Sam Hain - Occult Detective: A Night in Knightsbridge (Episode II)
"On their first case together, Sam and Alice investigate an alleged haunting at a Knightsbridge townhouse. However, the two of them soon discover that they may be in for more than they bargained for..."
The second instalment in the Sam Hain - Occult Detective series, A Night in Knightsbridge, available on Amazon sites internationally for the Kindle (as well as for the free Kindle app for phones/tablets/computers/toasters) for £1.85 (or $2.99 USD/€2.67 EUR/¥312 JPY, and other such currencies), and as a pdf eBook for £1.50 from the Sam Hain’s Casebook website for people who don’t have Kindles or an app on their phones/tablets/computers/toasters.
Click here to purchase A Night in Knightsbridge from the Amazon Kindle Store.
Click here to buy A Night in Knightsbridge as a pdf eBook.
Sam Hain - Occult Detective: All Hallows' Eve (Episode I)
"On her way home from a Halloween party, Alice Carroll unwittingly stumbles upon a world she would never have believed was real. Just as her life is beginning to turn upside down and she starts to feel as if her nightmares are bearing down on her, Alice meets the one man who might be able to make sense of it…"
Also, the first Sam Hain story - All Hallows’ Eve - is absolutely FREE to download as both the Kindle edition and as an eBook for the 1st and 2nd of March. If you haven’t read the first episode and you want to in time for the second, the beginning of March is the time to do it!
Click here to download All Hallows' Eve from the Amazon Kindle Store.
Click here to download All Hallows' Eve as a pdf eBook.
Saturday, 1 March 2014
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Doctor Who - The Day of the Doctor 50th Anniversary Special Review
This review can also be found on Media Gateway.
At 5:16pm on Saturday the 23rd of November 1963, 4.4 million viewers turned on their televisions to watch a new science fiction programme about a curious old man who lived in a time travelling police box. No one would have believed the legacy that was about to be born... 50 years (and a couple of hours) later, the 799th episode of Doctor Who, The Day of the Doctor, was broadcast simultaneously across the globe, hitting screens in homes and cinemas in 94 countries to celebrate one of the longest running science fiction franchises in television history. And, as it so happens, one of my favourite science fiction franchises in television history. The amount of hype and anticipation that had been drummed up about this event was outstanding.
And so, just before 7:50pm on the 23rd of November 2013, I took my seat in the auditorium - surrounded by so many Doctors that I feared a rupture in space-time would open up and consume the cinema - and I donned a pair of ridiculous 3D glasses. The Moment had finally come. The Day of the Doctor was upon us.
Starring current Doctor, Matt Smith, previous Doctor, David Tennant, and hitherto unknown Doctor, John Hurt, the 50th Anniversary Special episode set out to mark this momentous occasion with something to remember. Did it feel like a fitting tribute to 50 years of Doctor Who? To be honest, I felt that An Adventure in Space and Time (a dramatisation about the inception of Doctor Who, written by Mark Gatiss, starring Jessica Raine as Verity Lambert and David Bradley as William Hartnell) was a far more fitting tribute to the show’s history, but that’s not to say that The Day of the Doctor wasn’t spectacular in its own right. The interplay between the three Doctors was fantastic, as the three actors play off of each other’s performances perfectly, and I was thrilled to finally glimpse a part of the Time War (although I’d love to see more. In fact, I’d love to see a series with John Hurt as the Doctor, whether it’s set in the Time War or not). And there was one particular moment - oh, one shining, brilliant moment - that sent a frisson running through my two hearts, but I’ll come back to that one later...
There are two stories at work throughout The Day of the Doctor: the Doctor and the Time War, and the Zygon foothold on Earth. First and foremost is the story of the Doctor who fought in the Time War, the man who was there at the fall of Arcadia and left burdened with a terrible decision, who is now brought forward in time to meet his future selves and see the man he will become. In possession of the Moment (it's interface played by the brilliant Billie Piper, although it would've been good to see more of her as Rose Tyler interacting with David Tennant's Doctor), the Doctor is prepared to take the fate of Gallifrey and the Daleks into his own hands and end the war that almost destroyed the Universe. This is the Doctor's biggest regret. Seeing John Hurt as the weary War Doctor, a good man at heart but carrying out a necessary evil, was fantastic. When Hurt was revealed as the Doctor at the end of The Name of the Doctor, I was bloody excited - doubly so that his Doctor (the ninth incarnation) was to be the focal point of the 50th Anniversary - and he delivered the role perfectly. He was as excitable and eccentric as his predecessors and successors, but with the gravitas of a man burdened with the destruction of his people, and his bemusement when dealing with his future selves was an absolute joy (“Why are you pointing your screwdrivers like that? They're scientific instruments not water pistols.” … “They're screwdrivers! What are you going to do, assemble a cabinet?”).
In addition to this, the other two Doctors (Tennant and Smith) were wonderful as ever. Their initial double-act - turned triple-act - was truly one of the highlights of the episode/film, as they play off of each other's energy, quirks, differences and similarities extraordinarily. Their ability to collectively go from eccentric and entertaining to dark and brooding was fantastic, and no moment demonstrated this as perfectly as the climax, as the three solemnly gather to use the Moment to end Dalek and Time Lord alike, and then snap into jubilation as they reach an alternative conclusion. This conclusion essentially saves Gallifrey (a point I'll revisit in a moment), hiding it and Time Lord society away in a pocket universe, and strongly hints that the Doctor will be returning home soon... I can't think of a more fitting way to conclude the 50th Anniversary episode!
The Zygon storyline, on the other hand, sadly didn't work quite as well. Mostly, it felt like filler in between scenes with the three Doctors, and although it progressed things with the Queen Elizabeth I plot and was - in a sense - the driving force behind the narrative, the whole thing felt a little flat. The Zygons are a good alien race to choose (their shapeshifting abilities allow for a number of duplicitous plots), but overall their inclusion didn’t feel necessary, and although it was a nice nod to a classic monster, they could easily have been replaced with almost any other enemy. I can't help but feel that the Daleks would have made a more fitting and engaging foe, especially as they are an icon of Doctor Who and are just as old as the show itself (not that they weren’t present in the episode, but it was only fleetingly during the brief segments of the Time War). The Zygon story also felt largely unresolved, with UNIT personnel and Zygon doppelgängers in a stalemate, neither party able to remember which side they belong to and beginning to negotiate an end to the invasion (although I imagine that’s a bit difficult if you don’t know which side you’re representing). Whilst this effectively disarms the initial Zygon threat, this narrative thread is suddenly dropped with the implication that - because temporarily neither human nor Zygon can tell each other apart - this facilitates peace and the whole issue is supposedly resolved. But what about when the Zygons remember that they are indeed Zygons? What prevents them from resuming their incursion on Earth? I doubt they’d just call off the invasion because for three hours they thought they might possibly be human…
Ah well, sometimes it’s best to let Zygons be Zygons (always wanted to say that).
