Boys from the Dwarf: How Red Dwarf Became the Greatest Sci-Fi Sitcom Ever Made
Three million years in deep space with a hologram, a creature evolved from a cat, and a neurotic android shouldn't work as comedy gold—but somehow it absolutely does.
Cancelled, forgotten, or criminally short-lived sci-fi and fantasy.
Three million years in deep space with a hologram, a creature evolved from a cat, and a neurotic android shouldn't work as comedy gold—but somehow it absolutely does.
Twenty-five years later, Chris Carter's paranormal procedural remains the perfect fusion of monster-of-the-week thrills and conspiracy-driven mythology that defined '90s television.
Twenty-five years after Kirk and Spock, a new Enterprise crew proved that lightning could strike twice in the final frontier.
Thirty-five years after Marty first traveled 88 miles per hour, the Back to the Future trilogy still represents the gold standard for time travel storytelling.
David Lynch and Mark Frost's surreal murder mystery didn't just change TV—it showed us what the medium could be when creators stopped playing it safe.
Twenty-five years later, J. Michael Straczynski's ambitious 'novel for television' remains a masterclass in serialized storytelling that changed the game forever.
From a late-night Minneapolis experiment to Netflix phenomenon, MST3K proved that the best way to survive bad movies is with good friends and better jokes.
Twenty-five years later, Joss Whedon's supernatural teen drama remains the gold standard for how to blend metaphor with monster-of-the-week storytelling.