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Friday, 17 January 2025
The Inexperienced Ghost (Audio Play)
Tuesday, 14 January 2025
Moon8: An 8-Bit Tribute To Dark Side Of The Moon
For the Floyd purists I suspect this might be a difficult listen but for those of you with an affection for electronic music, game music or just the slightly barmy then this'll make your day because it's all those things.
You can find out more along with all sorts of technical details that my luddite brain wouldn't understand at rainwarrior.ca
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Sunday, 12 January 2025
Superstitious Ignorance
Yellow beach buggy owning hipster couple 'Teddy' (Jeremy Clyde - 'Schalcken the Painter') and 'Penny' (Tessa Wyatt - 'Robin's Nest') visit a dilapidated house with vague plans to buy and renovate it but encounter the sitting tenant, 'Mrs Laristo' (Eve Pearce) who warns them not to stay.
Following it's sitcom like beginning there's a well-paced build up of tension as the pompous pair run roughshod over the increasingly panicked tenant and parade around the house planning their remodelling. Is there something evil in the house or is Mrs Laristo simply trying to scare them away from her home or, is it something, else?For the most part it's a quick and effective little creeeper but unfortunately the pay-off, whilst unexpected, is rather silly and much of the hard work of the previous 30 minutes comes crashing down.
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Friday, 10 January 2025
The Best of Tharg's Terror Tales
Rebellion
Pulled from the pages of 2000AD this collection of horror shorts is, in the spirit of anthologies everywhere, a bit of a mixed bag.
With stories and art by the likes of Mark Millar, Alan McKenzie, Simon Spurrier, Al Ewing, Greg Staples, Shaky Kane, Dom Reardon and Henry Flint, it definitely has it's moments but I imagine the demands of producing a weekly magazine are pretty intense and occasionally the quality control slips a bit which may excuse some of the stories here which are pretty poor. Mixed in amongst them though are some, maybe not gems, but definitely some shiny pebbles.
It's not a patch on my potentialy rose-tinted memories of, the Future Shocks or Time Twisters of yore but it's nice to think that the days of the EC Comics shocker aren't completely gone and there's still an occasional home for them in the Galaxy's greatest comic.
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Wednesday, 8 January 2025
This Quiet World
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Sunday, 5 January 2025
Dirk Gently
Adapted by 'Misfits' creator Howard Overman, with later scripts by Doctor Who alumni Matt Jones and Jamie Mathieson and starring Stephen Mangan as Dirk, Darren Boyd as Richard MacDuff, Helen Baxendale as Richard's exasperated girlfriend Susan Harrison, Jason Watkins as D.I. Gilks and Lisa Jackson as Dirk's perpetually unpaid secretary Janice.
The original pilot episode aired in December 2010 and is the one, of the 4 episodes made, which most closely relates to the first novel with it's tale of time travel but the others, shown in 2012, all maintain the science fiction elements that perfectly suit a detective whose investigative style is based on quantum physics and the fundamental interconnectedness of all things. The now ubiquitous Mangan, who was then mostly known for his starring role in the hospital based sitcom 'Green Wing', brings the perfect amount of manic untrustworthiness and crazed genius to the role whilst Boyd is the consumate everyman foil as Dirk's "averagely incompetent assistant" / partner.Whilst there is a slightly cheap and cheerful aspect to the show, particularly when viewed against 'Sherlock', that was airing to global acclaim around the same time, but it's charm is it's own and, had it been given the chance, feels like it could have grown into something lasting but, unfortunately the show was cancelled following it's sole series with the BBC blaming a funding freeze and a decision to consolidate it's original drama production to it's two principal channels.
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Thursday, 2 January 2025
Coil Manifesto
There are longer versions that incorporate elements of 'Queens of the Circulating Library' but I prefer this one mostly due to the exclamation and laughter near the end that perfectly encapsulates the group's playfulness alongside how seriously they took their art.
"Coil is a hidden universal. A code. A key for which the hole does not exist. Is non-existant. In silence and secrecy. A spell. A spiral. A serpent etched around the female cycle. A whirlwind. A double helix. DNA. Electricity and elementals. Atonal noise and brutal poetry.
Coil is amorphous, luminous, and in constant change. In-built obsolescence. In-built disobedience. A vehicle for obsessions. Dream cycles in perpetual motion. We are cutthroats, infantile, immaculately conceived. Diseased. the virus is chaos. The cure is delirium.
Coil are archangels of chaos. The price we pay for existance is eternal warfare. There is a hidden coil of strength, dormant, beneath the sediment of convention. Dreams lead us under the surface, over the edge to the delirium state, unchained. past impositions with false universals. We assemble them into our order.
Coil who has the nerve to dream, create, and kill, while the whole moves and every part stands still. Our rationale is the irrational. Hallucination is the truth our graves are dug with.
Coil is compulsion, urge, and construction. Dead letters fall from our shedding skins. Kabbalah and chaos. Thanatos and Thelema. Archangels and antichrists. Open and close. Truth and deliberation. Traps and disorientation.
Coil exists between here and here. We are janus-headed, plural. Out of time, out of place, out of spite. An antidote for when people become poisonous.
Coil know how to destroy angels. how to paralyse. Imagine the world in a bottle. We take that bottle, smash it, and open your throat with it. I warn you we are murderous. We massacre the logical revolts. We know everything! We know one thing only. we know nothing.
Absolute existence, absolute motion, absolute direction, absolute truth. Now, here, us.
"Not knowing what is and is not knowing, I knew not"
Hassan i Sabbah"
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Wednesday, 1 January 2025
Happy New Year.