But if the Zygon story felt like it had been dropped, it was only to make way for the episode’s grand finale with the three Doctors and the Time War, and the conclusion that’s likely to be a bit of a game-changer in future episodes (spoilers ahead, although if you’re worried about spoilers I’m not too sure why you’re reading a review!). Having had a good four hundred years to reflect on the moment he used the Moment to destroy both Time Lords and Daleks, the ‘current’ Doctor (Matt Smith, traditionally called the 11th Doctor) has been thinking of an alternative solution that will destroy the Daleks but save Gallifrey and the Time Lords from destruction, just tucked away in an isolated pocket Universe; out of sight, out of time, frozen in a single moment. With the aid of thirteen incarnations of himself (along with a brief cameo from Peter Capaldi’s smouldering eyes), the collective Doctors remove Gallifrey from the Universe, causing the Daleks to destroy each other in the cross-fire and secreting the Time Lords away, frozen in time. With the knowledge that his homeworld and his people are still alive out there, somewhere, the Doctor now has a new destination: home.
And the quest to return to Gallifrey couldn’t have come a moment too soon… With the Doctor now on what is actually his 12th incarnation (possibly 13th, if we count the meta-crisis Doctor from The Stolen Earth/Journey's End) he is approaching the end of his life. It's been stated in The Deadly Assassin that a Time Lord only has 12 regenerations/13 incarnations (whether this is an organic regeneration energy limit, technological limit or societal limit is unknown - I like the idea of it being organic energy, each Time Lord body only having the energy for 12 regenerations), so now that the Doctor is at the end of his regenerative cycle it's imperative he finds a way to prolong his life, and the survival of Gallifrey could be the key. In The Five Doctors, the Time Lords offer a new set of regenerations to the Master in exchange for working with them, and theoretically the same could be offered to the Doctor (perhaps as a token of gratitude for saving Gallifrey). Presumably, with Peter Capaldi taking the role of the 12th Doctor (13th incarnation) in the upcoming Christmas episode Time of the Doctor, he will then embark on his journey home, on a quest to find Gallifrey and, with luck, find a way to extend his life. Personally, I feel this would make a fantastic character arc for Capaldi’s Doctor.
Another implication of Gallifrey’s return is obviously the return of the Time Lords. This was something I’d hoped would happen when it was revealed that Gallifrey was returning in The End of Time, only for it to be sucked straight back into the final day of the Time War. This naturally opens up the possibility for many more stories about the Time Lords, how their society has evolved since their last appearance in the classic era, and how the Time War has changed them. Also, with the Daleks revived through the Progenitor device in Victory of the Daleks, and the prospect of the Time Lords returning, there is a chance the Time War may flare up again.
There is also the matter of Rassilon, and his Ultimate Sanction: to bring about the destruction of all of creation, ripping the Time Vortex apart, and to cause the Time Lords to ascend beyond the physical and exist as beings of consciousness alone. The Doctor stated in The End of Time that he had been aware of Rassilon’s plans and was left with no choice but to use the Moment, ending the Time War and preventing the Ultimate Sanction from being enacted (something that’s not really touched upon in The Day of the Doctor). This does raise a question about the Doctor’s reaction to saving Gallifrey instead of using the Moment. All three of them seemed overjoyed that the Time Lords will be saved, the Daleks destroyed and the Time War ended, but they seem to be forgetting the terrifying implication of what this could mean for the rest of the Universe if Gallifrey returns and if Rassilon is ever given the chance to carry out his plans. Presumably the Doctor has faith that there are enough people on Gallifrey who would be opposed to the plan to actually stop it, but that’s not a guarantee, or that he himself may be able to prevent it when the time comes (freezing a Universe-ending plot for an indefinite amount of time is arguably better than having the blood of billions of innocents on your hands, after all!). There’s also the potential that the Master - along with other renegade Time Lords - will return, as he was taken back to the final days of the Time War along with Rassilon and the rest of Gallifrey in The End of Time. As the Master was engaged in a fight to the death with Rassilon at the time, it’s also possible that the Doctor will return home to find it being run by one Lord President Master...
To be honest, I really could ramble on about this for hours.
Lastly, for me, the crowning moment of the episode came towards the end, as the Doctor sits in the National Gallery musing that one day he’d quite like to be curator of the place. “You know, I really think you might,” says an all too familiar voice, and a frisson ran through the auditorium. There was a collective awe-struck silence, and a number of middle-aged men gasped. My face twitched with an involuntary smile. Tom Baker. Arguably the most iconic Doctor. I’d be lying if I said this wasn’t a magical moment, and not just because it’s Tom Baker and one of the few proper tributes to the show’s past in the 50th Anniversary Special. It’s implied (in a sense) that he is a future Doctor, having chosen to take on the form of his fourth incarnation (“In years to come, you might find yourself… revisiting a few [faces]. But just the old favourites, eh?”), and confirms that “Gallifrey Falls No More”, pointing the Doctor in the direction of a search for Gallifrey, telling him he has "a lot to do." It’s a wonderfully performed segment, and is quite possibly one of the main stand-out moments of the episode for me. Baker’s appearance also means that, if Baker was indeed playing a future, retired Doctor now under the name of the Curator, that the Doctor will find Gallifrey, return home and acquire enough regenerations to live long enough to reach retirement after an indefinite amount of regenerations. But who knows, eh? Who knows. *taps nose*
It’s a shame that other classic era Doctors (Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, Paul McGann) weren’t featured in the 50th, as it would have been brilliant to pay homage to the other previous eras in more than a few snippets of old footage. After all, Doctor Who would not have reached 50 if it weren’t for the 34 years of television that have built its legacy, and this is something The Day of the Doctor sadly missed out on. However, Peter Davison’s short film The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot is a fantastic piece and incredibly amusing, featuring Davison, Baker, McCoy and McGann as well as a great many of the actors who played their former companions, and is absolutely well worth watching. If you’re not going to be in something, this is the way to not be in it!
