A video popped up in my Youtube recommendations recently that gave me pause. I didnât recognise the
name of the channel, or the man on the thumbnail, sat unbothered atop a log in a distinct yellow
hunting jacket. Beside that image were two short words: âIâm Deadâ.
Itâs an omnipresent trope of fiction, and itâs a strange feeling seeing it cross into the real
world.
âAs iâm recording this today, it is 20 December, 2023, and iâm recording this and giving Brad
instructions to publish it upon my death. So if youâre watching me: iâm dead.â
I never met the uploader, Paul Harrell. I never watched anything he made. Iâd never even heard his
name. But watching his last message a tear crossed my cheek nevertheless, an experience, judging by
the videoâs comments, that isnât uncommon among people who happened to stumble upon it.
What makes it stranger is that, while, yes, a recording of a man speaking from the grave, âIâm Deadâ
is also a Youtube video, with all the trappings of the format. Mr Harrell makes note two minutes in
that other creators have made claims of him with which he strongly disagrees, and bemoans (tongue
planted in cheek) that he wonât be around to respond anymore. In a twist on the formula, he thanks
the viewers for all the likes, comments, and subscriptions over the years â no point in beseeching
for more, after all. I donât point these quirks out to denigrate the man; by all accounts he seems
to have been an upstanding chap with a passion for weaponry. But⌠I donât know. Itâs hard to put
into words the cocktail of emotions that arises when someone jumps from talking about his diagnosis
of pancreatic cancer to going âthanks for the likesâ, all in the typical jolly cadence of online
video.
Time comes for us all. Two of my most valiantly followed blogs are run by authors of
fifty-nine and
seventy-three; barring a rapid scientific
breakthrough, i am near certain to outlive them. Videomakers trend younger; still, in just the past
year, a cancer diagnosis and
a stroke have passed my subscription feed.
I donât get torn up when a musician i love passes, but in this postmodern age, the internet begets a
one-sided connection that feels a damned lot more like friendship than a vinyl record ever could.
One by one, the first generation of internet creatives is dying â and, unless we remember them,
their spirit will too.
Oh fuck i idly put on Kid A and accidentally let it get all the way to âMotion Picture
Soundtrackâ.
đď¸đď¸đď¸ REEEED WIIIINE đď¸đď¸đď¸ AND SLEEEEEPIIIING PILLS đď¸đď¸đď¸đď¸ HELP ME GET BACK T
The Almighty Algorithm⢠recommended me this song yesterday and i canât turn it off. This is so
precisely My Kind of Shit that itâd be criminal not to post it, so⌠now listening:
Boring post but last nightâs BBC Two quiz night had possibly the
greatest game of Only Connect ever played by man. Both teams kept getting the connection on
only the second example. The first group solved the connecting wall in, like, ten seconds. It was
incredible.
Authorâs note: I first wrote up this wee bit of allohistorical silliness in March of this year,
posting it a few places online, but never actually bothered on my own website until now.
Enjoy.
Doctor Who?, on CBS
1963â1966: Vincent Price (Doctor Who)
First episode: âThe Girl from Another Worldâ
Last episode: âPlanet of the Daleksâ
1966â1967: Jack Nicholson (Doctor Who, Theta Sigma)
First episode: âPlanet of the Daleksâ
Doctor Who and the Daleks, on CBS
1967â1972: Jack Nicholson (Doctor Who, Theta Sigma)
Last episode: âThe Paradox Webâ
Doctor Who: Alien Agent, on CBS
1973â1975: David McCallum (Agent John Smith / Doctor Who, Theta Tau)
First episode: âThe Mannequin Menâ
Last episode: âDoctor Whoâs Mindâ
Doctor Who and the Cyber-Man, produced by New World Pictures
1980: Clu Gulager (Doctor Who / âThat existed?â)
Doctor Who, on UPN
1986â1989: Kyle MacLachlan (The Doctor)
First episode: âPilotâ
Last episode: âThe Deadly Assassin (Part 1)â
1990â1993: Bruce Campbell (The Second Doctor)
First episode: âThe Deadly Assassin (Part 2)â
Last episode: âThe Edge of Timeâ
1994â1998: John Rhys-Davies (The Third Doctor / The Professor)
First episode: âFor Want of a Nailâ
Last episode: âSeta (Part 2)â
1999â2002: Kate Mulgrew (The Fourth Doctor)
First episode: âChangesâ
Last episode: âHourglassâ
Doctor Who, on NBC
2005â2011: Neil Patrick Harris (The Fifth Doctor)
First episode: âThe Interstellar Interruptionâ
Last episode: âParadise Lostâ
2012â2013: Donald Glover (The Sixth Doctor)
First episode: ââŚWe Have a Problemâ
Doctor Who, on Blockbuster
2014â2015: Donald Glover (The Sixth Doctor)
Last episode: âThe Three Doctorsâ
2015â2019: Nathan Fillion (The Seventh Doctor)
First episode: âThe Three Doctorsâ
Last episode: âWorld Enough and Time (Part 5)â
2019â2023: Daniel Dae Kim (The Eighth Doctor)
First episode: âGrandfather Clockâ
Last episode: â1963â
Season 26 of Doctor Who is slated for a release in the late summer of 2024, starring
Matt Smith of TCMâs A Song of Ice and Fire.
