A drawing reacting to the last episodes of LOST. The time-travel season threw me off, but I figured J.J. Abrams was practicing for Star Trek, which was an amazing movie. I hope that the time-travel is easy enough to follow & that you enjoy the comic as much as you enjoyed the series.
03 Jan
Posted by ericmsteen as Sci-Fi, Sci-Fi and Activsim, Social Art, Utopian Visions
Stephen Hendee’s Flag of North America 2058 CE. I found this image when a friend recommended I look at the work of artist Stephen Hendee. Hendee’s work is laced with sci-fi influences, especially dystopian and doomsday genres. I think this may influence my future work.
2009 Abyss in one hand, remote control in the other. The other night I paired Deschutes Brewery’s The Abyss beer with The Abyss science fiction film. It’s The Double Abyss! So, do the two go together? The movie does indeed bring you to a dark place, well below the surface of the earth where there is no light, just dark. You get a sense of being claustrophobic as you watch it. The Abyss beer does provide some of the darkest, thickest beer, you can find but the flavors open up up as you sip it, revealing layer after layer of rich complexity – quite the opposite of claustrophobia. The movie makes you cold, knowing the people are so far down underwater that there would be very little heat. The beer is 11% alcohol, an imperial stout, if my memory serves me, so it warms you right up. That’s a good combo. The movie is a very long one so if you wanted to drink a full beer you would need to sip it. And the beer is definitely made for sipping, but I can’t imagine drinking the whole thing in one 3 hour sitting. I would say make sure a couple friends are with you and sip very slowly. But a beer with such high alcohol volume just serves to increase your tiredness during a slow movie, so by the end of the movie you will likely be asleep. If you’re wanting to watch the full movie, I recommend a different beer.
25 Oct
Posted by ericmsteen as Beer (Oregon), Movies, Neighborhood, Portland, Portland Fun, Sci-Fi
Portland’s Bermuda Triangle is Horse Brass, Movie Madness, and Belmont Station. The perfect, walkable, place to lose track of time, enjoy beer and science fiction, and bring something home for later.
I’m a little behind in watching the $10 movies – why spend $10 at a franchise theater when I can wait 2 months, pay $3 to watch it at Laurelhurst Theater and drink beer? Or wait for the DVD and browse the incredible selection of horror and science fiction at the famous Movie Madness? Anyway, [...]
Our pollution is getting worse, we are creating a monster. It’s impossible to stop the progress of buying new things and throwing out the old, which is polluting the planet.
01 Jul
Posted by ericmsteen as Double Features, Movies, Sci-Fi, Travels
Double Feature Sci-Fi Movie Recommendation #05 is based off my observations of tourists at Yellowstone National Park. I want to recommend movies where tourism goes horribly wrong. Read on for details…
Science Fiction and activism: where the two come together. Think Galactic is an activist sci fi book club. Sleep Dealer is a movie that explores international border control and globalism and Public Social University explores rethinking society before and after an apocalypse.
23 Mar
Posted by ericmsteen as Portland, Portland Fun, Sci-Fi, Sci-Fi and Activsim, Social Art
An art exhibition about community, collaboration, and alternative and free education in the times of a struggling society.
18 Mar
Posted by ericmsteen as Double Features, Movies, Sci-Fi
I have paired together two sci fi movies that I believe work well as a double feature…Panic in the Year Zero (1962) and The Man From Earth (2007).
07 Mar
Posted by ericmsteen as Movies, Sci-Fi, Sci-Fi and Activsim, Utopian Visions
Post-Apocalyptic movies portray the destruction of the world. Can we have a post-apocalyptic movie that shows the rebuilding phase, the hard labor, and connecting of communities instead of just ending the movie right when the world is saved or meaning is found?
I have some new drawings from my neice. She’s drawn some evil robots, bad monsters, and of course some humanitarian-type good robots and monsters. First we acted out scenes where I was a bad robot terrorizing buildings and people and she was the good robot that came in and saved the day. Then I asked [...]
Image of Edgar Arceneaux’s Tupca, Tuvoc, and Spock drawing compared with three beers from Deschutes Brewery in Portland, Oregon: Black Butte Porter, Obsidian Stout and the limited Black Pearl Dark Ale
27 Jan
Posted by ericmsteen as Movies, Sci-Fi, Utopian Visions
A discussion between Dolittle and Bomb 20 in Dark Star about how we perceive our reality and how what we think is our reality may not be true or the same for others. Doing what we think we need to do has effects and consequences on other people’s lives. Does this have any correlations to the utopia movie Commune?
26 Jan
Posted by ericmsteen as Beer (Oregon), Movies, Portland Fun, Sci-Fi
Earlier this evening I went to the Bagdad Theater, drank a Terminator Stout and watched Alien on one of the original film reels. I’ve never seen Alien in such quality. Nor have I seen it with a crowd that is as nerdy about it as I am. You could hear cheers and laughter after scenes [...]