Ultimately, although The Day of the Doctor didn’t feel quite like 50th Anniversary tribute I’d been hoping for, and occasionally fell short narratively, it was an overall enjoyable and at times truly spectacular episode. The interactions between the Doctors was by far the highlight of the piece. It may not have spent much of its time paying tribute to the past, but it’s given us something to look forward to for the future.
At 5:16pm on Saturday the 23rd of November 1963, 4.4 million viewers turned on their televisions to watch a new science fiction programme about a curious old man who lived in a time travelling police box. No one would have believed the legacy that was about to be born... 50 years (and a couple of hours) later, the 799th episode of Doctor Who, The Day of the Doctor, was broadcast simultaneously across the globe, hitting screens in homes and cinemas in 94 countries to celebrate one of the longest running science fiction franchises in television history. And, as it so happens, one of my favourite science fiction franchises in television history. The amount of hype and anticipation that had been drummed up about this event was outstanding.
And so, just before 7:50pm on the 23rd of November 2013, I took my seat in the auditorium - surrounded by so many Doctors that I feared a rupture in space-time would open up and consume the cinema - and I donned a pair of ridiculous 3D glasses. The Moment had finally come. The Day of the Doctor was upon us.
Starring current Doctor, Matt Smith, previous Doctor, David Tennant, and hitherto unknown Doctor, John Hurt, the 50th Anniversary Special episode set out to mark this momentous occasion with something to remember. Did it feel like a fitting tribute to 50 years of Doctor Who? To be honest, I felt that An Adventure in Space and Time (a dramatisation about the inception of Doctor Who, written by Mark Gatiss, starring Jessica Raine as Verity Lambert and David Bradley as William Hartnell) was a far more fitting tribute to the show’s history, but that’s not to say that The Day of the Doctor wasn’t spectacular in its own right. The interplay between the three Doctors was fantastic, as the three actors play off of each other’s performances perfectly, and I was thrilled to finally glimpse a part of the Time War (although I’d love to see more. In fact, I’d love to see a series with John Hurt as the Doctor, whether it’s set in the Time War or not). And there was one particular moment - oh, one shining, brilliant moment - that sent a frisson running through my two hearts, but I’ll come back to that one later...
There are two stories at work throughout The Day of the Doctor: the Doctor and the Time War, and the Zygon foothold on Earth. First and foremost is the story of the Doctor who fought in the Time War, the man who was there at the fall of Arcadia and left burdened with a terrible decision, who is now brought forward in time to meet his future selves and see the man he will become. In possession of the Moment (it's interface played by the brilliant Billie Piper, although it would've been good to see more of her as Rose Tyler interacting with David Tennant's Doctor), the Doctor is prepared to take the fate of Gallifrey and the Daleks into his own hands and end the war that almost destroyed the Universe. This is the Doctor's biggest regret. Seeing John Hurt as the weary War Doctor, a good man at heart but carrying out a necessary evil, was fantastic. When Hurt was revealed as the Doctor at the end of The Name of the Doctor, I was bloody excited - doubly so that his Doctor (the ninth incarnation) was to be the focal point of the 50th Anniversary - and he delivered the role perfectly. He was as excitable and eccentric as his predecessors and successors, but with the gravitas of a man burdened with the destruction of his people, and his bemusement when dealing with his future selves was an absolute joy (“Why are you pointing your screwdrivers like that? They're scientific instruments not water pistols.” … “They're screwdrivers! What are you going to do, assemble a cabinet?”).
In addition to this, the other two Doctors (Tennant and Smith) were wonderful as ever. Their initial double-act - turned triple-act - was truly one of the highlights of the episode/film, as they play off of each other's energy, quirks, differences and similarities extraordinarily. Their ability to collectively go from eccentric and entertaining to dark and brooding was fantastic, and no moment demonstrated this as perfectly as the climax, as the three solemnly gather to use the Moment to end Dalek and Time Lord alike, and then snap into jubilation as they reach an alternative conclusion. This conclusion essentially saves Gallifrey (a point I'll revisit in a moment), hiding it and Time Lord society away in a pocket universe, and strongly hints that the Doctor will be returning home soon... I can't think of a more fitting way to conclude the 50th Anniversary episode!
The Zygon storyline, on the other hand, sadly didn't work quite as well. Mostly, it felt like filler in between scenes with the three Doctors, and although it progressed things with the Queen Elizabeth I plot and was - in a sense - the driving force behind the narrative, the whole thing felt a little flat. The Zygons are a good alien race to choose (their shapeshifting abilities allow for a number of duplicitous plots), but overall their inclusion didn’t feel necessary, and although it was a nice nod to a classic monster, they could easily have been replaced with almost any other enemy. I can't help but feel that the Daleks would have made a more fitting and engaging foe, especially as they are an icon of Doctor Who and are just as old as the show itself (not that they weren’t present in the episode, but it was only fleetingly during the brief segments of the Time War). The Zygon story also felt largely unresolved, with UNIT personnel and Zygon doppelgängers in a stalemate, neither party able to remember which side they belong to and beginning to negotiate an end to the invasion (although I imagine that’s a bit difficult if you don’t know which side you’re representing). Whilst this effectively disarms the initial Zygon threat, this narrative thread is suddenly dropped with the implication that - because temporarily neither human nor Zygon can tell each other apart - this facilitates peace and the whole issue is supposedly resolved. But what about when the Zygons remember that they are indeed Zygons? What prevents them from resuming their incursion on Earth? I doubt they’d just call off the invasion because for three hours they thought they might possibly be human…
Ah well, sometimes it’s best to let Zygons be Zygons (always wanted to say that).