Actors who played the Master includeâŚ
James Shigeta as âthe Celestial Masterâ, a one-shot villain from the Price era who would
reoccur as a trickster figure in army fatigues in Doctor Who and the Daleks
Robert ZâDar as âthe Master of Timeâ, a larger-than-life egomaniac who forced
MacLachlanâs Doctorâs regeneration and would regularly clash with him in the âactionisedâ
Campbell years
John Anderson as âMr. Setaâ, a master (heh) of disguise who was written as a throwback to
the Alien Agent era
Christopher Walken as âProfessor Tannhauserâ, who, in the far future, devises an equation
proving humanity can escape the end of the universe â a plan that NPHâs Fifth Doctor gladly
assists in, until one of them realises just who the other isâŚ
Lady Gaga as âClaire Oswaldâ, a companion throughout the first season of the Fillion era
who always seems to know a bit more than she lets on
âAustralianâ is an anagram of âSaturnaliaâ. I donât know what it means,
but i bet it means something.
Mandarin Chinese implies the existence of Fed English and Apparatchik Russian.
I watched Fede Ălvarezâs turn at the Alien franchiseâs helm with, i sense, the ideal amount
of knowledge. Online reviews are split â and the more Alien films the reviewerâs seen, the
less they like it. Me? Iâd sat down for the first and second, once, a while ago, and that was it. No
slogging through assembly cuts or failed comebacks or stealth prequels or anything of the sort.
Where they saw the gasping regurgitations of a dying and overexerted setting, i saw a darn good
film.
The opening credits start rolling and weâre immediately in the future. Yesterdayâs future.
Everythingâs clicks and clacks and yellowing walls, just as James Cameron left it when he turned off
the lights. What theyâve done is turn what could be an embarrassing anachronism â haha, look at what
those quaint twentieth-century fools thought today would look like â into a believable path that,
with a nudge and a push, technology might have otherwise taken. Certainly, the bulky
CRTs and Vectrex video games arenât better than the technology
of even ten years ago IRL⌠but theyâre cheaper, exactly the
sort of thing a fledgling colony would use to save money, and one gets the sense that the
predilection for tactile tools and fuzzy screens is the result of ĂŚsthetics cycling back to where
they were a hundred years ago, not everyone collectively forgetting how to make a liquid-crystal
display.
Two sci-fi pet peeves of mine are nicely resolved, too. In the role of the astronomer-aggravating
âââasteroid fieldâââ we
instead have the ring of an icy planet; the shipâs artificial gravity system is no mere cost-saving
cop-out, but a structual Jenga block in the filmâs action scenes, which mine the flip between 0 and
1 g for all itâs worth. Objectively speaking, Alien: Romulus just wouldnât work on a
hard sci-fi rotating spaceship, which is a rare thing!
Seven films into a franchise, it would be easy to bog oneself down in continuity and lock out any
viewers who havenât melted into their couch for a twelve-hour marathon. (This is the predicament
which Marvel films have found themselves in as of late.) Equally, it would be easy to go too far in
the quest to âbreathe new lifeâ⢠into the world and leave us wondering why they put the
Alien name on it at all. Romulus finds a sensible middle path. Its connection with the
Alien brand is chiefly a matter of economy. We know, for example, that xenomorphs are bad,
that they have acid blood, and that they get you boypreggers. We know Weyland-Yutani is an
unscrupulous corporation in the business of space colonisation that wants to use xenomorph
DNA for its own gain. We know that androids are made of milk for some
reason. And so Mr Ălvarez neednât waste any time explaining that to us. Equally, nobody ever says
the name âEllen Ripleyâ. Thereâs no mention of the ancient progenitors of mankind or whatever those
prequel films were about. Our story is set in the world of Alien, not the wiki.* (Please
ignore that Asterisk of Doom. Iâm sure itâs fine.)
