February 01, 2007

Pink Five News


From the official production blog of Pink Five:

"But the top story this week is that Allegiance, the new Star Wars novel by Timothy Zahn, goes on sale tomorrow.
Way, way back at Celebration III, longtime friend-of-Pink-Five John Hudgens introduced me to Timothy Zahn, because John knew that Timothy was a Pink Five fan.
Which made a kind of sense... EU writers do the same thing fanfilm makers do, after all - we poke around the edges of the established SW universe, hunting for stories that haven't been told before.
It turned out Zahn was indeed a Pink Five fan, and during our conversation he said (in a mock-conspiratorial whisper) "I'm going to put Stacey into my next novel, if I can get away with it.
"

Timothy Zahn has been a fan to Star Wars fans for quite some time, even making the 501st Stormtrooper Garrison (fan community that dons the armor and cloaks of SW villains for charity) Canon by including them in his novels Survivor's Quest and Fool's Bargain. 

In late Pink Five news, it seems that the first 3 and a half minutes of Return of Pink 5, Vol 2 is available on YouTube.


August 08, 2006

Star Trek Aurora


startrekaurora.gifThe USS Aurora is ready to leave dock!

This ambitious fanfilm series is one of the first of its kind. It's a four part series done completely in CG. The Aurora takes to the stars between the original series and the Star Trek: The Motion Picture. The story revolves around a group of merchanteers, just trying to make their way in the universe. To quote the creator:

...the many civilians that Kirk's Enterprise encountered in the original series: as a kid, I would see these jumpsuit-clad people on this planet or that station and wonder more about their stories. It seemed to me that you'd have to be almost as courageous as the Enterprise crew to leave Earth behind and put yourself out there in that very same unpredicable and sometimes hostile galaxy–but without a heavily armed starship at your disposal!
There is no set release date for the next chapters since they will be released as completed, and the unique CG format is no easy process. We'll try to keep you posted as more information comes along.

Visit AuroraTrek.com/


July 14, 2006

Ryan vs Dorkman 2 announced.


I don't know about you guys, but I have been a serious fan for years of the film Ryan Wieber vs Dorkman Scott. It was originally released in 2003 and pit two of the best rotoscopers on the TFN boards against each other, in a contest to see who really was the best. As it turns out, RvD won TFN's competition with 54% of the vote, a staggering number to say the least.

It seems the guys are ready for round 2. They have announced that they are under way with production of number 2.

You can find updates and more information at ryanvsdorkman.com/


October 22, 2005

Stargate SG-Delta


Some creative googling today has yielded the discovery of yet a new Stargate fanfilm: Stargate SG-Delta.

"The premise of this project is this: A situation arises which the SGC is unable to handle. One of General Hammond's assistants gets authorization to form a new SG team composed of an Army Delta Force team. Their initial mission is a rescue operation which also uncovers a new threat to Earth. SG-Delta is born."

Be sure to visit the downloads to catch a couple preview glimpses, as well as a behind-the-scenes look at the project and the all-important blooper reel.

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October 08, 2005

Review: Hidden Frontier: Vigil


Ratings for Hidden Frontier's "Vigil":
Plot: starstarstarstar
Acting:starstarstar
Dialogue:starstar
Special Effects:starstarstar
Overall:starstarstar (of 5)


The Hidden Frontier Star Trek fanseries is impressive for it's longevity alone, but it's creators constant effort to push the envelope is what really makes it notable. Vigil is a groundbreaking and ambitious effort among Star Trek fanfilms, and not only because it features a notable crossover with New Voyage's James Cawley (Captain Kirk). In the longest episode ever attempted by the Hidden Frontier group, this episode plays like an actual television production of Star Trek, with cross-crossing A and B plots spanning interstellar politics to personal character struggle.

Vigil sports an intriguing plotline that dovetails nicely into pre-existing Star Trek history, decent acting, and an applaudable performance by James Cawley, though the episode does have a few key drawbacks. In some areas, the dialogue gets a bit muddled, and the characterization of the lead Romulan in the story at one point stretches suspension-of-disbelief.