But if the Zygon story felt like it had been dropped, it was only to make way for the episode’s grand finale with the three Doctors and the Time War, and the conclusion that’s likely to be a bit of a game-changer in future episodes (spoilers ahead, although if you’re worried about spoilers I’m not too sure why you’re reading a review!). Having had a good four hundred years to reflect on the moment he used the Moment to destroy both Time Lords and Daleks, the ‘current’ Doctor (Matt Smith, traditionally called the 11th Doctor) has been thinking of an alternative solution that will destroy the Daleks but save Gallifrey and the Time Lords from destruction, just tucked away in an isolated pocket Universe; out of sight, out of time, frozen in a single moment. With the aid of thirteen incarnations of himself (along with a brief cameo from Peter Capaldi’s smouldering eyes), the collective Doctors remove Gallifrey from the Universe, causing the Daleks to destroy each other in the cross-fire and secreting the Time Lords away, frozen in time. With the knowledge that his homeworld and his people are still alive out there, somewhere, the Doctor now has a new destination: home.
And the quest to return to Gallifrey couldn’t have come a moment too soon… With the Doctor now on what is actually his 12th incarnation (possibly 13th, if we count the meta-crisis Doctor from The Stolen Earth/Journey's End) he is approaching the end of his life. It's been stated in The Deadly Assassin that a Time Lord only has 12 regenerations/13 incarnations (whether this is an organic regeneration energy limit, technological limit or societal limit is unknown - I like the idea of it being organic energy, each Time Lord body only having the energy for 12 regenerations), so now that the Doctor is at the end of his regenerative cycle it's imperative he finds a way to prolong his life, and the survival of Gallifrey could be the key. In The Five Doctors, the Time Lords offer a new set of regenerations to the Master in exchange for working with them, and theoretically the same could be offered to the Doctor (perhaps as a token of gratitude for saving Gallifrey). Presumably, with Peter Capaldi taking the role of the 12th Doctor (13th incarnation) in the upcoming Christmas episode Time of the Doctor, he will then embark on his journey home, on a quest to find Gallifrey and, with luck, find a way to extend his life. Personally, I feel this would make a fantastic character arc for Capaldi’s Doctor.
Another implication of Gallifrey’s return is obviously the return of the Time Lords. This was something I’d hoped would happen when it was revealed that Gallifrey was returning in The End of Time, only for it to be sucked straight back into the final day of the Time War. This naturally opens up the possibility for many more stories about the Time Lords, how their society has evolved since their last appearance in the classic era, and how the Time War has changed them. Also, with the Daleks revived through the Progenitor device in Victory of the Daleks, and the prospect of the Time Lords returning, there is a chance the Time War may flare up again.
There is also the matter of Rassilon, and his Ultimate Sanction: to bring about the destruction of all of creation, ripping the Time Vortex apart, and to cause the Time Lords to ascend beyond the physical and exist as beings of consciousness alone. The Doctor stated in The End of Time that he had been aware of Rassilon’s plans and was left with no choice but to use the Moment, ending the Time War and preventing the Ultimate Sanction from being enacted (something that’s not really touched upon in The Day of the Doctor). This does raise a question about the Doctor’s reaction to saving Gallifrey instead of using the Moment. All three of them seemed overjoyed that the Time Lords will be saved, the Daleks destroyed and the Time War ended, but they seem to be forgetting the terrifying implication of what this could mean for the rest of the Universe if Gallifrey returns and if Rassilon is ever given the chance to carry out his plans. Presumably the Doctor has faith that there are enough people on Gallifrey who would be opposed to the plan to actually stop it, but that’s not a guarantee, or that he himself may be able to prevent it when the time comes (freezing a Universe-ending plot for an indefinite amount of time is arguably better than having the blood of billions of innocents on your hands, after all!). There’s also the potential that the Master - along with other renegade Time Lords - will return, as he was taken back to the final days of the Time War along with Rassilon and the rest of Gallifrey in The End of Time. As the Master was engaged in a fight to the death with Rassilon at the time, it’s also possible that the Doctor will return home to find it being run by one Lord President Master...
To be honest, I really could ramble on about this for hours.
Lastly, for me, the crowning moment of the episode came towards the end, as the Doctor sits in the National Gallery musing that one day he’d quite like to be curator of the place. “You know, I really think you might,” says an all too familiar voice, and a frisson ran through the auditorium. There was a collective awe-struck silence, and a number of middle-aged men gasped. My face twitched with an involuntary smile. Tom Baker. Arguably the most iconic Doctor. I’d be lying if I said this wasn’t a magical moment, and not just because it’s Tom Baker and one of the few proper tributes to the show’s past in the 50th Anniversary Special. It’s implied (in a sense) that he is a future Doctor, having chosen to take on the form of his fourth incarnation (“In years to come, you might find yourself… revisiting a few [faces]. But just the old favourites, eh?”), and confirms that “Gallifrey Falls No More”, pointing the Doctor in the direction of a search for Gallifrey, telling him he has "a lot to do." It’s a wonderfully performed segment, and is quite possibly one of the main stand-out moments of the episode for me. Baker’s appearance also means that, if Baker was indeed playing a future, retired Doctor now under the name of the Curator, that the Doctor will find Gallifrey, return home and acquire enough regenerations to live long enough to reach retirement after an indefinite amount of regenerations. But who knows, eh? Who knows. *taps nose*
It’s a shame that other classic era Doctors (Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy, Paul McGann) weren’t featured in the 50th, as it would have been brilliant to pay homage to the other previous eras in more than a few snippets of old footage. After all, Doctor Who would not have reached 50 if it weren’t for the 34 years of television that have built its legacy, and this is something The Day of the Doctor sadly missed out on. However, Peter Davison’s short film The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot is a fantastic piece and incredibly amusing, featuring Davison, Baker, McCoy and McGann as well as a great many of the actors who played their former companions, and is absolutely well worth watching. If you’re not going to be in something, this is the way to not be in it!
Ultimately, although The Day of the Doctor didn’t feel quite like 50th Anniversary tribute I’d been hoping for, and occasionally fell short narratively, it was an overall enjoyable and at times truly spectacular episode. The interactions between the Doctors was by far the highlight of the piece. It may not have spent much of its time paying tribute to the past, but it’s given us something to look forward to for the future.
Thursday, 31 October 2013
Sam Hain: All Hallows' Eve
I've written a short story for Halloween, Sam Hain: All Hallows' Eve.
It's the first in a series of contemporary fantasy short stories which will follow the adventures and exploits of the eponymous occult detective, Sam Hain, as he and his companion, Alice Carroll, investigate the paranormal and supernatural cases across London.
