WALL-E Movie Review

By Jennifer Coale




WALL-E is a brilliant computer-animated science fiction movie that was released by Pixar in 2008. The story follows a little robot called Wall-E. He is programmed to strictly compact and stack blocks of trash on what is left of the planet Earth, and he is going about these duties when he finds small green plant growing in an old dirty boot. Earth has been abandoned for generations, and a plant hasn’t been seen in hundreds of years, so his find ends up creating chaos in the space-ship that contains the remainder of human beings. This movie is considered by many to be a silly, but cute and well done, children’s movie. However when you really pay attention to the gravity and seriousness of the events that take place in it, it is through and through a work of science fiction that an adult can enjoy as well. I personally was really touched by this movie, and thought that it was adorable, but also somewhat terrifying because of what it was suggesting. On the space-ship that the humans inhabit, things are completely different than the life we know here. All the people are extremely overweight, and no longer know how to walk because they each have a chair that glides them around to wherever they want to go. The chairs also take care of all their needs: food, water, a change of clothes, everything. In addition to this, there is constantly a digital screen in front of their faces in which they watch movies or read websites or video chat with people who are just a few feet away from them. These screens are so distracting that the inhabitants aren’t even aware that their ship has a pool. Robots raise the children, and though the ship does have a captain, it is actually manned by an auto-pilot machine. In fact, the robot Wall-E has more character than any of the humans, which is what brings about the change. All of these themes are really strong, and I found it to be a really interesting interpretation of what could happen to our decaying planet due to our ever-growing abundance of trash, and how we could one day face a planet that no longer has plants. I would give this movie the highest of ratings, both because of how well done the animation is, and for the thoroughly deep science-fictional storyline.

Avatar Review

By Teagin Lopez




The movie Avatar, a sci-fi action movie directed by James Cameron (Titanic), is a must see with its jaw dropping motion picture animation and 3-d capability. The movie will be known for its amazing look of “Pandora”, the planet where this humanoid group of natives lives (which also happens to be the same area of a very valuable gem to the humans who have come inhabited this planet). The events of the movie take place in 2154 on Pandora which isn't just interesting for the mining of minerals, but how James Cameron makes Pandora look might be one of the most fascinating parts of this move with multiple new kinds of alien species to touch your Sci-Fi loving heart. Jake Sully is a disabled marine who is given the opportunity to join the Avatar program where a human is directly linked into a Na’vi, the native humanoid on Pandora. So Jake and his team of other human controlled Avatars venture into Pandora to hopefully create peace among this beautiful planet. A very enjoyable movie to watch in 3-d with a whole new perspective on fully animated movies, a must see for the experience.

Watchmen Ads

By Marina Yerkes



Welcome to Rapture

By Dallas Robinson




Welcome to Rapture- Where the Utopia became a Dystopia

1959

I am going to tell you a story about a dream; a dream that became a reality; the reality that became a phenomenon. This phenomenon is called Rapture!

Much like the mythical city of Atlantis, Rapture sits at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean somewhere between Greenland and Iceland. Its lights create an aura around the city much like Las Vegas does to Nevada. In Rapture, the greatest minds and artists go at it in the hub of innovation.

A philosopher, Andrew Ryan is the mind behind Rapture. Tired of the achievements of man being taken from him by the government and given to gods, kings and others, Ryan decided that everyone should benefit from the sweat of their brow. Nobody should be limited by law and no innovation should be limited by the public. He was disgusted by those who took and never gave back, that sat on welfare and never contributed. Those people he referred to as “parasites.”

He built Rapture where “the artist would not fear the censor, where the scientist would not be bound by petty morality, where the great would not be constrained by the small.” He collected the most innovative artists and the greatest minds and brought them to Rapture by way of a bathysphere (a small mode of transport) into the Underwater City. These men were free to create whatever they wanted and do whatever they wanted (as long as the didn’t limit or harm others) with the exception of one law: You may never leave Rapture or contact the surface world.

While a great philosopher, this one law would start a chain reaction of the downfall of utopia and create a civil war. You see, the workers who built Rapture weren’t the most innovative and intelligent but since they knew of its secret location, they had to live their as well. Competing for jobs against the highly innovative and highly intelligent was as difficult a task as one might think. Nobody wants to clean toilets or the hallways. This set up a top-heavy class system where the most basic and important jobs were given bad light and eventually neglected.

Another downfall in Ryan’s philosophy was that since government was minimal, everything needed to be controlled by the individual. This led to major corporations being the main source of air, water and basic needs. With great power came greed as these corporations lacked competition and charged whatever they wished to their consumers which created a great deal of poverty among many citizens. Andrew Ryan never stepped in as he believed government had no role in the matter and if enough people cared, it would breed new competition and variety.

Living beneath the sea, many citizens missed the values of the surface from sun to surface goods such as alchohol. This was forbidden as access to the surface was illegal. That led to the rise of a man known as Frank Fontaine (Atlas) who would run an illegal smuggling operation to give these goods to the citizens of Rapture. When Ryan found out about this, a civil war erupted between the two eventually leading in the “death” of Fontaine.

