Wednesday, February 29, 2012

TINSELTOWN BAD GUYS


The 10 Most Pointlessly Evil Movie Bad Guys


The process of watching a film isn’t meant to be hard for the viewer: from the first glance at the screen till the final one, we should just be able to sit there and absorb everything in and not have bothersome stuff like reality or realism get in the way. However, there are some villains out there about whom you just can’t help thinking: “Why are you being evil?”, and just appear to have been made evil for the simplest of reasons. Here are the best 10 of them…
10.
Senator/Chancellor Palpatine (The Star Wars Prequels)
Palpatine had total control of the entire galaxy, thanks to some well-timed political machinations and a vast network of allies. Sure, the Jedis sort of suspected him a little, but the only reason they knew for sure that he was eeeeeevil was because he straight-up told Anakin, who then blabbed to the council. If he had just played his cards a little closer to his chest, no one would have ever been able to prove anything and he wouldn’t have had to kill every Jedi in the universe.
senator chancellor
“Shit.”
9.
Lord Voldemort (The Harry Potter Movies)
Jesus Christ, if Voldemort had just focused on getting back his body instead of trying to fuck over Harry Potter seven ways from Tuesday, he would have been golden. There have got to be ways to recorporealize that don’t involve constantly attempting to infiltrate Hogwarts – an incredibly high-security facility run by one of the greatest and most powerful wizards of all time – and even if there aren’t, if he had just held off on starting his reign of terror until he actually had a body to terrorize people with, no one would have figured out he was back until it was too late. But no, he just has to destroy Harry and all of his friends in the most obvious, attention-drawing ways possible.
lord voldemort
Like, he doesn’t draw enough attention as it is...
8.
Lex Luthor (Superman Returns)
Luthor is already filthy rich thanks to inheriting a small fortune from a rich old lady, and when he discovers a super-strong element that grows ridiculously fast you would think he would patent the shit out of it and watch the money roll in. Instead he decides to create a continent to do… what, exactly? Apart from causing tons of flooding and ruining the economy, it would also ruin his reputation and make it impossible for him to ever succeed again.
lex luthor
“So, why am I doing this again?”
7.
Bill (Kill Bill)
Bill manages to track down his wife, Beatrix “The Bride” Kiddo, and she tells him that she left because she didn’t want to be an assassin anymore since she now had an unborn daughter to worry about. Instead of accepting this and moving on, he instead decides to stab her, shoot her new husband and all of their friends, and steal her baby for no reason whatsoever. This ends up backfiring on him badly when he pussies out of actually pulling the plug on The Bride; when she inevitably wakes up, she kicks the ass of Bill and the Deadly Vipers.
bill
6.
Jean-Baptiste Zorg (The Fifth Element)
Zorg befriends the Great Evil that want to destroy all life in the universe in order to get a little more money and power. He seems to have overlooked two things: first off, he’s already incredibly rich and powerful as the leader of the Mangalore shapeshifters, and second, he is part of all life in the universe which means the Great Evil will inevitably destroy him as well. Seriously, is there any way this is going to work out better for him than if he just sat out the movie and let the Mondoshawans kill the Great Evil?
jean baptiste
5.
Carnegie (The Book of Eli)
Carnegie is ruthlessly single-minded in the pursuit of the book of Eli, revealed midway through the movie to be the Bible. Our only question is: why? He already rules his town with an iron fist, and he has his pick of any of the sexy ladies; he’s lord and master of all he surveys. It can’t be that he wants to expand – everything outside his town is either a barren wasteland or inhabited by creepy old cannibals. And he’s also the only person in the town who can actually read, so a Bible would be totally useless to his followers. He could just make up any mumbo-jumbo, and they would be forced to believe him. Instead, he tries to kill the shit out of Denzel Washington and ends up dying sad and alone, his town torn apart from the inside.
carnegie
Aw, bless?
4.
Ryder (The Taking of Pelham 123: The 2009 Version)
We’re initially supposed to think that Ryder is a terrorist but it turns out he’s actually in it for the money, buying tons of gold in order to become super-rich when the stock market panics in response to his hijacking the train. Which would be great, if his evil plan wasn’t totally retarded in every way, shape, and form. Ryder’s big escape plan was to sneak off through an abandoned tunnel, and even Denzel Washington’s incompetent boss managed to figure that out. Not to mention that Mayor Gandolfini figured out Ryder’s true identity thanks to the hints he dropped; even if he hadn’t, Ryder doesn’t wear gloves and touches all sorts of shiny metal surfaces with his hands, making it super-easy to get fingerprints. Everything’s taken up another notch of stupid when you realize that Ryder – an incredibly successful stock broker – went to prison four years ago just to gain enough money for his retarded scheme. If he had just stayed on the straight and narrow, he would have been able to rip us off legally; instead, the best-case scenario was that he would be hunted for the rest of his life for killing innocent people.
