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Why Aren't There More Sci-Fi Movies About Dreams?

WIRED

In the recent movie Coma, everyone who falls into a coma finds themselves inhabiting the same surreal landscape. Science fiction author Anthony Ha enjoyed the film's premise, and is surprised there aren't more science fiction movies about dreaming. "There isn't quite as much as I would have expected," Ha says in Episode 441 of the Geek's Guide to the Galaxy podcast. "There's so much dream fantasy fiction--and certainly there are a number of science fiction examples too--but it seems a lot less common." The best-known science fiction dream movies, such as Inception and The Cell, are at least a decade old, and the best-known novels on the subject were published in the 1960s and '70s.


Will We Ever Get Another Season of 'Dimension 404'?

WIRED

Dimension 404 on Hulu is a science fiction anthology show in the tradition of The Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits. TV writer Andrea Kail loved the fifth episode, "Bob," about a (literal) giant brain who works for the National Security Agency. "I thought this was one of the best things I've seen in a long time," Kail says in Episode 347 of the Geek's Guide to the Galaxy podcast. "I thought it was incredibly good filmmaking, and incredibly great writing and acting. There was nothing about it I didn't love."


Apple's 'Amazing Stories' Reboot Taps 'Once Upon A Time' Co-Creators

International Business Times

Apple's "Amazing Stories" revival finally has new showrunners on board. The tech giant has inked a deal with "Once Upon a Time" co-creators Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis in order for the two to take on the role and executive produce the project. Variety first reported that Horowitz and Kitsis have now assumed the role that Bryan Fuller left in February. The announcement of their involvement in the project comes days after ABC aired the finale of "Once Upon a Time" season 7, which is the fantasy series' final run. As what IBTimes learned last February, Fuller exited the reboot of Steven Spielberg's science fiction horror series due to creative differences.