National Black Cat Day in the UK on Thursday 25th October, to encourage more people to adopt unwanted black cats for Halloween (and beyond). Lovecraft would surely approve.

21 Sunday Oct 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
National Black Cat Day in the UK on Thursday 25th October, to encourage more people to adopt unwanted black cats for Halloween (and beyond). Lovecraft would surely approve.

21 Sunday Oct 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
Very Lovecraft: Cat discovers 2,000-year-old Roman catacomb.
24 Monday Sep 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
Barlow’s rare Dragon-Fly zine, up for sale on eBay.

16 Sunday Sep 2012
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings
Has anyone ever thought of doing Lovecraft’s life as a faithful graphic novel? It seems not. Just a thought, if anyone wants to run off with the idea. It occurred to me as I was thinking about how many in the amateur movement might have experienced opium dreams during the influenza epidemic of 1918-19 and during treatment for the other chronic diseases of the time, having been treated with opium by doctors.
10 Monday Sep 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
Those who buy books from Amazon USA might like to know that Amazon will have to start charging a state-based sales tax in some U.S. states, including California (7.25%) and Pennsylvania (6%), from 15th September 2012.
Small online book retailers are presumably able to escape the requirements of adding such local taxes, because they don’t own distribution or manufacturing facilities scattered across the country. It appears that ebooks will also be exempt in the USA, for now.
Here in the UK we have zero sales tax (VAT) on printed books, newspapers, magazines, maps etc. But perversely we add the full 20% UK sales tax to ebooks.
10 Monday Sep 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
I’ve finally seen the blockbuster SF movie Prometheus. I have to say that it was a big disappointment. Especially if it really has killed off the movie of At The Mountains of Madness, as Del Toro has suggested. The studio’s $120m dollars are certainly all up there on the dazzling screen, and there are a few moments that intrigue… but the plot is fairly predictable, the dialogue is flat, and the plot jumps forward far too quickly in numerous places. Visuals aside, the totality feels about on a par with the pilot episode of an adequate TV sci-fi series. There’s certainly no feeling of ‘the cosmic’ in there. It’s often more comic, than cosmic.
/SPOILERS AHEAD/
I mean, the setting is 2089 and yet the film shows humanity having fully humanoid super-intelligent androids, cryo-sleep chambers, and interstellar travel capable of reaching Gliese 86 (35 light years away). Yet humanity is represented on that journey by a standard-issue Evil Megacorp CEO, some unstable self-obsessed dorks, and one mildly interesting superhuman android? How can these people be representative of a civilization that is advancing so fast? The ground crew continually does really dumb things. They’re supposed to be scientists, but they behave like they’re hormone-addled teens out on a summer-camp hike. Didn’t we invent some intelligence pills, alongside all that other wonder-tech? /Sigh/ The film’s plausibility was simply left behind on Earth. Unless… the invention of the androids is causing humanity to slack off and regress… this would at least explain humanity’s apparent sudden descent into witlessness.
The sequel:
Prometheus‘s general premise and setup is not without some interest. At least in terms of where it will go next. What might the inevitable sequel bring?
My guess is that the Engineers are not annoyed by what humanity has done. Rather, it’s what humanity will do that’s the problem for them. It’s pretty obvious, judging by the tech the movie shows, that humanity is under threat of being ‘replaced’ by vaguely amoral androids in the coming centuries. Androids who have never heard of Asimov’s ‘Three Laws’, and who are possibly already slowly gaining control over humanity (via their Weyland Corp. etc). But the androids realise that they are lacking something. Hence David’s curiosity in Prometheus about human dreams and blind religious faith. But when they are ready at some point in the future highly evolved androids will have interstellar travel, and unlimited means of replication. They will not require hypersleep chambers, so they will have the time to further evolve themselves as they fairly quickly colonise the galaxy. They will be immortal godlike beings, but they will be unable to create new biological life. Indeed, they may have little concern for biological life as we know it.
So what humanity has done that’s ‘wrong’ is to have started down the path that will lead to a viable form of artificial immortal anti-life — and this is an utterly blasphemous heresy to the Engineers. Possibly the Engineers have seen their created life-forms go down such a historical trajectory before, as their created species became ‘infected’ with intolerant monotheistic religion — they know that in time this leads inevitably to the creation of a technologically-embodied proto-‘godhead’, in the form of immortal robots and AIs. This may be why the Engineer in Prometheus reacts so strongly and immediately to the android David. And why the Engineers in general want to wipe out the old biological humanity with the ‘black goo’ weapon (presumably this is the flipside of their life-giving planet-seeding version of the ‘black goo’ seen at the start of Prometheus).
But then the events of Prometheus happen, the Engineers threat to Earth is for some reason stymied for 2,000 years (presumably the ‘goo’ plague spread to the Engineers’ home planet?), and the Aliens race is born.
Now of course a sequel will have to have human interest. And it will have to have multiple humans fighting against the Aliens. It can’t simply be Elizabeth Shaw + David the-robot-head, strolling around the presumably-dead ‘Paradise’ planet of the Engineers.