ryder
Pictured: Something else that killed thousands of innocent people
3.
Chris (Carrie)
A girl named Chris is banned from the prom for being a relentless bitch to Carrie and instead of reacting in the normal way (spreading malicious rumours) she totally flips the fuck out and decides to toss pig blood on her. Keep in mind, Carrie has done literally nothing to anyone, and the teacher was the one punishing students on her own initiative – there was absolutely no reason to go after Carrie. Even if Carrie hadn’t been psychic, Chris told so many students about her plan that it would have inevitably backfired on her and she would likely have been expelled. As it was, Carrie destroyed the prom. Chris, though, was so single-minded in her “must be a complete asshole to Carrie” plan that she tried to run her over with her car, despite the fact that she had seen Carrie electrocute and impale people firsthand.
chris
2.
Principal Vernon (The Breakfast Club)
Vernon seems like a pretty average principal – a little stuffy and authoritarian, not popular with the kids, your basic administrator. He then proceeds to throw that right out the window when he tells Bender that someday in the future, when he’s totally not expecting it, he’s going to beat the shit out of him and “kick his dick into the dirt.” He then actually challenges Bender to fight him right then and there and then calls him a pussy when he refuses. Maybe he was just messing with Bender, but still, what the shitting fuck? He knew that Bender was a no-good future dropout, and there was absolutely zero reason to threaten him with premeditated violence, especially when teachers have been fired for much, much less. And it wasn’t like he was trying to teach Bender “tough love” – there’s genuine malice in his face, and it’s clear he’s actively taking pleasure from this. It’s almost like he was cartoonishly exaggerated so we would forget how much of a douchebag Bender was….
principal vernon
Ah, this brings it all back...
1.
The Aliens (Independence Day)
Man, there’s so much unprovoked dickishness here. Firstly, the Independence Day aliens are the ultimate enemies in sci-fi; they’re super-smart, incredibly technologically advanced, and hell-bent on destroying the Earth. The only real question is: Why the fuck do they care about wiping us out in the first place?
aliens
How can you hate the Fresh Prince?
Humanity has done literally nothing to offend these alien assholes; our only contact with them pre-invasion was when we recovered a few alien corpses back in the 40s. It’s not like we could have been a viable threat, either: by 1996, it had been 24 years since anyone had stepped on the moon and NASA was a massively underfunded joke, so it wasn’t like we were in any danger of building X-Wings and blowing the shit out of the aliens.
aliens1
It would have made much more sense if they pulled this shit a long, long time ago in a galaxy... yeah, you know the rest.
But hey, maybe the aliens just wanted the Earth without any pesky humans running around so they could strip-mine it dry. Here’s the problem with that: there are literally billions of planets in the Milky Way alone, and odds are very, very few of those are actually inhabited. If the aliens really wanted to extract resources, they had a galaxy-wide smorgasbord to choose from and they wouldn’t even have to stand in line to get the good stuff. Why use up the ridiculous amounts of power it must take to operate their nuke-deflecting shields and superlaserbeam when they could get the exact same stuff for free elsewhere?
It could also be that they’re looking to colonize Earth, but even if that was literally the only planet in the entire universe that could support them (and it’s probably not) their full-frontal assault was definitely the worst way to go about it. Remember that they sent recon missions to New Mexico right around the time of the Trinity Tests, which means they knew full well that we had atomic bombs (and even if they didn’t find it out directly, they can still read our goddamn minds) which means they must have known that when they attacked, our counterattack would turn the Earth into a radioactive, uninhabitable wasteland. They made it clear they weren’t interested in negotiating, so we had zero incentive to not release all the nukes at them and pray for the best (and only some last-second Goldblum computer magic saved us from going down that path.)
aliens2
Oh, Goldblum. Is there anything you can't do?
So just to recap, if everything had gone exactly to plan the aliens would have blown the crap out of a race so technologically backwards our only space exploration program was cancelled earlier this year, just to reduce a useless, dime-a-dozen planet to toxic waste, using up countless years and resources in the process. What actually happened was that they got their asses kicked and their mothership blown up. In business terms, this is what is known as a lose-lose situation. In common sense terms, it’s just flat-out retarded.
Written by Mark Scott – Copyrighted © www.weirdworm.com

