IN THIS MONTH’S AMAZING ISSUE:
- The big movie preview – Featuring exclusive news, interviews from Comic-Con and a host of must see movies, this preview has all you need on the blockbusters yet to hit cinema screens.
- True Blood – Blood lovers Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer talk True Blood.
- Insider feature: Lost – We chat to Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse about Lost’s final season.
- Interview: Dario Argento – The influential horror helmer discusses his bloody career.
- The greatest sci-fi film of all time is… – Don’t miss the start of our ongoing forum experiment.
- Free inside! – Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy stickers.
Also included:
- The complete guide to Red Dwarf
- Bluffers guide to… Sapphire & Steel
- Retro classic – The Avengers
- Huge SF/F literary section with author interviews
- A brand new dedicated memorabilia section
- And much, much more!
To purchase this issue online, order other Imagine Publishing products or to subscribe to SciFiNow, visit our eShop at http://www.imagineshop.co.uk












How about mentioning the free Hitchhiker’s stickers and feature that are in this issue?
I love how it says sex-crazed show on the cover(concerning True Blood), I’ld hate for whoever came up with that to watch any other HBO show. Which are all(and rightfuly so) regarded as the best television shows ever(The Wire, Sopranos, Six Feet Under, Deadwood, all lots of f-words, sex and violence). Also, in the last issue it had descriptions of all these TV-shows that had been renewed, but with True Blood there were these little icons, like: SWEARING + SEX = CASH. It seems obvious that SciFiNow(ar at least some of it’s writers/editors) hates True Blood. Unless I’m misreading it, but it also comes across this way in the podcasts.
I’ve noticed this for as long as True Blood has been on the air, how there’s a sense of negativity surrounding this show when I read SciFiNow. When really, it’s arguably the best written/directed/acted (not only genre)show on TV at the moment. And for those who might take True Blood too seriously(story-wise), let’s not forget it’s like 50% percent a parody on the genre(Alan Ball “having fun”).
P.S. Don’t get me wrong, I love the magazine and the podcasts but as someone who watches a lot of HBO stuff and True Blood, this is how it comes across. Unless I’m wrong?
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