You may have a natural media gravitation toward the '70's. Fortunately, you can still make a really good photoset for everyone in the '90's, when it was still possible to smoke like a chimney in government offices.
Ha, I did spend the best part of decade watching way too much 70s TV, it is true. And, lol, am I making a photoset now? (Actually, I don't think contemporary late 90s Jeremy Northam ever wears a suitable suit, not in anything I have, at any rate. Contemporary JN is very casual, or removes his clothes altogether. The Tribe would probably have a suit, but not the right kind, if he keeps it on for long enough, but idk about that because the dvd of that BBC TV Poliakoff thing is only available in Region 1, my favourite reason not to be able to obtain a dvd of an obscure British thing. *cough* Plus, do I have other Rebecca Pidgeon screencaps? I did watch something else and I think I did take some, but i can't remember for sure. If not, then nope. lol.)
Oh, nice. I did not know the details of the history of post-apocalyptic fiction, but it worked very well as a vague, terrible, non-cozy catastrophe. The unrecognizable ruins of the heart of power was a nice and classically sfnal touch.
<3 I was trying to remember how that was a thing I knew - and it was because I read pretty much ever wiki page going on apocalypses when I set up my apocabingo comm! Anyway, yep. The first one was After London in the 1880s, although that was not really the actual focus of the novel - but it clearly started something.
I can see him and Catherine thriving in JS&MN, too. (Is Ronnie entangled in a fairy bargain?)
It must be something like that! And yes, they felt so much like they would fit in that particular world. I think I might try a crossover next time I re-read JS&MN - depending of course on whenever that is, and what I'm feeling like by then, of course, heh.
I still really love the Supernatural one. As soon as you suggested it, I couldn't understand why no one ever had cast Jeremy Northam as an occultist/parapsychologist of doubtful reputation. He'd knock it out of the park.
Oh, I was thinking of it purely in TWB AU terms, and therefore as Sir Robert, but you are so right! That would have been great. Someone should have asked him to do that! (I mean, they could have done, I suppose, but there are a couple of interviews I've seen that suggest that he likes SF/horror/ghost stories and does not get the chance to do them often.)
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Ha, I did spend the best part of decade watching way too much 70s TV, it is true. And, lol, am I making a photoset now? (Actually, I don't think contemporary late 90s Jeremy Northam ever wears a suitable suit, not in anything I have, at any rate. Contemporary JN is very casual, or removes his clothes altogether. The Tribe would probably have a suit, but not the right kind, if he keeps it on for long enough, but idk about that because the dvd of that BBC TV Poliakoff thing is only available in Region 1, my favourite reason not to be able to obtain a dvd of an obscure British thing. *cough* Plus, do I have other Rebecca Pidgeon screencaps? I did watch something else and I think I did take some, but i can't remember for sure. If not, then nope. lol.)
Oh, nice. I did not know the details of the history of post-apocalyptic fiction, but it worked very well as a vague, terrible, non-cozy catastrophe. The unrecognizable ruins of the heart of power was a nice and classically sfnal touch.
<3 I was trying to remember how that was a thing I knew - and it was because I read pretty much ever wiki page going on apocalypses when I set up my apocabingo comm! Anyway, yep. The first one was After London in the 1880s, although that was not really the actual focus of the novel - but it clearly started something.
I can see him and Catherine thriving in JS&MN, too. (Is Ronnie entangled in a fairy bargain?)
It must be something like that! And yes, they felt so much like they would fit in that particular world. I think I might try a crossover next time I re-read JS&MN - depending of course on whenever that is, and what I'm feeling like by then, of course, heh.
I still really love the Supernatural one. As soon as you suggested it, I couldn't understand why no one ever had cast Jeremy Northam as an occultist/parapsychologist of doubtful reputation. He'd knock it out of the park.
Oh, I was thinking of it purely in TWB AU terms, and therefore as Sir Robert, but you are so right! That would have been great. Someone should have asked him to do that! (I mean, they could have done, I suppose, but there are a couple of interviews I've seen that suggest that he likes SF/horror/ghost stories and does not get the chance to do them often.)