Prior to this, a lady by the name of Tennenbaum discovered a sea slug that could lead to genetic modification. This was known as ADAM. This genetic plasmid would allow people to change themselves, from their hair, to their body structure to their face. This innovation opened a new door of possibility for the city but it would also aide in its downfall.

Science happened, innovation appeared but things were growing darker for this underwater utopia. Fontaine re-appeared under a new alias of Atlas. A “poor civilian of Rapture who wanted more for his people,” was the headline for Atlas. Poverty was growing and this criminal knew that this would be the opportunity to capitalize and take control of the city.

On New Year’s Eve of 1958, the war began. A caste system of those who were bound by the success of others and not aided by anyone decided they wanted to take the city for themselves. This led to the violent and deadly war that would take Rapture down. Nobody could stop it! The man who could have was entrenched so much into his beliefs that he decided that should he intervene, it would be traitorous to his ideals.

Fontaine (Atlas), was the man who operated the corporation for the ADAM Plasmid, and he was the only one. This one detail is why he won the war. Since Ryan didn’t want to intervene in personal achievement, the Fontaine Futuristsics corporation took monopoly control over the selling of the ADAM Plasmid. This ADAM Plasmid, which was originally created for good was used for evil, the evil being weapons. Atlas and his allies used the ADAM to create genetic weaponry: fire, electricity etc to use on their opposition and nothing could stop them.

Rapture now sits at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in a heap of its own failure. An airplane goes down in flames as a man name Jack swims to a Lighthouse with a bathysphere preparing to submerge!


Sci Fi Obituaries

By Palmi Ingvarsson






Star Wars Crossword Puzzle

By Jesse Erickson























Mass Effects 2 Review

By Tola Pong

Mass Effects 2, the sequel to the bestselling video makes it return to the XBOX 360 and PC. The best part comes from when you start the game, it will ask you if you want to import your previous save data from the first Mass Effects. If you do (and you should), the game will pick up where you left off from your previous mission of saving the universe. All the decisions that you’ve made in the first game will have an enormous effect on your journey in this game.

The game starts where the first game left off as Commander Sheppard and his crews are searching for the universe for Geth activity, when an unknown spacecraft appears out of nowhere from the Mass Relay and blast the Normandy ship and its crew in outer space. Commander Sheppard then wakes up to discover that he has died and been brought back to life by a mysterious person call the Illusive Man. He then tells Sheppard of the ordeal that have been going with human colonies disappearing and it is up to Sheppard to gather a new team and get to the source of the problem.

The game play of Mass Effect has been slightly tweaked to make the game flow more smoothly. Sheppard’s powers can now be mapped on to select button to make for more ease of access. The cooldown for his powers now appears on the main screen. Weapons are now easier to maintain and upgrades for specific types of weapons (e.g. pistols, snipers, SMG, etc…) are now set for your entire squad. Handing out commands are now simpler with the much needed boast to the teammates’ A.I. knowing when to cover and shoot, instead of just shooting and dying.

The scope in Mass Effects 2 is immense, as you travel through several galaxies in order to stop an evil force bent on killing human civilization. If you played the first Mass Effects, you’ll come across many familiar alien races, such as the Asari, Turians, Volus, Geths, Quarians, and Krogans. But in the second outing more races are introduced, such as Drells, the Vorchas and the Collectors (the antagonist). Each alien race has their own unique traits and characteristic that makes the scale of the game even bigger.

BioWare, the makers of the Mass Effect series, has put a huge emphasis on team interaction and chemistry. Now players feel a need to interact and understand their squad mates in order for them to become more powerful, because as your squad trust you and you gain their loyalty, they gain new and more powerful abilities to help them and yourself during battles. The end of the game is when your squads’ loyalty comes into play, as it can either make or break your survival on the final mission.

From the graphics, to the gameplay, the voice acting, and the soundtrack, BioWare did it again and created an extraordinary game that pulls people into a limitless universe where players get pulled in and refuse to put down their controller until the game is over.


Overall score: 9.75

Pandorum Movie Review

Movie Review
By Victoria Cooper


Rating:


Pandorum is a terrifying Sci-Fi/Horror film made in 2009 and directed by Christian Alvart. The movie takes place in the future on a space ship called the Elysium. The ship was meant to transport humans from a ravaged and over populated Earth to a newly discovered Earth-like planet called Tanis. The main character of Pandorum is Corporal Bower, a member of the ship’s crew. He wakes up from hyper-sleep and finds that things have gone awry on the Elysium. After waking Lieutenant Payton from hyper-sleep, Bower leaves the safety of the cabin to repower the ship’s reactor so that power will return to the whole ship, allowing them to figure out where they are. Unfortunately, Bower quickly finds out that there are cannibalistic mutants aboard the ship. This movie is definitely NOT for the faint of heart. The space ship is horribly claustrophobic in a few scenes, very suspenseful throughout the movie, and there is also a fair amount of gore that could easily make even a horror film connoisseur cringe. However, this film is a must see for those who can handle scary movies. The plot is one that takes the viewer completely by surprise toward the end. I personally give Pandorum 5 Alien faces out of 5. I really enjoyed it!

Sci Fi Word Scramble and Word Search

By Jesse Erickson