2015 Sleepover

IMG_20151218_212734-ANIMATION

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2014 Sleepover

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SciFan Universes Everyone Should Know

BOOKS & AUTHORS — although many of these have inspired TV/MOVIES

Harry Potter series
Philip K. Dick SciFi stories
Tolkien-verse
Arthurian Legends
Song of Ice and Fire/Game of Thrones
Outstanding Online Comic
Outstanding Graphic Novel series
Wheel of Time
Dune
Ender Verse
Neil Gaiman-Verse
Outstanding MANGA series

TV SHOWS & MOVIES

Doctor Who
Star Wars
Adventure Time
Marvel Movies
Buffy-verse
Avatar (The Last Airbender + Korra)
Star Trek
Firefly + Serenity
Twilight Zone
Buffy-verse
Miyazaki Verse!

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SciFan Sleepover 2013 – Encounters with the Otherworldly

chocolate

dvds

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Ender’s Game (the Book): What SciFan Members think…

Recently, SciFan members answered the following questions and the outcomes are recorded here:

  • Average Age of SciFan Members first reading Ender’s Game: 12.2
  • 75% have re-read the book since.
  • Average rating of the book by SciFan Members: 9.0733333333
  • Some of the reasons that we love the book:
      • Ender’s character development (especially his struggle with being like Peter).
      • All the tactics in the books and how smart Ender was tactically.
      • Ender’s strategies, the descriptions, the premise.
      • The ending with a twist, not the cookie cutter type.
      • Ender’s interactions with his fellow soldiers/commanders, (especially Bean.)
      • Ender’s ability as a leader, and how he wasn’t just a good commander, he was loved by the people who served under him
      • Ender’s interactions with the other commanders.
      • Reading about how his army was pushed to exhaustion was really engaging.
      • Any of the times Ender thought of something simply brilliant.
      • The parallel of Valentine and Peter, and how they reoccur in the later books.
      • How the author described world events in such an interesting way and how serious and smart everything is.
      • The descriptions of all the political and “power plays.”
      • Ender’s brilliance in unifying most of the great soldiers and how he usually outsmarts the grown-ups.
      • The MIND Game – one of the most horrifying side plots
      • How the author shows us the devastating effects of War, Manipulation, but also the healing power of humanities.
      • The psychological aspect was really interesting, especially with Valentine and Peter.
      • The characters are ALL brilliant and complex, and in a purposeful way.
      • Valentine and Peter.
      • The book did a great job of portraying Ender’s deliberate way of doing things while still showing us that he got more and more jaded by what he said and did.
      • How a great deal of the book was inside of Ender’s head and you really understood him as a character and as a person.
      • The battle school. 
      • Peter and Valentine being two immensely complex and interesting characters.
      • The Valentine-Peter subplot. 

 

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First Meeting Team Trivia

On Friday, September 13, 2013, new and old SciFan members came together and had some fun at Team Trivia.   The teams are: House Lannister, The Browncoats, District 12, The Rohirrim, and Time Lords.

Here are the questions — answers are at the end of this post:

1. Who wrote Mistborn?

2. What is River Song’s real name?

3. Sing the first line of the Hobbit theme song in a Dwarven voice.

4. Who was the leader of District 13? (full name)

5. Who is the only individual to have travelled with both their own parent and child in the Tardis?

6. Which department does Percy work in at the Ministry of Magic (Before he became secretary)?

7. Name all the companions since the 9th doctor in order.

8. What is Hermione’s patronus?

9. Lee Scoresby the Aeronaut is from which trilogy?  (Name the trilogy)

10. What is Jean’s new name at the end of the X-Men trilogy?

11. What is the first joke George Weasley makes after the loss of his ear?

12. In the movie Matrix, Neo’s other name is… (give both first and last names):

13. In the making of the movie District 9, how many of the people were hired to talk specifically about aliens?

14. Who was in charge of the hunt for Sirius Black at the Ministry of Magic?

15. Name the title where this first sentence came from: “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.

16. What is the last name of the two brothers from Fullmetal alchemist?

17. What is the novel that the movie Blade runner is based on?

18. Anansi Boys is the sequel/companion title to which book?

19. What is admiral Ackbar’s most famous quote?

20. What is the title of the fifth Wheel of Time series?

21. What TV series is coming out soon by Joss Whedon?

22. Which author created the alien creature C’thulhu (kə-thoo-loo)?

23. The “precogs” can predict future murders in which movie starring Tom Cruise (based on a short story by Philip K. Dick)?

