Biology in Science FIction Roundup: January 27 Edition
Here's my weekly roundup of biology in science fiction links:
io9 reports on a movie adaptation of Ray Bradbury's short story
Chrysalis:
Bradbury himself has been involved in every step of the movie,
which takes place in an Earth left barren after a third world war.
Scientists in a research facility are struggling to find ways to
revive plant life. One of the scientists apparently dies, but then
a plant chrysalis grows around him and saves him. He starts
changing into something new and scary.
Production Charts has the scoop on a movie adaptation of the comic
book Y:The Last Man, to star Shia LeBoeuf:
A mysterious plague has killed every man on earth except Yorick
Brown, who was somehow spared. That is the provocative premise of
the comics series whose first five issues make up this book.
The sole Y-chromosomed survivor is an amiable, headstrong young
man, the son of a U.S. congresswoman and, as it happens, an amateur
escape artist. He spends most of the story on the run from a tribe
of self-styled Amazons bent on eliminating the last vestige of
patriarchy. He is also trying, with a bioengineer who may be
responsible for the worldwide "gendercide," to figure out why he
survived; hoping to reach his girlfriend in Australia; and, of
course, contemplating the repopulation of the planet.
io9 also has some footage from the bad bad movie Repli-Kate:
Here's a great scene where one of the gene geeks uses his amazing
high-throughput sequencer to create a clone of a hot chick from
some blood drops on a CD-ROM. Even the genechip whiz kid Michael
Eisen, whom I know for a fact has watched this movie, agrees that
this is the most thrilling representation of genetic engineering
ever captured on film.
SciFi Weekly reviews the midseason premiere of Kyle XY
Slice of SciFi reports on a campaign to save The 4400 from
cancellation. You can participate by visiting Save The 4400.net.
David Ng writes about some lost cartoon episodes about science - I'd
love to see "That's Biotechnology, Charlie Brown" myself.
Tags:science fiction, biology
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