No geek
is an island

April 29, 2005

Estimating the General Election

Filed under: Politics — Will @ 2:11 pm

Via Chris Lightfoot’s Estimation Quiz.

Your score is…

+66.9
That means that you’re…
better informed than 91% of people who’ve already taken the quiz
better informed than 96% of Labour supporters who’ve already taken the quiz
better informed than 85% of Conservative supporters who’ve already taken the quiz
better informed than 91% of Liberal Democrat supporters who’ve already taken the quiz

“I’m feeling very depressed”

Filed under: Film, Geeklife — Will @ 1:13 pm

I went to see The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy film last night, which I enjoyed as a pleasant enough way to pass the time on a Thursday evening. I even laughed a few times.

If I’d never read the books (which I’ve read some of), heard the radio series (which I’ve heard some of) or seen the TV series (which I’ve seen all of), I would probably have enjoyed it more. I may well have thought "Gosh, this is an exciting and amusing new world I’m discovering." As it was, I didn’t.

Minor spoilers follow…

For an alternative view: Gavin’s review.

April 28, 2005

My vote doesn’t count

Filed under: Politics — Will @ 1:57 pm

I’m going to vote LibDem (obviously) but since I live in safe Labour seat with the SNP is second, it’s not going to affect who MP is.

What it will do is increase the LibDem’s vote share across the UK. Every vote like mine helps the argument for proportional representation. The BBC have a discussion thread on this very subject, which has lots of comments in favour of change, including one by me. (Via Make My Vote Count.)

“I’ve changed a lot since the old days”

Filed under: Doctor Who, Doctor Who Reviews — Will @ 1:55 pm

So, after something of a delay, Aliens of London reviewed. Leaving it until after World War Three was useful as I can now review episode four knowing how the story was resolved. It also means I won’t ask questions like “Why not take over the Prime Minister’s body?” which have now been answered on screen.

The revelation that Rose has been missing for a year provided plenty of opportunity for domestic backdrop to the alien invasion, and Russell Davies used it to the full. That Mickey would be suspected of murdering Rose was all too believable. I’ve been undecided about Camille Coduri’s and Noel Clarke’s performances but I’m slowly settling on Clarke’s portrayal of Mickey as being spot on, if a bit goofy at times (e.g., the OTT wall collision as the TARDIS dematerialises) but Coduri’s Jackie as a bit hammy. Sorry Jackie fans. She’s at her worst as soon as she gets a telephone in her hands.

Aliens of London has a noticeably slower pace than the previous episodes but it nevertheless feels scrappy, jumping around from scene to scene. Eccleston seems to be mugging more, but given his comments his first scene involved chasing a pig, perhaps much of this episode was filmed before he’d settled into the character.

The plot itself is a great idea: aliens faking an invasion in order to get alien experts together to kill them (and later to justify a nuclear launch). The Slitheen as humans have been accused of being a bit CBBC, which is fair enough, but it doesn’t damage the episode so long as this is a characteristic of the aliens. As long as the rest of the characters appear to be taking the events seriously (for example, Navin Chowdry is excellent as Indra Ganesh), the Slitheen can still seem dangerous. If I were to change one thing about the Slitheen, it would be the thoroughly un-alien zips.

Once again, there were plenty of good gags, notably the Patrick Moore quip and Harriet Jones’s ID card waving, and the special effects (even the disrobing Slitheen) were good - and, of course, still light years ahead of the original series. It was a shame, given the use of Andrew Marr and Matt Baker, that the BBC News 24 reporter was an actor. (The News 24 clock appeared to be missing from some shots too.)

The return of the cliffhanger to Doctor Who was welcome, with three sequences building to a strong climax - albeit ruined by the “Next Time” teaser (and a cursory resolution in the next episode).

My least favourite of the first four episodes, but still the best thing on TV at the time. And Penelope Wilton was terrific.

What’s in a name?

Filed under: Doctor Who — Will @ 1:17 pm

According to Doctor Who Magazine - via Outpost Gallifrey - the penultimate episode of this series of Doctor Who finally has a name. And it’s…

Read more…

April 27, 2005

Doctor the manifesto

Filed under: Doctor Who, Pictures, Politics — Will @ 1:55 pm

Thanks to a blank version on Thought Crime Is Death, we can all play.

Tony Blair and Doctor Who and the Giant Robot

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