The most important element of a Sci Fi film, Mr. Badish said, "is a topical film that has relevance to our audience. In a film coming up," he added, "stem cells are key to the plot; in another, it's mad cow disease.
No, no, no, no!
The MOST important element of a SciFi film is STORY.
Topicality is about last on the list. I can not express how fucking sick and tired I am of shows that decide to do a "war on drugs" episode, or "child molester" or "euthanasia" or "terrorist" or "ebola" or "flesh-eating mold" or "song lyrics/video game inspires teens to kill" show. They are either totally dull, or so wacked out beyond reasonable that there is no way to willingly suspend disbelief.
If you must do topical, do something that hasn't hit mainstream consciousness yet. Be pre-topical. At least that way, chances are that the BS you make up for the story won't be so obvious.
Otherwise, just focus on the story and give me something to think about, not something that makes my bullshit-detector go off so loud that I can't concentrate on the show.
Please?
Re:Topical, My Shiny Metal Ass! (Score:2)
-- Terrorism may have turned the United States into a nation of fear and aggression, but it won't succeed in Europe.
Something to be happy about (Score:4, Insightful)
why not..... (Score:3, Insightful)
The original dune series was compelling, and wonderfuly great considering the circumstances under which it was made. Acting was OK. CG was OK, but the story was a wonderful adaptaton of the novel.
How about something by asimov? Maybe make a film out of one of the Terry Pratchett novels (and have the side effect of it being hilarious). How about a decent 2001 remake with some new spin on it?
I'm convinced that War of the Worlds could have been a good movie if it wasn't directed by speilberg and didn't have a sky-high budget.
But please. No more B movies. From what I recall, Dune made a mint for SciFi. I doubt they'd recover the costs of all these B movies.
Re:why not..... (Score:2)
I'm more of the latter opinion. I don't think you need a lot of money to make great Sci-Fi. One of my favorite Sci-Fi movies is Pi. Aronofsky probably could have made a hundred great movies for what Spielberg paid for War of the Worlds.
And let's not forget the Twilight Zone. That was a great Sci-Fi show, but the budget for a year of those shows probably woul
I have to think that... (Score:2)
Re:I have to think that... (Score:2)
Sci-Fi Channel is now 100% Crap (Score:2)
Dumb Movies Done Dirt Cheap (Score:3, Insightful)
I can understand the limitations of a tight budget, and I can forgive a lot. I can forgive cheesy sets, cinematography, props, acting. . . But I have a hard time time watching movies that are just flat-out blindingly stupid. I also have trouble watching movies that are inferior knock-offs of other movies that were blindingly stupid.
If only they would dig through SF literature, I'm sure they could find a lot more original and plausible ideas to work with. But I think part of the problem is, these guys are fans of B-movies, they come from a B-movie making background, and the only experience they have to draw inspiration from is other B-movies. So we get the same tired, silly, often downright embarrassing stuff rehashed over and over. They're too inbred.
Rather than hire known B directors and writers (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Missouri (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Missouri (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Missouri (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, it should be +1, Informative. Missouri wouldn't be allowed into the EU with their laws on capital punishment. Some Americans probably take that as another sign that we all sit and sing kum-bah-yah all day long in our socalist cult, oh well.
"Progress" in Missouri? (Score:3, Informative)
Missouri probably doesn't belong in the EU, because it's large and wealthy already. Its GDP in 2003 was $194,611,000,000 USD, or $29,252 USD per capita. Its population is about 5,755,000. Its armed forces number approx. 10,500 soldiers and airmen (not including those which it contributes to the United States' armed forces).
That means that its per capita GDP is almost equal to those of the UK or Belgium, and is hig
Re:"Progress" in Missouri? (Score:3, Informative)
What that term actually says is that 'People in Missouri make almost as much as people in the UK or Belgium'. Oooo, scary. Almost as much!
Its economy is larger than those of Ireland, Luxembourg, Finland, Greece, or Portugal
Luxembourg? WTF? Do they even have an 'economy'? And didn't you then say it has a larger population than Ireland and Finland?
So, to rephrase that paragraph in
Re:"Progress" in Missouri? (Score:3)
Missouri is about as wealthy (per capita) as the old EU15, and would make up less than 1.5% of the EU in population. Apart from not actually being in Europe, you would be quite similar to Austria, Sweden and Finland joining in 1992. All of comparable size and wealth *cough*richer*cough* than Missouri. You wouldn't make any more of a dent in the EU than my country joining the United States. My pun was that you wouldn't qualify even if you wanted to.
Kjella
Re:Whoop (Score:2)
I rented the recent mini-series DVD recently. I'll admit to being more than a little sceptical but I thoroughly enjoyed it. The story is good, if perhaps a bit on the melodramatic side, and some of the shooting reminded me of 24, which I detest.
I know you aren't a firefly fan, but my jaw dropped when I saw Serenity fly in for a landing. It's in the early sceene where the lady who becomes president is waiting in the doctor's office. On the left side of the screen for just a moment, Serenity flys in fo
Re:Whoop (Score:2)
I'm no entertainment critic, so I'll simply say that it was the most realistic story I've ever seen done on screen, and it was SCIENCE FICTION. SCIENCE FICTION. Amazing.
It'll be interesting to see where they take it this year!
Cheers,
SB