*The Asterisk of Doom, or, the dead CG elephant in the room
This was an exceedingly minor thing to my overall enjoyment and i didnât want to give it more
space than it deserved, so iâm shunting it down here where noĂśne will see it. So. That, uh⌠that
Ian Holm deepfake, huh?
There has always been spirited debate over the ethical quandaries of reviving old actors with
effects, even before the current wave of machine learning â Crispin Glover sued Universal for
flipping his character upside down in Back to the Future: Part II, remember! I actually
donât mind it, particularly when the character themself, like Ian Holmâs Ash/Rook, is meant to
be artificial. (And as before, the same way we already know xenomorphs are bad news, we already
know Mr Holmâs face wonât belong to someone with our crewâs best interests at heart.)
My annoyance is strictly technical. To understand the problem, letâs flash back fourteen years
to Tron: Legacy, the first blockbuster to bring back an old face with the power of the
computer:
Here Joseph Kosinskiâs legasequel flashes back to the original filmâs time period, so faces the
task of bringing back Jeff Bridges as he looked in 1982. It starts with just his voice. Perfect:
faces and bodies change drastically in oneâs life, but at worst, a voice will get a little
huskier.
Then, as we pan into his sonâs room, we see him first from the back, then a side profile, in the
dark. Again, perfect. Hiding shoddy CGI in the dark has been a go-to
in the filmmakerâs bag of tricks since Spielberg did it in Jurassic Park. This is going
great. We have a believable fake Jeff Bridges. Weâre hitting our audience right in the nostalgia
zone, which, as we all know, is the most profitable zone of the body. And then⌠oh. Ohhh no.
Ohhh no no no.
Mr Bridgesâs doppelganger turns around directly into the bright light and opens his mouth. Every
weakness in early-tens computer graphics comes out at once. The plastic skin. The dead eyes. The
mouth that never moves the same way as the rest of the face. This is not Jeff Bridges. This is a
changeling who has stolen his name and skydived into the uncanny valley. The illusion is
shattered, because the filmmakers couldnât help themselves from giving the game away.
I bring this example up because Alien: Romulus has the exact opposite problem. The crew,
exploring a dank, dark ship, finds Rook face down on the messy ground, having barely survived a
close encounter of the third kind. They plug him in, and⌠a heretofore unknown bright light
turns to shine directly onto his face, on which not a jot of blood or waste is to be found.
(Itâs harder to deepfake someone if thereâs muck in the facial area, you understand.) This is
everything youâre not meant to do, and though technology has advanced tremendously in the
fourteen years since Rubbery Bridges Syndrome, a cluster of neurons in the back of your head
knows that something is deeply wrong. There is no light in his eyes. I kept looking at his
eyebrows, wondering if the problem was there, but no. Every bit of his face looks perfect â but
all put together in motion⌠one shudders at the sight.
But the further the film goes on, the smarter it gets. After our scavengers leave the lab where
they found him, they interact with him chiefly through fuzzy
CRT screens, smoothing out the imperfections. Unable to move,
assorted gunk and alien goo piles up on his increasingly ravaged face, and when we do properly
cut back to him, heâs shot in a side profile with chiaroscuro alarm lights. I kept thinking:
why the fuck are you only doing this nowâ˝ You donât put the bad effects first, for Godsâ
sakes!
Anyway, the rubbery robot face didnât actually bother me that much â weâve come to the point
where weâre closer to the top of the uncanny valley than the bottom. I just needed some time to
explain.
Particularly iâd like to single out the cast, none of whom i had heard of before barring a passing
recollection of the name Cailee Spaeny, but all of whom do great jobs. Mr Ălvarez has aged down the
cast from the seriesâ usual monster fodder, not burnt-out truckers but wide-eyed twentysomething
pirates looking to steal some cryo pods to blast off after a better life. (Outside the lead two
theyâre pretty thin, but hey, itâs a monster movie.) Our lead is the orphaned Rain Carradine, a
serviceable Sigourneyalike played by Ms Spaeny, who reluctantly goes with the scavengers after she
finds out sheâs been assigned another six years on a black-skied mining colony⌠and because they
require the services of her android guardian Andy (heh), the only one who can interface with the
systems on the derelict space station they have their eyes on. David Jonsson, who plays Andy, would
deserve an âand introducingâ had he not been in Rye Lane just last year, but this alone
already proves heâs going on to do even greater things. Heâs given the task, without spoilers, of
playing what amounts to two different (but similar!) characters in the same body, and shows off his
naturalistic chops in every little micro-movement.