All Hallows' Eve is completely free to download from the website. I'd appreciate any comments and feedback on this pilot story, and if you enjoyed reading it, please consider leaving a donation; it'd be greatly appreciated, and every penny donated will help support me to make more stuff up and write it down.
Click here to read Sam Hain: All Hallows' Eve.
www.SamHainsCasebook.co.uk
It's the first in a series of contemporary fantasy short stories which will follow the adventures and exploits of the eponymous occult detective, Sam Hain, as he and his companion, Alice Carroll, investigate the paranormal and supernatural cases across London.
All Hallows' Eve is completely free to download from the website. I'd appreciate any comments and feedback on this pilot story, and if you enjoyed reading it, please consider leaving a donation; it'd be greatly appreciated, and every penny donated will help support me to make more stuff up and write it down.
Click here to read Sam Hain: All Hallows' Eve.
www.SamHainsCasebook.co.uk
Friday, 11 October 2013
Winter London Film and Comic Con: An Interview with Garrett Wang
This interview can also be found on Media Gateway.
Garrett Wang is probably best known for his role in Star Trek Voyager as Harry Kim, having also reprised the character for the independent film Star Trek: Renegades which has just recently gone into production, as well as playing Commander Garan in the independent miniseries Star Trek: Of Gods and Men. Wang has been a science fiction fan from childhood, in particular Star Wars and Battlestar Galactica, and although he saw all the Star Trek films that came out in the cinema, he never really got into The Next Generation series prior to his work on Voyager (largely due to him only ever seeing the same episode whenever he attempted to watch it!).
It was fantastic to meet Garrett Wang at Winter London Film and Comic Con, and an absolute pleasure to chat with him about Star Trek and his work on Voyager.
Hello sir!
Hello! How are you?
I’m very well, and how are you?
Very good, thank you.
How’s your weekend been?
It’s been good, yeah.
Obviously you’re well known for playing Harry Kim on Star Trek Voyager. How was it working on that series?
It was like a dream come true for me, being a sci-fi fan. If you look at the sci-fi shows out there, very few members of the casts of any sci-fi show were sci-fi fans to begin with - I mean, they’re actors, not sci-fi fans! I find myself in the minority, that small club of people who were sci-fi fans before they got on their shows! So it was great to work on Voyager.
Had you been a fan of previous Star Trek series, like the original series and Next Generation, that had come beforehand?
I was a fan of the movies. I never really got into the original series because, for me my first sci-fi ever was 1977 Star Wars, and 1977 Star Wars visual effects is a thousand times better than 1966 Star Trek visual effects right? It was kind of hokey, kind of cheesy. Next Gen came on when I was in college, and the episode that came on was Code of Honor. That episode is agreed upon by all writers of Star Trek to be the worst episode ever. So that episode comes on and I’m thinking, “this is horrible,” so I turn the TV off. Six months later, I turn it on again to watch Star Trek The Next Generation, and it’s a repeat of Code of Honor. I turn the TV off. A year and a half later, I try to watch Next Gen, and again it is Code of Honor. Three times in a row I tried to watch Next Gen, and it was the same shitty episode! So I said, “you know what, this is a sign from God. God is trying to tell me something. Do not watch The Next Generation.”
Which is a good thing, because if I became a Next Generation fan, it would have adversely affected my audition for Voyager. I would’ve been so nervous that I think I wouldn’t have gotten the role. So I think it worked out fine. But since I’ve been on the show, I’ve gone back to see Next Gen, Deep Space, and I am a fan of those shows now. But I didn’t get into it beforehand because Code of Honor kept playing over and over again!
It’s like the Universe really didn’t want you to enjoy Next Gen!
Nope, the Universe certainly did not!
So how did you feel about the character of Harry Kim?
I think they should have let him do a little bit more than he did. I felt like any time the other actors got to go down and do like cool things, like the episode where we went to Earth and they got to wear normal Earth clothes, Kim was left on the ship. The episode where the Hirogen take over the ship and use it as a training tool for all their hunters, everyone gets to do a holodeck simulation where they’re wearing World War Two clothing, Neelix got to be a Klingon, Ensign Kim is wearing his regular Starfleet uniform maintaining all the sensor arrays, you know. I really wish I had a chance to be included in some of these episodes where they got to wear other clothes other than the Starfleet uniform.
And he was never promoted above the rank of Ensign!
No! It’s ridiculous.
He’s such an integral member of the crew! Why not?!
I have no clue. If you’re talking about who deserves to be promoted more than anyone else, it’s Kim! All the crap he went through, all the things he did… It’s Kim! Not Paris. Not Tuvok. Kim! It was quite annoying, not being promoted.
Seven years!
Seven years!
I think Starfleet ensigns are promoted in that time even if they’re not exemplary officers!
Kim should’ve just walked in and phasered everybody. “Take that! Take that! I’ve gone postal! AHA!” Kim should’ve gone mad in the last episode and just shot everybody, that would’ve been the way to go!
Haha! Psychotic Kim, would’ve been brilliant!
Speaking of which, is there anything you wished you could have done with the character?
Yes, shoot everybody on the ship! Psychotic Kim.
I wish they would’ve taken advantage of more comedy, more humour out of the human characters. They shouldn’t leave it up to just the Doctor to be funny, which is what it ended up being. They didn’t really let the human characters engage in comedic moments. And if there were comedic moments, they were horrible! I remember at the end of one episode, Paris looks at Tuvok and says “Tuvok, you’re a real freakasaurus,” and I thought, wow, that’s really not funny at all!
There was certainly room for more humour from the human characters.
Are there any particular moments that were your most - and least, for that matter - favourite moments throughout the series?
Least and most favourite moments…
Least Favourite Moment: Filming the shoot when I got bronchitis...
Bloody hell, that must’ve been horrible.
Yeah, that was not good.
And favourite moment would be being told by the producers that I would be the integral character in the 100th episode, Timeless, which was supposed to be, in their estimations, the best stand-alone episode of all Voyager episodes. So I felt somewhat valued that they chose me to be the main character for that episode.
Would you say Timeless was your favourite episode then?
It is. It is. In my estimation, it is probably one of the best, if not the best episode of Voyager.
Fantastic. And what other projects have you been working on recently? Anything in the works at the moment?
I’m working on a film called Unbelievable, it’s an independent film, sort of a comedy mixed with sci-fi, so… It’ll either totally flop, or it’ll be a cult classic for the rest of time, so we’ll see what happens!
