The great corridors of sci-fi cinema

Friday, September 4, 2009


Martin Anderson shamelessly geeks out in a fun Den of Geek column celebrating the great corridors of sci-fi cinema. Anderson is a corridor connoisseur, and after you read this article you may well become a corridorophile, too.

It's too bad he limited the article to the corridors of movie sci-fi. TV sci-fi has had some unforgettable corridors, too. The sleek and well-scrubbed halls of Star Trek. The mecha-horror corridor decor of the Borg. (Try saying that three times fast.) The sticky, drippy, almost womb-like walls of Lexx, the constantly evolving yet homey passageways of Doctor Who's Tardis. And don't get me started on sci-fi's greatest air ducts! There's the one the kids crawl through to escape the velociraptors in Jurassic Park...

Got a tip for Monsters and Rockets? Want to contribute to the site? Send us an email.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

About This Blog

"Science fiction plucks from within us our deepest fears and hopes, then shows them to us in rough disguise: the monster and the rocket." - W.H. Auden

Who is he, this one who is called "Greg Stacy"?

Greg Stacy began the MONSTERS AND ROCKETS blog in April of 2009. Prior to that, he was editor of the popular sci-fi/horror news website DARKWOLDS.COM. He has also written for LA WEEKLY, OC WEEKLY, UTNE READER and LOS ANGELES CITYBEAT. He always feels weird writing about himself in the third person.

  © Free Blogger Templates Nightingale by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP