vintage
Vintage geek content from the archives of the geek, comic, and entertainment collections.
The Imagination and Admiration of Studio Ghibli
Our journey through the wonderful world of Studio Ghibli continues! If you have not yet read the first part of this series I would highly recommend it
Blake's 7: Warship Review
One of Big Finish's most exciting products in their Blake's 7 range has to be their very first full-cast audio, "Warship". After a number of narrated Liberator Chronicles box sets and books, "Warship" was perhaps the closest Big Finish had got to telling an authentic Blake's 7 story up till that point, and, as such, was highly anticipated by fans. Set in the gap in between series two and three, and telling the story of the Liberator's fight against the alien fleet featured in the final episode of series two, the anticipation was even higher. Fortunately, this is a tight, exciting audio drama that bridges the gap between series two and three fantastically, and affords Jenna and Blake the departure from the Liberator that they weren't given in the TV series.
Joseph A. MorrisonPublished 2 years ago in GeeksGrandma, Dostoevsky, and the emotional pull of literature
My grandmother became a Reader in her late 80s, by accident. Her early education in the east of Poland during the third decade of the last century was interrupted by World War II when she finished grade 4. She never went back to school. Moving to Poland’s capital after the war, she took up manual labor right away to make ends meet.
Tess V. FlairePublished 2 years ago in GeeksGone With the Wind
I remember in 1980 when I was nine years old and living in The Galaxy Condominiums and attending Klien Elementary school, my mother sat me down in the living room in front of our television. She looked at me and said, "Shanon, I want you to watch my all-time favorite movie with me. I love this movie." So I put away my dolls, my piano lessons, my homework, and playing with the other kids and sat down with my mother to watch for the first time "Gone With the Wind" - her all-time favorite movie. I wanted to know why she loved the movie so much. At nine years old, my favorite movies were "Grease" and "The Jungle Book" but I didn't know much at nine years old. So I sat there and watched the masterpiece of film adapted from Margaret Mitchell's novel about the south and the civil war and slavery and survival. Why was this movie so important to my mother? I was sure if I paid attention, I would understand.
Shanon NormanPublished 2 years ago in GeeksKid Life Lessons With Love From Peanuts
Before television offered hundreds of channels 24/7 in never-ending children’s options, the ‘70s television golden era stretched in kid glorious majesty. Where I grew up, that meant hilarious and engaging children’s programs sprinkled sparingly across three TV stations throughout the year where said stations pretty much all signed off by midnight.
The Dani WriterPublished 2 years ago in GeeksThrift Gold Review #1
Thrift stores are a treasure trove that many have lost touch with. Sure, I don't do a vast majority of my shopping at them--very little of it, in actuality--but there is no mistaking the wonder and even pressure involved in going there with a reason in mind.
Batmen and Robins
Michael Keaton wasn't the first Batman on the big screen. Nor was Adam West. There have been many actors who have played Batman, starting when the character was relatively new.
Top 5 cartoons introduced to me by "The U.S.A. Cartoon Express;" and 5 introduced to me by "Cartoon Network."
Hello, friends; me again. And hello to me from 1990 "me;" right around 5-6 years old and hanging out at my late grandmother's for the day with my G.I. Joe's somewhere nearby and a television set tuned to U.S.A. network in front of me. (my sister, ranging somewhere between 2 and 3 years was generally somewhere nearby too).
Kent BrindleyPublished 2 years ago in GeeksA Star is Born, An Identity Dies
Considering Esther Blodgett’s journey through A Star is Born, one can assert that Los Angeles is a city that perpetuates a culture of identity destruction and reconstruction. In order to involve oneself fully in a city that perpetuates a misguided view of its own development, thrives off an industry of fictional storytelling, and lures lost souls from across the country with empty promises of new beginnings, one must learn how to mask their true selves in order to conform to the very nature of Los Angeles. Esther Blodgett is not ignorant of the lies she must create in order to achieve fame. Nor is she afraid of the drastic reformation she must undergo to become a Hollywood legend. Esther is young and naive however and does fully understand the consequences of her actions. Norman Maine, Esther’s icon and later husband, is a frightening look into the suffering caused by self-erasure. A Star is Born operates almost as a modern fable of Los Angeleno life that mirrors Esther Blodgett’s euphoric rise to fame at the cost of her identity with Norman Maine’s disappearance from the public eye after having been shunted away by the breakout new starlet.
The Yearning for Nostalgia
What is it about nostalgia that stirs such powerful emotions in us all? Why do we insist on revisiting, remaking, and reconstructing the past?
My Own Personal History Of Computer Gaming
I am going to start this with the reason why I could never learn to ride a motorcycle as a teenager. I learned to drive but when i got on a full blown motorcycle there were so many things to remember and control that I usually ended up just falling off. I could ride a moped because everything was on the handlebars , and a speedway bike was brilliant , just an accelerator and no brakes perfectly simple , but a full blown motorcycle, I just couldn’t cut it.
Mike Singleton - MikeydredPublished 2 years ago in GeeksYou're a Millennial If You Remember . . .
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times; it was the times that we will forever base 50% of our personality on because it was both thrilling and traumatizing.
Mae McCreeryPublished 2 years ago in Geeks