Can you share anything about the film (non-disclosure agreements permitting!)?
There’s a problem with the Lunar Base, and astronauts have to go up there to fix it. There is a marionette puppet of Captain Kirk in it… It’s an interesting film.
Well I’ll be sure to keep an eye out for it! Thank you for your time, sir. It’s been a pleasure!
Thank you sir, and you.
Enjoy the rest of your weekend.
---
Garrett Wang's current projects, Star Trek: Renegades and Unbelievable are currently in production. You can find out more about Renegades here, and check out the Unbelievable Facebook page here.
Garrett Wang is probably best known for his role in Star Trek Voyager as Harry Kim, having also reprised the character for the independent film Star Trek: Renegades which has just recently gone into production, as well as playing Commander Garan in the independent miniseries Star Trek: Of Gods and Men. Wang has been a science fiction fan from childhood, in particular Star Wars and Battlestar Galactica, and although he saw all the Star Trek films that came out in the cinema, he never really got into The Next Generation series prior to his work on Voyager (largely due to him only ever seeing the same episode whenever he attempted to watch it!).
It was fantastic to meet Garrett Wang at Winter London Film and Comic Con, and an absolute pleasure to chat with him about Star Trek and his work on Voyager.
Hello sir!
Hello! How are you?
I’m very well, and how are you?
Very good, thank you.
How’s your weekend been?
It’s been good, yeah.
Obviously you’re well known for playing Harry Kim on Star Trek Voyager. How was it working on that series?
It was like a dream come true for me, being a sci-fi fan. If you look at the sci-fi shows out there, very few members of the casts of any sci-fi show were sci-fi fans to begin with - I mean, they’re actors, not sci-fi fans! I find myself in the minority, that small club of people who were sci-fi fans before they got on their shows! So it was great to work on Voyager.
Had you been a fan of previous Star Trek series, like the original series and Next Generation, that had come beforehand?
I was a fan of the movies. I never really got into the original series because, for me my first sci-fi ever was 1977 Star Wars, and 1977 Star Wars visual effects is a thousand times better than 1966 Star Trek visual effects right? It was kind of hokey, kind of cheesy. Next Gen came on when I was in college, and the episode that came on was Code of Honor. That episode is agreed upon by all writers of Star Trek to be the worst episode ever. So that episode comes on and I’m thinking, “this is horrible,” so I turn the TV off. Six months later, I turn it on again to watch Star Trek The Next Generation, and it’s a repeat of Code of Honor. I turn the TV off. A year and a half later, I try to watch Next Gen, and again it is Code of Honor. Three times in a row I tried to watch Next Gen, and it was the same shitty episode! So I said, “you know what, this is a sign from God. God is trying to tell me something. Do not watch The Next Generation.”
Which is a good thing, because if I became a Next Generation fan, it would have adversely affected my audition for Voyager. I would’ve been so nervous that I think I wouldn’t have gotten the role. So I think it worked out fine. But since I’ve been on the show, I’ve gone back to see Next Gen, Deep Space, and I am a fan of those shows now. But I didn’t get into it beforehand because Code of Honor kept playing over and over again!
It’s like the Universe really didn’t want you to enjoy Next Gen!
Nope, the Universe certainly did not!
So how did you feel about the character of Harry Kim?
I think they should have let him do a little bit more than he did. I felt like any time the other actors got to go down and do like cool things, like the episode where we went to Earth and they got to wear normal Earth clothes, Kim was left on the ship. The episode where the Hirogen take over the ship and use it as a training tool for all their hunters, everyone gets to do a holodeck simulation where they’re wearing World War Two clothing, Neelix got to be a Klingon, Ensign Kim is wearing his regular Starfleet uniform maintaining all the sensor arrays, you know. I really wish I had a chance to be included in some of these episodes where they got to wear other clothes other than the Starfleet uniform.
And he was never promoted above the rank of Ensign!
No! It’s ridiculous.
He’s such an integral member of the crew! Why not?!
I have no clue. If you’re talking about who deserves to be promoted more than anyone else, it’s Kim! All the crap he went through, all the things he did… It’s Kim! Not Paris. Not Tuvok. Kim! It was quite annoying, not being promoted.
Seven years!
Seven years!
I think Starfleet ensigns are promoted in that time even if they’re not exemplary officers!
Kim should’ve just walked in and phasered everybody. “Take that! Take that! I’ve gone postal! AHA!” Kim should’ve gone mad in the last episode and just shot everybody, that would’ve been the way to go!
Haha! Psychotic Kim, would’ve been brilliant!
Speaking of which, is there anything you wished you could have done with the character?
Yes, shoot everybody on the ship! Psychotic Kim.
I wish they would’ve taken advantage of more comedy, more humour out of the human characters. They shouldn’t leave it up to just the Doctor to be funny, which is what it ended up being. They didn’t really let the human characters engage in comedic moments. And if there were comedic moments, they were horrible! I remember at the end of one episode, Paris looks at Tuvok and says “Tuvok, you’re a real freakasaurus,” and I thought, wow, that’s really not funny at all!
There was certainly room for more humour from the human characters.
Are there any particular moments that were your most - and least, for that matter - favourite moments throughout the series?
Least and most favourite moments…
Least Favourite Moment: Filming the shoot when I got bronchitis...
Bloody hell, that must’ve been horrible.
Yeah, that was not good.
And favourite moment would be being told by the producers that I would be the integral character in the 100th episode, Timeless, which was supposed to be, in their estimations, the best stand-alone episode of all Voyager episodes. So I felt somewhat valued that they chose me to be the main character for that episode.
Would you say Timeless was your favourite episode then?
It is. It is. In my estimation, it is probably one of the best, if not the best episode of Voyager.
Fantastic. And what other projects have you been working on recently? Anything in the works at the moment?
I’m working on a film called Unbelievable, it’s an independent film, sort of a comedy mixed with sci-fi, so… It’ll either totally flop, or it’ll be a cult classic for the rest of time, so we’ll see what happens!
Can you share anything about the film (non-disclosure agreements permitting!)?
There’s a problem with the Lunar Base, and astronauts have to go up there to fix it. There is a marionette puppet of Captain Kirk in it… It’s an interesting film.
Well I’ll be sure to keep an eye out for it! Thank you for your time, sir. It’s been a pleasure!