The episode also delves into a foray which studio Star Trek rarely approached: a homosexual attraction between two male cast members. The way this bit of human drama plays out is sometimes silly, if only for its own cliche self-awareness (women trying in vain to get his attention by showing off their cleavage, etc). But overall, the episode is very watchable, and maintains enough sense of narrative drama to keep you interested through to the conclusion. As a Star Trek fanfilm and as a Hidden Frontier project, Vigil shines most brightly in terms of plot, setting the bar higher for future fan projects to follow. | Discuss


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Tales of the Seventh Fleet - Important Info


"Tales of the Seventh Fleet" To Beam Fans Into Space At UberCon
Fan Produced Star Trek Series Aims to Continue to Explore New Words

East Rutherford, NJ-OCT 5: The USS JUSTICE, a "Star Trek" fan club and producer of "Tales of the Seventh Fleet" (TotSF), is proud to announce that they will be attending UberCon (http://www.ubercon.com) this October 15th and 16th. This gaming convention, held at the Meadowlands Sheraton in East Rutherford, NJ, is the premiere convention of its type in the area.

Cast and crew of Tales of the Seventh Fleet will be on hand to answer any and all questions relating to the series, and fandom in general. In addition, patrons can have their picture taken against a "blue screen" and receive a souvenir of themselves on the JUSTICE's Bridge, Transporter Room, Engineering, or on an Alien Planet. The USS JUSTICE will also be sponsoring a free raffle for a walk-on role for one lucky UberCon attendee to appear in an actual TotSF episode.

The highlight of the weekend will be the presentation of both TotSF episodes, "Return to Doomsday" and "Upgrade," along with several other fan produced creations.

For more information about the USS JUSTICE and Tales of the Seventh Fleet, please refer to their web site at http://www.ussjustice.org. | Discuss this topic, visit the Forum


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September 19, 2005

The Fanboys are coming! How Laissez-faire could revolutionize SciFi


Gene Rodenberry would be proud, I think. Or at least suprised.

With the paradoxically tragic, and yet celebrated, cancellation of Star Trek: Enterprise, Trekkies across the globe are finding themselves in something of a time-warp. Today, fans are in a similar position to a previous generation when the original Star Trek was taken off the air in 1969. The parallels between the final throes of the Original Star Trek and Star Trek: Enterprise, are indeed noteworthy, but it is the differences between them that may end up revolutionizing TV SciFi as we know it--Star Trek and beyond.

In a striking demonstration of the kind of disregard that Hollywood all too often shows to some of it's audiences, Enterprise co-creator and co-executive producer Brannon Braga once referred to some Trekkies as "continuity pornographers" because of online criticisms leveled against him and Rick Berman during the rough and waning years of Star Trek's latest TV series. Toward the end of Enterprise's run, Berman himself would cite "franchise fatigue" as a prime reason behind the demise of modern Star Trek, saying that the series should be allowed to lay fallow for a few years until demand for it re-asserted itself. The truth, however, was that enough fans (both casual and hardcore) had become fed up with the increasing variance between the beloved Next Generation model of Star Trek and "Neo Trek" that the fanbase fractured into something akin to a Nerd Civil War. By the time that Manny Coto took the helm, the damage to Enterprise's viewer base had already been done and the series was inevitably canned.

Now, sadly, there's no more new Star Trek to watch . . . or is there?

Even before Enterprise was cancelled, fanboys across the country--and the world--had started building up a new cottage industry of Star Trek, turning their backyards and garages into film studios, and their home computers into special effects labs. Though this kind of grass-roots ambition was not new, it wasn't until home studio equipment became affordable that the movement really began to explode. Contrary to Berman's "franchise fatigue" explanation--which implied that demand for Star Trek had exhausted itself--fan-made productions are popping up all across the internet, and gaining notoriety among those who believe that Trek still has some steam left in it.

Time and Technology have been kind to the Trekkie. In the years since Star Trek first hit the air, advances in computing technology have made it possible for average people to film, edit, and produce video presentations of a quality that rivals the early years of The Next Generation. Even the vaunted cult hit Babylon 5 can seem archaic in comparison with some of the SFX jobs that characterize SciFi fanfilms. With some 3D animation software like Maya, even novices can create epic starship battles and renderings of alien planets that used to be the exclusive prevue of companies like Industrial Light and Magic.

