Saturday, February 6, 2016

Web TV Review: Two Atompunk Series

Welcome to the first post for The Super Freek! In this blog you’ll find content about everything pop culture, particularly in nerd-dom. We’ll discuss everything from science fiction and fantasy to computer technology. We’ll cover entertainment media in TV, movies, comic books, video games, and even music. As of now, a post will be published here mid-week—Wednesday or Thursday—every other week. If enough people seem interested, I may post every once a week. To find out more about this blog, please check out the About page. If you have any suggestions for the blog, please feel free to post any comments in the box below. To start off, I provided two short reviews of two internet TV sci fi series below.

These two series can be considered atompunk. For those of you who don’t know what atompunk is, it’s a sub-genre of science fiction involving retrofutures like much steampunk does, only instead of these futures being based on Victorian-derived steam technology it’s based on atomic era technology and so technology of the late 1940s through the early half of the ‘60s (though this has been debated like nearly all history). To find out more about atompunk, check out my article at my other blog, A Far Out Fantastic Site. You can also check out the links below:


"Here Comes 'Atompunk' . . ." , Wired article by Bruce Sterling




Matt Mercury




This humourous space opera debuted only last year, but is reminiscent of 1930s through ‘50s sci fi TV and movie serials. Yet, it uses today’s special effects (considering it was produced on a string budget, that is). Think Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers and Star Wars. Hell, there’s even an alien hang-out of a cantina scene in the first episode. It stars Rick Corrigan, Doug Drexler, Lauren Galley, and Eric Lobo, (better known as Mr. Lobo, horror host of TV-syndicated Cinema Insomnia). The director is Bill Hughes who also co-writes with Heidi Hughes.



10 Ways to Defeat Aliens




Like Matt Mercury, this series is atompunk only the aliens come to Earth in this one instead of Earthlings going to the aliens. Defeat Aliens, is an alien-invasion series but with twists: children, babies to be precise, defend the adults from the alien invaders (at least in episodes one and two they do) and it is told mockumentary style, or, more precisely, instructional/how-to style. Because of these comical twists, Defeat Aliens is a parody of atomic era sci fi like Matt Mercury but even more hilarious. Starring Karl Champley and my x-girlfriend. Okay, it doesn’t star any x-girlfriend of mine. But the woman it does star, Dorothy Chan, looks a lot like a gal I dated once. But I won’t go on any more about that; bad memories. Produced by Griffith Pictures.

Next time, I’ll talk a little more on Matt Mercury and maybe a new video game premiering this month. So tune in in one-and-a-half weeks, same Freek time . . . well, not really. But in one-and-a-half weeks for sure.


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