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I remember buying one of those crappy imitators that came after Star Wars broke out, I think it was called "Laser Blast" or something awful like that. It made "Cracked" look like "National Lampoon"...
Hey, Laserblast was a fun movie!
I'd love to see it again.
Low budget yes, but I miss those B-movies.
Starcrash, Beastmaster, It came without warning, Blood beach, The Hearse,...
I loved Starlog.
Read it from issue 15, and only stopped about eight years ago.
In later years, they seemed to really just cover the worst movies.
Seeing a long article about a movie in Starlog made me think "crap movie" instantly.
And imported mags here cost between $10-15, so...
Still, the end of an era. In the 70s and 80s I really loved every issue!
>The only sci-fi magazine I really miss was the old Star Trek Magazine. Yes, it was pricey, but I loved the cutaways, and other general Treknology articles.
THAT was a great source of material for customs! And yes, it was VERY pricey....
>The reader base for these publications has been eroding for years.
Yeah. I think part of it is that the internets are a quicker and more prolific source of info on the nerdly arts than a mag could HOPE to be any more.
It's a sign of the times.....print costs verses subscription and news stand revenue.The reader base for these publications has been eroding for years.
Sad to see it go from hard copy to e-copy.
Stranglely, I was never a fan of Cinemafantastique.
They had GREAT covers but were overpriced considering how many pages they had.
Also, back in the day, Cinemafantastique was quite pretentious. I have picked up a few issues from Ebay and they have some great insightful stuff. But the editorial viewpoint comes off as quite snobbish.
I got a laugh about the Logan's Run cover issue back in 1976. All the articles about the movie are basically ripping on it (the regular articles, not the review) saying how disapointed they were in it and such. I can understand them not liking the movie but ripping it, in the midst of articles and interviews about the people that made the movie is major Comic Book Guy.
The highest praise reviews for these guys were given to movies like Three Women, a surreal, dreamlike film from Robert Altman that may or may not be Science Fiction. Also they championed The Wicker Man (the original, not the remake with Nick Cage), which is really well done, unusual thriller but it's not "the Citizen Kane of Science Fiction/horror" as they called it.
I'd love to see what these guys thought about Zardoz.
But by the mid 1980's Cinemafantastique was pretty much just like Starlog.
About the demise of Starlog, I haven't bought Starlog in years, but it still makes me a little sad.
I found Starlog in 1976, subscribed until 1985, and picked it up occasionally as recently as last year. In 1983, I actually went to their offices on a trip to NYC and met editors Howard Zimmerman and Kerry O'Quinn. They were very to cool to the 18 y/o super-geek. I loved that magazine dearly at one time. Sorry to see it go. Neat that they remain as a website, though.
That's too bad. I used to love reading that magazine back in the early 80's, along with Fantastic Films (and the occasional Cinefantastique). I think I still have some issues stashed away somewhere. I would re-read those mags constantly.
once in a great while i'd treat myself to a Starburst, but it was nowhere near the quality of Starlog.
Also, it was too expensive because you had to get it in specialty shops.
I remember buying one of those crappy imitators that came after Star Wars broke out, I think it was called "Laser Blast" or something awful like that. It made "Cracked" look like "National Lampoon"...
Starlog was great back in the late 70's early 80's.
I was first introduced to it in highschool back in 79-ish
I had a subscription from around late '79 to '84-ish.
After 84-ish, they seemed to stop focussing on classic sci-fi and went in more for the new current movies (which I didn't care for).
I was excited to purchase Issue #1 when it first hit the stands.. Back in the day (as most of you should remember..), there wasn't any intelligent magazines out on the stands except for 'Hollywood Monsters' and stuff like that for any good pics or interesting stories.
That ALL changed with Starlog #1.. It paved the way for everything, a few years before Star Wars came on the scene.
An actual Star Trek episode guide.., high quality color paper, insightful articles, current news, letters to the editor.. It was about time..!
I stopped when I started attending college, much about the time like Type1 said, they stopped focusing on older fare.., besides there wasn't much good sci-fi to come out of the '80s at that point, other than Trek and SW.., so I stopped collecting as well.
I remember my heart stopping when iss 6 announced the cancellation of Space:1999.
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