A certain scene with his character early on will be etched in my brain forever. Itâs the big reveal
of the Alienâ˘, facehuggers jumping out from every corner in a room flooded by molten ice and red
lights⌠and he stands there, rebooting, the same pose he was two minutes ago, his arms wide, as if
nothing happens. Two seconds later, he takes total command of the situation, going from timid to
Terminator in five seconds flat. If anything from this film is passed into the annals of pop culture
(other than the Asterisk) itâll either be that scene or the insane body-horror third act that i
darenât even mention for fear of ruining the experience. (Annihilation would be proud.)
Iâll be straight with you: itâs not as good as Alien. Itâs not as good as Aliens. But
nothing ever will be. Donât go in with sky-high expectations â go in for a rollicking
sci-fi-action-horror, xenomorph or no xenomorph, and youâll have a great time.
First up is Enemy (2013), a movie somebody peed on. Summarising the plot it sounds
a bit thin â Jake Gyllenhaal meets his evil twin Jake Evyllenhaal and not much else happens â
but Denis Villeneuve does a fantastic job of building up tension and dread around a slow-burning
premise which, in itself, isnât necessarily the scariest thing. 6/10.
Took a trip to the cinema to see Longlegs (2024), starring the greatest living
actor himself, Nic Cage. I say âstarringâ; heâs not in it so much, as itâs more about
the internal tensions of our mildly psychic, mildly autistic Clarice Starling stand-in, played
wonderfully by Maika Monroe. Again, the plotâs a bit thin, falling apart with a whimper in the
third act, but the style and execution more than makes up for it. There are so many looming
shots of doors and windows just at the edge of frame, snippets of interspersed terror, ominous
rumbling soundscapes⌠pretty good! 7/10.
Green Room (2015) is a solid little low-budget thriller where a punk band get
trapped in a nazi bar. Not much to say other than 6/10.
Watched Schindlerâs List (1993) for the first time. Cue several hours of inelegant
blubbering from me. (âI could have got moreâŚâ) I would like to apologise for calling John
Williams a hack. I was not familiar with your game, sir. 10/10, but it feels wrong to give it a
numbered score in the first place.
In Bruges (2008)! The online hype for this is ravenous and iâm not quite sure it
lives up, but i was suitably entertained. Colin Farrell has very kind eyes. 6½/10.
The Olympics were as uplifting as always. A Discord friend of mine put it best: âThe
Olympics makes me feel patriotic for the human raceâ. For a few glorious weeks, it doesnât
matter that the IOC is the third most corrupt organisation on the
planet behind Fifa and the Mafia. It doesnât matter that there are wars raging across the old
world. All that matters is that the most fit people on the planet have come to show what the
human body can really do when pushed to its limits.
After years of putting it off, i finally got around to
The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), all 3½ hours of it. Itâs hard to review just
the first part of the trilogy, but if the rest is as good as this, itâs on track for an easy 9.
Iâve been getting into the Eighth Doctor audio dramas recently and
âThe Chimes of Midnightâ might be among the best things to come out of Doctor Who.
Very dark. Very weird. It builds up this offputting atmosphere perfectly, Paul McGann and India
Fisher making you wish theyâd gotten a proper series, with the traditional timey-wimey twist.
9/10.
Feeling really quite glum over the news of
far-right riots near here yesterday.
I just keep coming back to the question⌠why Sunderland, of all places?
Not that it would be okay in any situation, but itâs not Leicester, where you have sectarian
tensions flaring up. Itâs not Southport, where you just had a mass stabbing. Itâs not even somewhere
with a properly substantial Muslim or immigrant population, like a Birmingham or a Boston. Itâs
Sunderland. Why here, in what is, pardon my bluntness, the White British1
working-class capital of the UK?
I donât know. I guess i thought it couldnât happen here. That we were nicer up north. Or that the
scenery was too nice for people to get angry. Or that we were too left-wing even though Reform beat
the Tories in every constituency. Or maybe that we were too deprived, and that we didnât
have anyone to scapegoat, because we knew itâd be shit no matter what.
Ach. History will trundle on as always, and in due time iâm sure the internet shit-stirrers and
fundie imams will be joining hands and complaining about all those filthy undersea neo-post-BahĂĄâĂ
immigrants from Atlantis taking our jobs. Maybe we can set up a football rivalry for everyone to
redirect their hate into like they did in Glasgow. Who knows.
A very minor thing, but iâve refreshed my blogroll. Do check the linked sites out if you havenât
already. :-)
Just bought a month of Discovery+ to be able to watch the Olympic surfing and iâm not happy about
it.