Starcraft Sketch Comedy on Korean TV [Video]

Two Korean actors impersonating the Protoss fighting against the Terrans? Now how awesome is that?

[Youtube]



Adrianne Curry’s (@AdrianneCurry) Publicly Indecent Aeon Flux Costume

Last time we talked about the former Mrs. Peter Brady, it was because she’d leathered-up the Imperial Officer uniform. This time, she’s playing Aeon Flux, all the way down to the nearly-nonexistent , uh, lower portions of the character’s outfit.

Just after arriving at Comic-Con on Saturday, Adrianne Curry was assked* to leave for showing a little too much skin. Butt* the model-turned-reality TV star played it cool, tying some red thing around her waist and taking tons of pics on her way out.

My prediction for the next costume, if the trend of continually smaller outfits persists, is pre-orange suspenders Leeloo Dallas.

*I’m so sorry. I’ll show myself out.

[via]



Lucas the Loser in Stormtrooper Battle

George Lucas struck the deal of two centuries when he secured the rights to Star Wars merchandising upon writing the first movie. But he has now tasted defeat in an attempt to claim full ownership of the Stormtrooper helmets.

The case involves British prop designer Andrew Ainsworth who physically made the white helmets used in A New Hope, and now sells replicas online using the original molds.

That led to a seemingly inevitable court case in the UK which made it all the way to the country’s Supreme Court. (For those who didn’t know the UK had such a court, it was set up in 2009, replacing the previous system where the ultimate rulings were made by special judges who were part of the House of Lords.)

The heart of the case, which began in 2008, was whether the helmets are considered sculptures or props. Lucas argues it is the former, meaning they are legally works of art and thus come under English copyright law. Ainsworth argued they are the latter, meaning they can’t be protected.

The Supreme Court upheld the verdict from the original case’s two subsequent appeals, ruling that “The helmet was utilitarian in the sense that it was an element in the process of production of the film.” The ruling now sets a precedent in English law about the copyright treatment of three-dimensional works.

There was a minor comfort for Lucas: the court formally recognized that the helmet design is indeed protected within the United States and barred Ainsworth from exporting the helmets to the US. Ainsworth had already stopped doing this as such sales were already barred by US law.

And if you thought a case of this type would surely wind up with a pun, you’re correct: Ainsworth told the Associated Press that “If there is a Force, then it has been with me these past five years.”

Fillion’s Inception-Style Approach to Starring in Uncharted

The path Sony’s game Uncharted is taking toward being a feature film is a bit… well, you know. There’s not a map for that. Last year,  the film’s first director, David O. Russell, pulled Mark Wahlberg into the role of Drake. After Russell’s weird “family dynamic” angle proved unsatisfactory and Russell split, so did Wahlberg–leaving Uncharted without a director or lead. Meanwhile, Firefly/Serenity/Dr. Horrible/Castle fans have been rooting for Uncharted’s new director, Neil Burger, to pick up Nathan Fillion for the role of Drake, and according to an interview with ScreenRant the actor gave at Comic-Con over the weekend, he’s liking the idea… under certain conditions.

“I am certainly still interested in playing Nathan Drake. I think every actor I know wants their action-adventure hero, their Indiana Jones. That would be a good one for me, I think. What I don’t want is people pressuring that poor man [director Neil Burger] and souring him on the actual idea. If we could somehow just… do you remember the movie Inception? I think that’s what we need to do. We need to let him land on the idea on his own.”

That sounds like a “yes I’d love to but only if you’re sure” to me, and I can respect that. Only time will tell if Burger does decide to cast Fillion as Drake, and if not, how the Captain Tightpants fanbase will react.

[screenrant]

Born This Way: The Comic-Con 2011 Edition [Video]

While nowhere as good as this awesome “Raise your Glass” lipdub, this SDCC 2011 edition of Lady Gaga’s Born this way was still pretty entertaining.

[Via Buzzfeed]

The Humble Indie Game Bundle #3 – Pay What You Want and Support Great Causes

It doesn’t take a genius to point out that the world of video games is changing rapidly. While many geeks bemoan that games have gone mainstream, many fail to realize that the future is on our hands, literally. We are the demographic—the first demographic. And the indie games that we support today will be the blockbusters of tomorrow—the game designers we give our dollars to now will be making new, innovative games in the future. The future!

That said, a great place to start supporting indie game developers is at The Humble Indie Bundle. You can pay what you want for the five games they offer: Crayon Physics Deluxe, Hammerfight, VVVVVV, And Yet It Moves, and Cogs (awesome names, if I may say so myself). As the site points out, that’s a $50 retail value for, well, whatever the heck you want to pay for it. They are multi-platform—yes Macs and even Linux-based systems can play these games.

But it gets even better, really, because the money you donate (again, whatever you want, and however you want to divide it) is also given to both Child’s Play and the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

And… just to sweeten the deal, we’re offering free bundles to two commenters who retweet (via the “Tweet” button below) this great approach to gaming and charity! To participate, just post the link to your RT in the comments section, that’s it!

[The Humble Indie Bundle #3]