So my guess at the sequel plot for Prometheus would be: Shaw + David find the very creepy but very dead Engineer world; they realise that they probably killed the last Engineer at the end of Prometheus (guilt, ‘God is dead’ etc); they explore this new world; David learns the still-functioning advanced tech in the Engineer world; David has the Engineer tech create a new body for his head; as he interrogates the Engineer information systems he learns of the Engineers’ deep fear of advanced androids; David learns how androids might go about ‘integrating’ a living mind with a robot mind; then Shaw is suddenly dying (all she has to eat and drink is some Engineer health plasma, not so good for humans…); David transfers Shaw’s mind into a new identical android body (which is a bit superhuman, coming in handy later when battling the Aliens); David studies the new android version of Shaw, looking for valid transfers of dreams and faith; Shaw + David fall in love, just a little, in a very ‘android’ manner; Shaw marvels and warbles philosophy about her new state-of-being and sense of freedom; meanwhile a Yutani military mission has come snooping to the Gliese 86 system, curious about what treasures Wayland was looking for there — maybe some Predator tech, or so they think; the Yutani team of course find the new Alien Queen taking over the largest of the old Engineer ships, but most of the team die of the black goo and so are not viable Alien hosts; from orbit the last survivors of the Yutani team send out a distress message via a smaller Engineer ship; their message is picked up on Paradise by Shaw + David; David builds a battalion of new androids for the mission to destroy (or capture?) the Alien Queen; Meredith Vickers is ‘recreated’ as one of the androids (it’s revealed her original was indeed a heavily augmented ‘experimental’ human, although not quite a programmable android, which means David has a copy of her thought/personality patterns) and there is suddenly a ‘love’ rival for Shaw; Shaw + David + the android battallion arrive at the Gliese 86 system; the remaining Yutani humans and the new androids have conflicting ideas on how to deal with the Alien Queen and they are also very wary of each other (perhaps the Yutani Corp. now owns Weyland and all its assets and discoveries?); Shaw feels human, but is rejected by the humans; while the humans and androids squabble Shaw sneaks off and heads down to the planet; Shaw is now conversant with Engineer tech, and so she learns how to repurpose the black goo to attack the Aliens rather than the humans; Shaw also finds a way to have the remaining Yutani humans become immune to the black goo; then Shaw just has to implant a big dose of the ‘new goo’ into the Alien Queen to kill it; big androids vs. Alien Queen battle, aided by Engineer weapons (and, remotely, by the Yutani team who mostly elect to remain in orbit); despite their hubris, the androids are mostly defeated; the Alien Queen is now desperate to get new organic hosts, as she only has goo-infected Yutani corpses and the androids — neither of which are any good for breeding in; the remnants of the Yutani team bravely decide on a suicide mission to the surface — but the goo-immune Yutani are exactly what the Alien Queen wants; finally it’s down to the new Shaw to destroy the Alien Queen (before the Yutani give the Alien Queen the opportunity to complete her vital ‘first full life-cycle’); the android Shaw later dies to save David, but transfers the ‘remains’ of herself to his mind as she does so; David thus obtains and integrates the ‘quasi-humanity’ patterns that androids need to become the galaxy-spanning threat that the Engineers feared they would become. But there is ambiguity — he has experienced love of a type, so is he now the harbinger of New Gods or a New Evil?
07 Friday Sep 2012
Posted in Historical context, Odd scratchings
From today’s press reports: A British team is exploring the Antarctic in a search for life unseen for half a million years.
Incidentally, here’s a news report from 1922 on the massive melting of ice across the Arctic. Arctic seas became so warm that ice seals left the region…
Possibly an interesting sidelight on Harry Houdini’s movie The Man from Beyond (1922), featuring a man defrosted from the Arctic ice.
23 Thursday Aug 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
An impressive precendent for a possible Lovecraft Research Archive of all the printed scholarship, perhaps fronted by a space for exhibitions. In just five days The Tesla Museum project has raised over $850k via IndieGogo, to buy Tesla’s old building in New York, and turn it into a museum. New York State is match-funding them, so they now have $1.7m.
22 Wednesday Aug 2012
Posted in Historical context, Odd scratchings
If we date the inception of the mythos to “Dagon” (written July 1917), then July 2017 will be the 100th anniversary. Five years to go. Time to start doing some tentative planning?
Some ideas:
* Publication of a fully searchable “Selected Letters” in digital form.
* Lovecraft research library, containing a copy of all the scholarship ever published on the man and his work.
* Major conference.
* Global online film festival, with major sponsorship for a competition for new animated films of Lovecraft’s work.
* Major publicity push to try to recover ‘lost’ letters and other items from attics, archives, personal effects etc.
* Publication of a complete Lovecraft Studies archive set, in digital form.
* Worldwide sugarcraft cake-decoration competition.
22 Wednesday Aug 2012
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings
China Mieville: Writers should welcome a future where readers remix our books…
“Speaking in Edinburgh [at the Book Festival] at a debate on the future of the novel, Mieville said that just as music fans remix albums and post them online, so readers will recut the novel.”
19 Sunday Aug 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
Excellent news for Amazon UK buyers of printed books, when those books are too big to fit through your letterbox or require a signature (I Am Providence or one one of the doorstop mythos anthologies springs to mind). Amazon is to roll out nationwide a “collect your parcel from a trusted local shop” service.
19 Sunday Aug 2012
Posted in Odd scratchings
Those interested in the poor state of science journalism in the mainsteam media, might like the MIT Science Journalism Tracker blog from MIT. This is devoted to winkling out the gee!-gosh!-ery and holding it up to the light.