Combine this cheap access to production equipment with simple Trekkie fanaticism and access to a world-wide distribution network (the Internet), and suddenly fans from Shanghai to Mozambique can watch the latest adventures of Captain Garrovick onboard the Starship Exeter or Captain Shelby in Hidden Frontier with a click of a mouse. No network schedules to work around, no DVD manufacturers to haggle with. Just simple, direct access to the audience.

But the true beauty of this whole new paradigm in fan production is that the internet isn't just a conduit for everyone with a camera to get their projects in front of people's eyes. No, in fact, it is the dispersed nature of the internet--millions of websites, and billions of pages--which acts as a sort of democratic mediator that promotes the good content and weans out the bad. It's a given that not every fan production is going to be a masterpiece (even most TV shows are garbage), but those which show talent and promise are quickly passed around the world-wide-web through word of mouth. Emails and instant messages crisscross the thin spindles of information that connect computer servers across the world . . . and every user who stumbles across an "eShow" worthy of mention, will probably forward it on to their friends who will judge for themselves and do the same.

Eventually, that discussion will manifest itself in hyperlinks on message boards, newsgroups, blogs, mailing lists and news websites (like PlanetFandom). In a kind of Laissez-faire fanboy economy, the projects, actors, editors, costume designers and special effects artists who have talent naturally generate notoriety. This is the same concept that the Google search-engine relies on; the more a site is mentioned and linked to, the higher Google will rank that site when someone searches for a phrase that describes it. Over time, this process of "vote with your mouse" would allow fan-based talent from all across the globe to interact and improve their trade. Eventually, the shows that are worthwhile would grow better known and those which lacked talent would ultimately fall into the dark depths of anonymity.

This process has already see the release of fanshows that rival and exceed the production quality of The Original Star Trek. If left to their own devices, fanboy productions will become more sophisticated and the talented individuals behind the shows will tend to gravitate toward each other. The prospect of ever-improving "TV show" production, specifically honed to the tastes and preferences of Star Trek's target market should make some studio executives stand up and think. Why risk an untested concept based on a quick studio pitch, when an all volunteer team has effectively done market research, selected qualified talent, and produced and distributed test episodes of it's show to an internet-savvy target market that is becoming harder and harder to reach through traditional advertising channels?

Ideally, recognition of the talent and value of good fanseries would lead to a kind of two-way communication between a fanbase and a professional production studio, with the lines between "fanboy" and "pro" being blurred somewhat. The more communication that exists between a show and its audience, the more responsive that show can be to the preferences of the viewers. Fanboys now take personal "ownership" or "stock" in the show that they watch, and instead of increasing audience atrophy, viewers become more fiercely loyal to their favorite series, and make it a point to evangelize their show through world-of-mouth. If fans feel they have a voice in the course of a show, they are much more likely to watch and talk about it. It's the basic Hail To The Fanboy concept all over again.

Refreshingly, all of this has not been lost entirely on Hollywood. Take Star Trek New Voyages, for example, which is one of the most popular Trek fanseries online today. Continuing the adventures of Kirk, Spock and McCoy of the Original Star Trek, this production has managed even to garner the attention of the professional media, as well as flag down an appearance of Walter Koenig and a script by D.C. Fontana. Producers of fanfilms like Star Wars Revelations are now getting to sit shoulder-to-shoulder with actors from Battlestar Galactica at fan conventions, so this cottage industry movement hasn't gone entirely under the radar. As fans, all that we can hope for is that, as time goes on, more producers--and not just of Star Trek--will start to follow the precedent set by George Lucas in allowing people to make fanfilms without fear of legal action. Eventually, Hollywood and the big studios will have to take notice of us, it's just good business sense to tailor your product (the show) to its consumer (the audience). The internet is a great tool for discovering those diamonds in the ruff among fandom, and as long as people care enough to keep doing stuff like this, the Federation is almost certain to be boldly going for many years to come, even if new Trek never returns to the air. | Discuss this item on the forums


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September 18, 2005

More on Stargate SG-2 - The Ninth Symbol


More information has come up since our first discovery of Blue Smoke Studios' Stargate SG-2: The Ninth Symbol: The final release date is TBA, however it looks as if plans are leaning toward a Winter, 2006 premier. BSS plans to release a new version of it's SG-2 trailer on or before September 25th. | Discuss this item on the forums


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September 13, 2005

More info on upcoming 'Hidden Frontier' ep: 'Vigil'


There's new information out about the Hidden Frontier episode guest starring James Cawley (Kirk, from New Voyages). They're calling this Hidden Frontier's "most ambitious episode ever," so anticipation is naturally high:

Calhoun. Shelby. Romulans. Tholians. Orions. Secret missions. Romance. Death. Hidden Frontier's 41st episode is expected to clock in at nearly network-TV length. Vigil weaves together four storylines in an episode fans will be talking about for some time to come.