This is the 10th year of the blog during which we passed 2 million views, which still amazes me whenever I think about it.
So, thank you for supporting Wyrd Britain through the last 12 months, I hope you've enjoyed the things we've shared here and I hope the year ahead is filled with love, laughter, and, of course, the weird and the wonderful.
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If you enjoy what we do here on Wyrd Britain and would like to help us continue then we would very much welcome a donation towards keeping the blog going - paypal.me/wyrdbritain
Monday, 30 December 2024
Alan Moore on Austin Osman Spare
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Tuesday, 24 December 2024
The State of the Art (audio drama)
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Wednesday, 18 December 2024
Louis Wain's Cats
Cannongate
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Friday, 13 December 2024
Goth at the BBC
For those of us who still have far too many black clothes in our cupboards its a fun trip back in time that'll have you reaching for the mascara and downing a pint of snakebite and black.
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Wednesday, 11 December 2024
Clangers
The Clangers spoke in a musical whistle created by using a slide (or swanee) whistle. Their dialogue however was all scripted and then reproduced through the instruments. This allowed Postgate to be rather more adventurous with the dialogue than the BBC would have maybe liked (if they'd known) with Episode Three, 'Chicken', containing - at 00:55 - the most famous piece of salty Clanger speak, "Oh sod it, the bloody thing's stuck again."
Only 27 episodes (two series and one special) of The Clangers were made but to this day they hold - as does much of Postgate and Firmin's work - a special place in hearts of swathes of Brits who grew up in the 70s and 80s, but their simple charm has rendered them timeless with the revived series (2015-2020) producing a further 106 episodes narrated by Michael Palin (in the UK) and William Shatner (in the US).
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Monday, 9 December 2024
The Legend of Luther Arkwright
Jonathan Cape
In my late teens and early 20s I worked in a comic shop and amassed a sizeable comics collection that got sold off over the years but in my personal pantheon of comic greats there are a few things that have stayed with me and have survived the various culls. Amongst them are various Alan Moore books, Grant Morrison's run on 'Doom Patrol', 'The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers', and 'The Adventures of Luther Arkwright'.
I pretty much walked away from comics in 1993 having got entirely bored of all the investment comics crap that lead to 942 variant covers of a terrible Spiderman comic but some time later I dipped my toes back in the water and re-purchased some old favourites like 'Love and Rockets', made some new ones like Warren Ellis' 'Transmetropolitan' and discovered to my delight and trepidation there was a sequel to Luther called 'Heart of Empire' that whilst missing some of the gonzo brilliance of the original was nevertheless a rivetting romp of a book and now 20 something years later we have a third.
Luther and the revitalised Harry Fairfax are travelling the multiverse together when they are summoned to meet 'Proteus' - the next, next stage (after. Arkwright and others) of human evolution - a psychopathic and very powerful telepath with distinctly fascistic views towards homo sapiens who Luther takes an immediate disliike to and vows to stop. The story thereafter is one long gethering of forces as Luther and Harry and eventually Luther's daughter Victoria finalise their plan with the aid of many Amys and one Zaffron Waldorf.
In scope it's huge and in execution it's immaculate and is every bit the equal of it's predecessor but I cant help but judge it against the original. I know I shoudn't, but I just can't help it, and the original is a phenomenon and a pivotal work in the history of British comics. Yes, it has flaws, and there's an excellent laugh to be had in book three that refers to one of them, but it's a glorious slice of new wave / Moorcockian science fiction that deserves a place right at the heart of any discussion of British science fiction.This third book isn't the original, it's its own thing and once I got my inner fanboy to shut up I thoroughly enoyed the ride as Talbot takes us on a tour of the various worlds that us lowly sapiens are liable to create and finds kindness and heroism in the most unlikely of places whilst telling a story of hope and redemption.
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Thursday, 5 December 2024
The Great When
Bloomsbury Publishing
Having completed his conjuring to place his hometown of Northampton at the centre of the country's collective historical consciousness with his epic tour de force, 'Jerusalem', Alan Moore now turns his sights on London and the creative hold it's had on generations of artists, seers and mad(wo)men; those who can walk the streets of it's mythic, sidereal counterpart, 'The Great When'.
In this, the first of what's intended to be a five book series, we meet the hapless hero, 'Dennis Knuckleyard', who is thrust, entirely unprepared, into a world of imagination and danger, of archetypes, avatars and artists. Arriving at 'The Great When' through the imaginings of Arthur Machen and traversing it with the aid of Austin Osman Spare, Dennis is tasked with the return of a book, a fictional book removed somehow from 'The Great When', that has found its way into his possession and which, if he can't get rid of it, could be the cause of him being turned inside out.
Obviously this is the first step in what will be a long journey and so there's a lot of worldbuilding, but Moore is a master of such things, and you rarely feel bogged down in exposition as the story weaves its way across post-war London, setting up events that'll take decades to resolve. The story at this early stage is relatively straightforward, playful and populated by a delightful cast of rascals, reprobates, ruffians and wrong uns who variously embrace or are embraced by that other London.For those, like me, who are long time Moore devotees it's an absolute joy to know that we are setting out on another journey with him, and you'll see an obvious kinship here with some of his previous work. The London of 'From Hell' is just behind the curtain - although a very different Ripper is held responsible - as is 'The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen', particularly the 'Century' trilogy, and it's cultural crate-digging that allowed Moore to play with the very character of the times, rooting around in its basements, unveiling secrets and dusting off intrigues, but 'The Great When' is it's own thing and has it's own story to tell, and I for one cannot wait to revisit.
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