First Questions for Each Team of the team names’ origins:

House Lannister (name of book series): Song of Ice and Fire (Not Game of Thrones)
The Browncoats (name of TV series): Firefly
The Rohhirim: Lord of the Rings
The Time Lords: Doctor Who
District 12: The Hunger Games

Answers to the questions:

1. Brandon Sanderson

2. Melody Pond

3. (Far over, the misty mountains cold…)

4. Alma Coin

5. Rory Williams

6. The Department of International Magical Cooperation

7. Rose, Martha, Donna, (Wilf,) Amy, Rory, Clara

8. An otter

9. His Dark Materials

10. Phoenix

11. He feels “saint-like” (because how he is “Hole-y”)

12. Thomas Anderson

13. None.  (These were all street interviews…)

14. Kingsley Shacklebolt

15. 1984

16. Elric

17. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep

18. American Gods

19. It’s A Trap!

20. The Fires of Heaven

21. The Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

22. H.P. Lovecraft

23. Minority Report

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Ragnarok

Ragnarok

By Jordy Samuels

Inspired by “Ragnarok”: the Doom of the Gods in Norse Mythology

Three years shall frost rage wild

In chaos to portend

An age for each doomed child

Of the All-father’s friend

And she who offers sorrow

From whence will dawn the morrow

When they from death will borrow

An army for the end

 

The moon and sun devoured

The sky: of pitch and tar

White clouds and blue sea scoured

The mourning Morning Star

Nine realms ablaze and riven

Dim drowning worlds driven

Through old feuds unforgiven

Old wounds; that ancient scar

 

And so will dawn the ending

And so the sea will dry

The Light’s Rebirth impending

Will sweep away the sky

And run you may in grieving

Or claim this Fate deceiving

But death is all-believing

And no God cannot die.

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Chronicle – Review

Director: Josh Trank
Writers: Max Landis and Josh Trank
2012
Dane DeHaan, Alex Russell, Michael B. Jordan

Chronicle, an action/ sci-fi flick, tells the story of three high school seniors:  weird loner Andrew, his intelligent cousin Matt, and their new golden-boy, jock buddy Steve, as they deal and experiment with their new found telekinetic powers. Through outcast Andrew’s video camera, we’re taken into his world: a sad, lonely place where the only person who talks to him is Matt. With an alcoholic father and terminally ill mother to boot, filming every second of every day makes sense as an escape. The story really begins when Matt drags Andrew, handy-dandy camera in tow, to a rager at an abandoned warehouse. There, the two link up with student body president-hopeful Steve, and the three inspect a curious hole in the ground and a mysterious blue light. The best friends approach their new powers from a playful standpoint, holed-up in Matt’s room, giggling like ten-year-olds with a new toy. The discovery process is an interesting and engaging one, and we as the audience are as eager to see how far their powers can take them as they are. The guys prank and play as they grow increasingly stronger, but escalating problems at home and a post-talent show party embarrassment anger Andrew, the most powerful of the trio, and trouble begins to brew.

Constantly comparing himself to a predator, Andrew sinks into a depression and lashes out, violently, at everyone and everything; literally tearing up the town and its people. Dane DeHaan conveys Andrew’s twisted mindset with a scowling, dead-eyed look that highlights and makes creepy the actor’s ice blue eyes. The shaky hand-cam made popular by The Blair Witch Project, and annoyingly perpetuated by Quarantine and Cloverfield, usually serve as a cheap gimmick that generates a forced intensity, but is made cool and clever in Chronicle. The camera is still when it needs to be and shakes when necessary, and the transitions from Andrew’s camera, to bystander’s camera phones, to security footage from police cars help maintain believability in an unbelievable situation. Matt tries, futilely, to talk down his dangerous cousin, and the endgame between the two is unexpected.

The best part about Chronicle isn’t the incredible display of awesome that is telekinesis (though that is cool), or the sweet camaraderie these high school kids engage in, but the kind of story the movie tells. It would be easy for the film to go into any number of conspiracy theories about where the power came from, who put it there, and why it was given to them, but Chronicle addresses none of these. Instead, what we’re given is the story of three guys who stumbled onto something amazing, and what happens when they take advantage of it. That character focus makes everything that happens seem that much more severe, because we as an audience know about and care for these people.  Calm enough for those who like a little plot with their action, and explosive enough for those who prefer constant motion, Chronicle is oddly and pleasantly gripping, and certain to delight sci-fi fans eager to see something a little different.