Vigil guest stars Star Trek: New Voyages' James Cawley (Captain Kirk), who appears as Captain Mackenzie Calhoun, commander of the USS Excalibur from the Star Trek: New Frontier series of novels.

ABOUT THE PRODUCTION: J.T. Tepnapa directs Vigil, with assistant directors P.K. Eiselt and Gabriel Giorgi. Vigil is Hidden Frontier's longest script yet to be produced, with its most extended production timeline ever. Principal photography began back in April, overlapping production with Homeport and Beachhead. Principal photography finally wrapped at the end of August.

ABOUT THE STORY: As Hidden Frontier continues its serialized format, Vigil brings together several of the series' most significant storylines. “The war with the Tholians is taking its toll,” says episode writer Carlos Pedraza. “The Federation has forged an awesome alliance, but it's by no means an easy one. Like any war, it's fought on many fronts, and there will be losses.” Carlos wrote the story with some help from scifi/horror author Steve Berman (no relation to Rick) and turned to New Frontier fan and HF Story Department head Mike Urvand to portray the Calhoun-Shelby interaction. Mike was the one who originally suggested including a Calhoun appearance in Season 6. The idea was further developed by Carlos, Executive Producer Rob Caves, and Adam Browne. You can READ MORE at Hidden Frontier.com. | Discuss this item on the forums


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September 10, 2005

Stargate SG-2 - The Ninth Symbol


A new day, a new fanfilm discovery. This one comes from Blue Smoke Studios and takes place in the universe of Stargate: Stargate SG-2: The Ninth Symbol. This series is currently in production, and the latest word on its status is that it's about 1/3rd completed. There was also talk about a planned October 2005 premier, but this is as yet unconfirmed.

Drop by the site and see the trailers for the series' pilot, especially the 3rd one (which is the best of the three). SG-2 looks like it will be very competently made and sports a colorful cast, so I'm eager to see what Blue Smoke Studios comes up with.


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August 28, 2005

Star Wars Fanfilm: Return of Pink Five


For those of you who have been following the Star Wars fanfilm scene for awhile, you're probably aware of the runaway hit that took the Grand Prize in the 2003 Atomfilms Fan Film Contest, Pink Five. Since the premiere of the original hilarious piece by The Truly Dangerous Company, it was followed up by Pink Five Strikes Back which won the Atomfilms Audience Choice Award in 2004. Now they're looking to bring in installment #3, Return of Pink Five, which if the previous two installments are any indication--will be absolutely hilarious and very well produced.

But, as fanfilms sometimes tend to do, the Pink Five production has run into a few financial snafus, and so they need your help. Check out Pink Five's Blog for more information.

From TheForce.net: TF.N and Rebelscum are working together to get donations for the fan film Return of Pink Five. In case you don't know, Pink Five won the George Lucas Selects award in Lucasfilm's 2003 Official Star Wars Fan Film awards - its sequel, Pink Five Strikes Back won the Audience Choice Award the following year. We love their work.

While in stock, your $20 donation, 100% of which will be sent to them, will get you a TheForce.net blue polo shipped to your U.S. address via Priority Mail.

There are only 58 shirts in mixed sizes and once they are gone, well, they are gone. After that, or in addition to it, you can buy Pink Five stuff over at HERE, or if you can donate even a dollar, you can do so HERE.


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August 16, 2005

STAR TREK NEW VOYAGES Movie Announced


The STAR TREK NEW VOYAGES online series, a fan-made continuation of Captain Kirk's initial five year mission, made the following announcement in their message board: "Originally, we had planned on filming both Episode 3 and 4 this coming September. This is no longer the case. The Fontana webisode will lens in September as planned. However, the Trevino/Calk script will not be filmed until 2006."

Via TrekWeb - Browse, Bicker, and Boldly Go (Star Trek)