Thank you sir, and you.
Enjoy the rest of your weekend.
---
Garrett Wang's current projects, Star Trek: Renegades and Unbelievable are currently in production. You can find out more about Renegades here, and check out the Unbelievable Facebook page here.
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Winter London Film & Comic Con: An Interview with Nicole de Boer
This interview can also be found on Media Gateway.
Nicole de Boer is probably best known for her roles as Ezri Dax on Star Trek Deep Space Nine, Sarah Bracknell Bannerman in The Dead Zone, and Joan Leaven in the cult film Cube. I was fortunate enough to be able to quickly interview de Boer whilst at Winter London Film and Comic Con, and it was an absolute pleasure to meet and chat with her.
Hello, Nicole de Boer! How’s it going?
Good, thank you.
How’ve you been enjoying this weekend?
It’s been great! It’s a really nice one. I always love coming to London actually.
Ah right, do you come to London often?
Yeah, over the years I have, for things like this.
Well, glad to hear you’re having a great weekend. Now obviously you’re known in Star Trek circles for playing Ezri Dax on Deep Space Nine. Had you been a fan of the show before you took on the role?
I hadn’t really watched Deep Space Nine, but I did watch The Next Generation pretty faithfully - I loved that show - so I was pretty excited to get the part. Getting to work with Worf and O’Brien…
And how did you feel about taking on the role of Dax? Did you consider how to approach the part to make her still recognisably Dax, yet also your own take on the character?
Well it all happened pretty quickly, and they gave me some episodes to watch since I hadn’t seen much of the show, but they did say “you’re a whole new person; you’re Ezri Dax, and Jadzia will be one of many, like all the rest of them. Part of you, but we don’t want you to act like Jadzia, we want you to act like Ezri.” And on top of it, Ezri wasn’t trained to be Joined, so really you see mostly her personality. But I did notice that Terry [Farrell] walked with her hands clasped behind her back, so I decided I would do that as well, just to see Jadzia coming through a little bit. But other than that, I really had to go with what the producers wanted me to make it.
How did you feel about the character of Ezri as a whole?
I loved it. I loved that she had these challenges to deal with; it gives me something to work with as an actor, and I also did love that she had different personalities going on inside of her that we got to explore in certain episodes, like Joran the murder inside of her… That stuff was fun too.
Had DS9 gone on to film any further series, what would you have liked to see happen with Ezri?
I think it’d be really fun to come back now and see Ezri years later, more mature and definitely with a handle on the whole symbiont situation, and much more confident. And I would be a captain, of course!
Oh naturally!
That’d be great.
Although Ezri took a while to adapt, obviously not being trained to be Joined, it must have been fun as an actor to bring a new approach to the existing relationships between characters. A mix of being familiar with everyone, but only just meeting as well.
It was, yeah! It definitely was. The nice thing for me coming onto the show - as the show was already established - was that everyone else was supposed to know my character, but yet not know her, so the writers had me slowly meet everyone and I had scenes with everyone, so that helped me - as Nicole - get welcomed into the group as well. I had a nice, little lovely scene with almost everybody on the show introducing Ezri, which helped me a lot.
I particularly liked the relationship she has with Sisko, and with Quark, that was always fun. That was actually what I auditioned with, a scene between Ezri and Quark.
Ah fantastic. Did you have to audition opposite Armin Shimmerman, or was it just a cold read?
No, I didn’t actually. Just with a reader and the producers.
Out of your time on the show, what would you say was a real highlight for you?
Just the whole. I’ve worked a lot, but nothing of that magnitude. I’ve worked a lot on American shows, filming in Canada, but nothing like working on the Paramount lot, and the sets were absolutely incredible on that show. Mostly just to be in the same atmosphere as those actors; wonderful veteran character actors that I got to work with. It was a real learning experience for me, and I was very proud of it.
What was your favourite thing about DS9? Any favourite episodes to work on?
I enjoyed all of it. It was fun, but it was also a more serious set. We didn’t really joke around like on The Next Generation, it just wasn’t like that on our show, so when we did get an opportunity to have fun, that was nice, like the Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang episode where we’re all at Vic’s club; I just adore James Darren. That was really fun for me, just because it did get a little serious and tense and hard work, so that was a nice break just to have a good time.
I imagine it must’ve been a very serious production to work on, as out of all the Star Trek series DS9 had some of the darker storylines, which often spanned over many episodes. Which is something it did particularly well, also balancing that with the humour that we associate with the Trek franchise.
And there were so many lovely relationships, too. The father-son relationship with Sisko and Jake. I really liked Kira and Odo’s relationship, really beautiful. There was just so much interwoven depth, and that it was a series and not a string of stand-alone episodes, which made it different. It wasn’t really big at that time. Since then, that’s what all show’s have become; it used to be that producers would shy away from doing serials because they wanted viewers to be able to pop in and out at any time and not have to worry about the storyline and if they knew where they were, but now that’s what everybody does now, like with Abrams’s Lost and all that. You have to tell the whole story. But not a lot of people were doing that when Deep Space Nine was doing it, and that’s something I really liked about it.
And what other projects have you worked on recently? Any productions currently in the pipeline?
Well obviously I did The Dead Zone, it’s been six years since then, and Stargate Atlantis. Lately, I’ve done more like TV movies, like Lifetime TV movies, and then some bad SciFi movies which are totally to pay the bills!
Worst experience on one of those?!
Well, I try to make light of everything, but… They’re never bad, because I love the crews and we have fun. It’s just bad when they actually air. That’s the part that’s bad. I had fun enough while doing it, it was challenging to make some of these works not horrible, that’s a challenge.
But I was back on Haven again recently, which I think is a really good show, and I reprise my character on that.
I haven’t actually started watching Haven yet. I do keep meaning to get around to it!
It’s a good one.
How’s your experience been working on it?
Well I was in their very first episode, because that’s Shawn Piller - Michael Piller’s son (Michael Piller worked on Star Trek as one of the producers and writers, and then went on to do The Dead Zone with his son). Michael sadly passed away, and Shawn continued on with that company and with The Dead Zone, and after The Dead Zone ended, he started Haven. So they asked me to be on the first episode of Haven, which was really great, really fun, lovely people. And then three years later, they ask me back, so I was just back on it again this year, which was great. And I’m not dead, so who knows, I might be back again!