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

CHRIS FRASER WORX

sean-sullivan-1 (1)
New Art /

Amazing light art by Chris Fraser

Chris Fraser’s work with light is stunning. There is a gorgeous movement and sense of direction in each piece, reminiscent of mathematical vectors. I love the possibility of experiencing the same piece differently, and the way focus shifts from one plane to another. 
sean-sullivan-1 (2)
sean-sullivan-1 (3)
sean-sullivan-1 (4)

THE MOST DANGEROUS PLACES IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM

The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System

There are some swell places to visit in the Solar System, but there are also a few places that it might be best to avoid. There are some grand vacation places — the rim of Mariner Valley on Mars comes to mind, or the ice fountains of Enceladus — but there are some places that you might be better off just reading about.
The Himalayas of Venus, the view of Jupiter from Io, being able to see the entire solar system in one glance from Pluto — all of these have places have some pretty nasty price tags attached. Here are the seven most dangerous places in the entire Solar System.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System


1. Io
In spite of boasting a spectacular view of the giant planet Jupiter, constant volcanic eruptions and huge flows of molten sulfur would make trekking around the landscape a little dicey. Even without the possibility of being blown up or fried, you'd have to deal with a deadly radiation field that would be pouring 3600 rems into you every day. You get about 0.1 rem per year on earth, so you work out the figures.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System

2. Venus
Crushing pressure, sulfuric acid rain, 700-degree temperatures. If you want to see Venus' towering Maxwell Mountains you better look fast — because it'd be a race to see whether you'd be crushed, incinerated or dissolved first.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System


3. Just about any comet
In addition to an unstable, perpetually erupting surface, it possesses an "atmosphere" consisting largely of gravel. Being on a comet that is "calving" — or disintegrating into big chunks like a glacier — would be worse. Even worse yet: a sun-grazing comet that is disintegrating like — well, like a snowball in hell, as it zooms through the outer atmosphere of the star.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System


4. The surface of Pluto
A surface containing oxygen frozen hard as steel with lakes of liquid neon. On a clear day the sun provides about as much heat and light as a full moon does back on earth. With Pluto's surface temperature at -378 to -396 F (-228 to -238 C) you'd freeze solid in a nanosecond so it at least it probably wouldn't hurt.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System


5. Inside the rings of Saturn
Playing dodge-em with 40 zillion icebergs probably sounds like more fun that it really would be.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System

6. The hydrogen sea of Jupiter
You just don't want to be anywhere near there, trust me. Somewhere far beneath Jupiter's clouds and the core of the planet may lie a sea of liquid hydrogen, lit only be the glow of titanic bolts of lightning. Below this the pressure continues to rise until ordinary liquid hydrogen is compressed into liquid metallic hydrogen, of all things.
The Most Dangerous Places in the Solar System

7. Titan
Intense cold and a dense, poisonous atmosphere...and if you needed any more reason to keep the windows and doors shut, it's an atmosphere which would be explosive if accidentally mixed with oxygen!

Monday, February 20, 2012

ARTWORKS GONE RETRO

When you look at art, you see what you want to see. And some people, as Irene Gallo, the art director for Tor Books, points out, see science fiction. BoingBoing pointed us towards the Tor blog, where Gallo has collected a great series of sci-fi-themed artworks inspired by classic paintings. Whether translating modern painting to hyper-modern painting or just swapping out a traditional angel’s wings for something a little more nerdy, these works are playful studies that were probably as much fun to make as they are to look at. Click through to see some of our favorites, and then be sure to check out even more over at Tor!
John Mattos adapted Marcel Duchamp’s famous “Nude Descending a Staircase” to include C3PO, presumably as the nude.
Pablo Picasso’s “Three Musicians” if it were set in Star Wars’ Cantina, also by John Mattos.
Tim O’Brien re-imagines “His Master’s Voice.”
Boris Vallejo’s adaptation of Botticelli’s “Birth of Venus” to depict Robert A. Heinlein’s To Sail Beyond the Sunset.
Michelangelo’s “Pietá” as a Star Wars book cover by Dave Seeley.
N. C. Wyeth’s “The Giant” hears the call of Cthulhu in Cyril van der Haegen’s adaptation.
One of Abbott Handerson Thayer’s angels goes steampunk for Greg Manchess.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

ON THE STREET WHEY SHE LIVED

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

omash
omash

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Jays Winter Tour 2012
Jays Winter Tour 2012

Olympus Mons
Olympus Mons - Submitted by Ryan Lynn

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Freddie Mercury
Freddie Mercury

The Beat Girl Project
The Beat Girl Project - Submitted by Philip Hew

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration

Illustration/Painting/Drawing inspiration