I've seen every episode (did a lot of binge-watching to catch up), and I've read the first e-book (there's a series). The book is somewhat different from the TV series. For one thing, there's another main character who isn't in the TV show. I'm looking forward to seeing the new season.The 100 is a guilty pleasure for me. It's kind of aimless; was derived from source material which it has since abandoned, but has good enough writing to be interesting.
I never saw that, but I finally got around to watching Terra Nova. That was an interesting idea, and it's a shame they canceled the show.Has anyone ever watched Space: Above and Beyond, btw? It was one of my fav sci-fi shows back in the 90s (I think), but then they got cancelled after a couple seasons. Maybe nostalgia has got the best of me, but I think that show was marathon worthy.
Gah. I really didn't care for The Sarah Connor Chronicles. The actress playing Sarah looked like she was perpetually scowling, and the way they did the time travel technobabble was basically whatever the plot required; it had no consistency with the movies or within the series itself, and made no sense.Another criminally-underrated sci-fi show was Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles (2008-09). I'm not aware that it's available to stream, so anyone who wants to give it a shot may have to resort to DVDs. It got 2 seasons, a total of 31 episodes, and not very many people watched it. It's a sequel to Terminator 2: Judgment Day and skips the next 3 films, mostly for the better, I thought.
Time travel is always a fraught plot device, but I never had a hard time following the story here. I thought this show handled it about as well as anybody does, and better than many.Gah. I really didn't care for The Sarah Connor Chronicles. The actress playing Sarah looked like she was perpetually scowling, and the way they did the time travel technobabble was basically whatever the plot required; it had no consistency with the movies or within the series itself, and made no sense.
Revolution never quite got its hooks in me, either. I think I watched most of the first season, but by the time season 2 started I'd kind of forgotten about it. The alternative take on the post-apocalypse was sort of neat, and it had a couple of actors I like (although I think one of them got killed in the first episodeOkay, the TV version of Sarah Connor was marginally more palatable than the main character on Revolution (her name escapes me at the moment). The actress had two facial expressions: blank and scrunched forehead. She just could not act to save her life, and the character was so unlikable that she was given the nickname "Bratniss" by the regular viewers on Television Without Pity (in the early part of the show's run her weapon of choice was a crossbow). I never finished watching the show, and from the comments I've seen, I really didn't miss much. It was canceled far later than it should have been.
Right, the streaming rights on shows is probably different in every country, which complicates a conversation like this one. Continuum is a Canadian show, which I think aired on Space originally. Fringe is a Fox show. I don't know what either means for Netflix Canada, though.I haven't seen either of those, and am limited to whatever is on Netflix Canada. I'm not sure if those are, but will check.
"SyFy" is one of the worst rebranding decisions I can remember, and I didn't even know about the Polish thing.Whenever I see "SyFy" my mind races to syphilis and messy bedrooms, which is what the word means in Polish. Unconsciously or not every single SyFy advert that my eyes pick up gets associated with garbage by default.
Sci Fi Universal in Poland was launched on December 1, 2007. {...}
Unlike NBCUniversal's other science fiction channels around the world, the Polish channel maintained the "Sci Fi" brand on October 14, 2010. The term "syfy" has negative connotations in the Polish language, because it is a plural form of the word 'syf' (dirt, syphilis), which is why they chose to become Sci Fi Universal rather than "Syfy Universal".
I don't get the Space channel. That means an extra subscription on top of what I'm already paying, and since I already don't watch much TV, it seems like a waste of money. Maybe if I moved the computer into the same room with the TV, or took up my needlepoint again (I used to spend hours a day on sewing and listening to TV shows or tapes) it would make sense to have the extra channels.Right, the streaming rights on shows is probably different in every country, which complicates a conversation like this one. Continuum is a Canadian show, which I think aired on Space originally. Fringe is a Fox show. I don't know what either means for Netflix Canada, though.
Canadians aren't allowed to access Hulu.The series streams on Hulu for free, so hey, why not.
Whenever I see "SyFy" my mind races to syphilis and messy bedrooms, which is what the word means in Polish. Unconsciously or not every single SyFy advert that my eyes pick up gets associated with garbage by default.
I know what you mean. I haven't had cable tv at all for about 3 years. There are some shows that I know I would enjoy but don't have access to (Mr. Robot; Fargo), and some shows that I'm a season behind on (The Americans; Halt and Catch Fire). Even still, there's still plenty available, just through the myriad streaming services. And of course, the streaming services provide access to old shows that we could only dream of 15 years ago.I don't get the Space channel. That means an extra subscription on top of what I'm already paying, and since I already don't watch much TV, it seems like a waste of money.
Yeah, I think any recommendations any of us make have to include the unwritten caveat "...in my country." Global licensing rights are a patchwork; even one particular service like Netflix is obligated to allow only certain content in certain countries, or to pay different licensing fees for different markets, even for the same show. I think the business side of television is all a bit of a mess right now.Canadians aren't allowed to access Hulu.
There's a word for "syphilis and messy bedrooms"? Sounds like the title of Russel Brand's autobiography.
Has anyone ever watched Space: Above and Beyond, btw? It was one of my fav sci-fi shows back in the 90s (I think), but then they got cancelled after a couple seasons. Maybe nostalgia has got the best of me, but I think that show was marathon worthy.