Fantastic, I guess we'll see! Well, thank you for your time, it’s been an absolute pleasure. Enjoy the rest of your weekend!
Thank you, and you.
Nicole de Boer is probably best known for her roles as Ezri Dax on Star Trek Deep Space Nine, Sarah Bracknell Bannerman in The Dead Zone, and Joan Leaven in the cult film Cube. I was fortunate enough to be able to quickly interview de Boer whilst at Winter London Film and Comic Con, and it was an absolute pleasure to meet and chat with her.
Hello, Nicole de Boer! How’s it going?
Good, thank you.
How’ve you been enjoying this weekend?
It’s been great! It’s a really nice one. I always love coming to London actually.
Ah right, do you come to London often?
Yeah, over the years I have, for things like this.
Well, glad to hear you’re having a great weekend. Now obviously you’re known in Star Trek circles for playing Ezri Dax on Deep Space Nine. Had you been a fan of the show before you took on the role?
I hadn’t really watched Deep Space Nine, but I did watch The Next Generation pretty faithfully - I loved that show - so I was pretty excited to get the part. Getting to work with Worf and O’Brien…
And how did you feel about taking on the role of Dax? Did you consider how to approach the part to make her still recognisably Dax, yet also your own take on the character?
Well it all happened pretty quickly, and they gave me some episodes to watch since I hadn’t seen much of the show, but they did say “you’re a whole new person; you’re Ezri Dax, and Jadzia will be one of many, like all the rest of them. Part of you, but we don’t want you to act like Jadzia, we want you to act like Ezri.” And on top of it, Ezri wasn’t trained to be Joined, so really you see mostly her personality. But I did notice that Terry [Farrell] walked with her hands clasped behind her back, so I decided I would do that as well, just to see Jadzia coming through a little bit. But other than that, I really had to go with what the producers wanted me to make it.
How did you feel about the character of Ezri as a whole?
I loved it. I loved that she had these challenges to deal with; it gives me something to work with as an actor, and I also did love that she had different personalities going on inside of her that we got to explore in certain episodes, like Joran the murder inside of her… That stuff was fun too.
Had DS9 gone on to film any further series, what would you have liked to see happen with Ezri?
I think it’d be really fun to come back now and see Ezri years later, more mature and definitely with a handle on the whole symbiont situation, and much more confident. And I would be a captain, of course!
Oh naturally!
That’d be great.
Although Ezri took a while to adapt, obviously not being trained to be Joined, it must have been fun as an actor to bring a new approach to the existing relationships between characters. A mix of being familiar with everyone, but only just meeting as well.
It was, yeah! It definitely was. The nice thing for me coming onto the show - as the show was already established - was that everyone else was supposed to know my character, but yet not know her, so the writers had me slowly meet everyone and I had scenes with everyone, so that helped me - as Nicole - get welcomed into the group as well. I had a nice, little lovely scene with almost everybody on the show introducing Ezri, which helped me a lot.
I particularly liked the relationship she has with Sisko, and with Quark, that was always fun. That was actually what I auditioned with, a scene between Ezri and Quark.
Ah fantastic. Did you have to audition opposite Armin Shimmerman, or was it just a cold read?
No, I didn’t actually. Just with a reader and the producers.
Out of your time on the show, what would you say was a real highlight for you?
Just the whole. I’ve worked a lot, but nothing of that magnitude. I’ve worked a lot on American shows, filming in Canada, but nothing like working on the Paramount lot, and the sets were absolutely incredible on that show. Mostly just to be in the same atmosphere as those actors; wonderful veteran character actors that I got to work with. It was a real learning experience for me, and I was very proud of it.
What was your favourite thing about DS9? Any favourite episodes to work on?
I enjoyed all of it. It was fun, but it was also a more serious set. We didn’t really joke around like on The Next Generation, it just wasn’t like that on our show, so when we did get an opportunity to have fun, that was nice, like the Badda-Bing, Badda-Bang episode where we’re all at Vic’s club; I just adore James Darren. That was really fun for me, just because it did get a little serious and tense and hard work, so that was a nice break just to have a good time.
I imagine it must’ve been a very serious production to work on, as out of all the Star Trek series DS9 had some of the darker storylines, which often spanned over many episodes. Which is something it did particularly well, also balancing that with the humour that we associate with the Trek franchise.
And there were so many lovely relationships, too. The father-son relationship with Sisko and Jake. I really liked Kira and Odo’s relationship, really beautiful. There was just so much interwoven depth, and that it was a series and not a string of stand-alone episodes, which made it different. It wasn’t really big at that time. Since then, that’s what all show’s have become; it used to be that producers would shy away from doing serials because they wanted viewers to be able to pop in and out at any time and not have to worry about the storyline and if they knew where they were, but now that’s what everybody does now, like with Abrams’s Lost and all that. You have to tell the whole story. But not a lot of people were doing that when Deep Space Nine was doing it, and that’s something I really liked about it.
And what other projects have you worked on recently? Any productions currently in the pipeline?
Well obviously I did The Dead Zone, it’s been six years since then, and Stargate Atlantis. Lately, I’ve done more like TV movies, like Lifetime TV movies, and then some bad SciFi movies which are totally to pay the bills!
Worst experience on one of those?!
Well, I try to make light of everything, but… They’re never bad, because I love the crews and we have fun. It’s just bad when they actually air. That’s the part that’s bad. I had fun enough while doing it, it was challenging to make some of these works not horrible, that’s a challenge.
But I was back on Haven again recently, which I think is a really good show, and I reprise my character on that.
I haven’t actually started watching Haven yet. I do keep meaning to get around to it!
It’s a good one.
How’s your experience been working on it?
Well I was in their very first episode, because that’s Shawn Piller - Michael Piller’s son (Michael Piller worked on Star Trek as one of the producers and writers, and then went on to do The Dead Zone with his son). Michael sadly passed away, and Shawn continued on with that company and with The Dead Zone, and after The Dead Zone ended, he started Haven. So they asked me to be on the first episode of Haven, which was really great, really fun, lovely people. And then three years later, they ask me back, so I was just back on it again this year, which was great. And I’m not dead, so who knows, I might be back again!
Fantastic, I guess we'll see! Well, thank you for your time, it’s been an absolute pleasure. Enjoy the rest of your weekend!
Thank you, and you.
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