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Son of Neptune by Rick Riordan

Reviewed by SciFan Member A. Lee

I loved the Percy Jackson series, and I also loved the idea of mixing Greek mythology with Roman mythology when I read The Lost Hero. However… I have a few gripes about the Son of Neptune. First off, Riordan is great at writing short, concise, and very teen-sounding sentences so you forget that you’re reading written sentences but simply ending up visualizing or really living the scenes with the characters. But in SoN, there were several awkward sentences where I had to reread it a few times to really understand what he meant. I’m sure he just wanted to include as many details as possible, but since his writing is already so fluid and very easy to absorb, those awkward sentences really stuck out and I was annoyed that I had to “get out” of the scene in order to decipher exactly what he was trying to describe.

Another gripe was Percy himself.  Okay I love Percy. If he were a real person I would kill him in 10 minutes max for his immaturity and cluelessness, but as a reader I admire him as the idealistically heroic demigod (now don’t crush my dreams). However in SoN (in the chapters in his point of view), he didn’t feel like Percy to me. I know he had to go through the whole Lupa training and escaping monsters and such, and he lost his memory, blah blah blah, but I was kind of disappointed that the Percy I so loved and had gotten to know in the Jackson series wasn’t there. I know this is a new series, but Riordan DID include Percy as one of the MAJOR characters. There was basically absolutely no stupid/funny comments or weird/funny observations from Percy!! Why did it take such a long freaking time to finally mention that blue things made him feel at home? It may seem like a minor detail (and it is just one example) but the reason I cared so much for Percy was because he was so genuinely down to earth and quirky (eg. the need for blue cake) in addition to being an awesome, selfless, dorky, (and again, awesome) demigod. Basically, I just felt like he grew up/matured/got so serious too fast in a period of 6 months of “sleeping” and wolf training. Okay I mean, who at age 16? (is he 17 yet?) thinks about marrying and living in a certain place with his girlfriend, whom he doesn’t even REALLY remember?? COME ON. THAT’S JUST NOT BELIEVABLE. I think Riordan should’ve shown that he’s still the same Percy no matter what, thus including a little more of his naive and weird/funny personality.

The last gripe I had is the pairing of Hazel and Frank as a couple. REALLY?? Can’t they just be really close friends?? Why can’t there be room for some future Greek-Roman romances?? Because now that Riordan has set up Hazel and Frank as a couple, he won’t break them up. And I just really want more inter Greek-Roman relationships going on besides I-hate-you-and-I-didn’t-know-you-exist-but-we-need-to-save-ourselves-so-let’s-work-together type of relationship. Also I felt like pairing Hazel and Frank left Percy as the 3rd wheel, and he is ALREADY the outcast from being Greek (come on, the spirits know he’s a graecus), having crazy powers on the first day he arrives in Camp Jupiter, and having amnesia.

Now. Even though I have these grievances, I still thoroughly enjoyed the book. It was fast paced, exciting, and quite educational (in terms of Roman mythology). I also hated but loved the cliffhanger, because I really really missed Annabeth and wanted to see her soon. Also I think Percy and Annabeth are totally perfect for each other so I can’t wait to see them together again!!

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The Children of the Dark

By Jordy Samuels

Inspired by George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire

They left us here
Those years ago
Among the trees
Beneath the snow
And here we rose from death anew
With hands, coal black, and eyes, bright blue.

In daylight’s world
We lifeless lay
No voice to cry
No breath to pray,
The white about us frozen red.
They’d had no time to burn the dead.

There night finds us
Entombed and still,
Revives our bodies,
Free of will,
And lifts us with the dauntless shade
To hunt the living cavalcade.

They whose pulses
Ring within
Our frozen hearts
And icy skin:
Whose heartbeats are the only sound
That reaches those the night has found.

Among the trees
With bark like bone,
The Wall of frost,
And spells and stone,
And all the streams where winter sleeps;
We linger in a world that weeps.

But tears mean nothing to the dead
Among white snows and leaves of red
Who rise at dark each night anew
With hands, coal black,
And eyes, bright blue…

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