Creation Entertainment’s third “Salute to Firefly & Serenity” took place on November 21-22, 2009 in Burbank California.

Guests included Gina Torres, Adam Baldwin, Alan Tudyk, Morena Baccarin, Mark Sheppard, Yan Feldman & Rafael Feldman.

Brian Rubin of Whedonopolis has written a great summarised report of the convention. You can also read the Whedonopolis Q&A recaps for Morena Baccarin, Jewel Staite, Alan Tudyk, and Raf & Yan Feldman.

If you’re interested in attending a Creation Entertainment event, visit their website. You can also purchase autographs and Serenity merchandise from their Shop and eBay store.

Creation Entertainment are proud Global Sponsors of Can’t Stop the Serenity.

Creation Entertainment’s second “Salute to Firefly & Serenity” took place on November 22-23, 2008 in Burbank California.

Read the Q&A recaps from the Whedonopolis crew, featuring Ron Glass, Jewel Staite, Gina Torres, Adam Baldwin, and Jane Espensen.

Fannish Inquisition also has Q&A recaps from panels with Ron Glass, Jewel Staite, Gina Torres, Summer Glau and Adam Baldwin, and you can listen to interviews with attending fans, artist Marian Call (with music from her new Firefly & BSG inspired album “Got to Fly”), Map of the Verse creator Geoffrey Mandel and Andy Gore from Quantum Mechanix.

If you’re interested in attending a Creation Entertainment event, visit their website. You can also purchase autographs and Serenity merchandise from their Shop and eBay store.

Creation Entertainment are proud Global Sponsors of Can’t Stop the Serenity.

Creation’s “Salute to Firefly and Serenity” took place on October 27, 2007 in Burbank California.

Interview with Summer Glau (CreationTV)
Interview with Morena Baccarin (CreationTV)
Interview with Yan Feldman (Creation TV)
Morena Baccarin on stage (CreationTV)

Whedonopolis has a great “blow by blow” recap of Day 1 featuring Q&A sessions with Morena Baccarin and Alan Tudyk (with surprise guest, Nathan Fillion). You can read the Alan Tudyk Q&A report, and panels featuring Summer Glau (who’s panel was hijacked by Nathan Fillion, Alan Tudyk and Sean Maher), and Yan Feldman

CreationTV captured some great moments, as Alan Tudyk gets a surprise from Nathan Fillion and Nathan Fillion joins Alan Tudyk on stage, only to be surprised by Morena Baccarin!

If you’re interested in attending a Creation Entertainment event, visit their website. You can also purchase autographs and Serenity merchandise from their store.

Creation Entertainment are proud Global Sponsors of Can’t Stop the Serenity.

We are excited to announce tickets for our main event are now available for purchase!
Tickets are $18.00 (online price) and are available from Dramatix
Please spread the shortlink: bit.ly/csts2011
And the QR code:

 

 

 

 

 

Tickets are limited, so it’s best not to wait until the day (when they’ll be $20).  Please remember to print out and bring your tickets with you on the day, it just makes getting everyone into the venue that bit easier.

For details on where and when, see the event post.

 

We Want You!

We’re counting down to our big Can’t Stop the Serenity shindig on 27th August but we need your help. We’re putting together a street team to help spread the signal wider than ever before, so if you’d like to help us promote CSTS, come to the meeting:

When: 7.30pm Wednesday 13th July
Where: Melbourne Lion Hotel (at Melbourne Central)

We have some ideas for online and in store promotion but would love to brainstorm new and creative ways to get the word out.

You all know how awesome watching Serenity with Browncoats are so help us sell out and make this our biggest year yet!

And if you’d like to help out in any other capacity, we’d love your help too, so join us on Wednesday!

Don’t forget Thursday is Firefly rewatch night!

We’re up to Ariel and Out Of Gas, so break out the DVD, grab a pizza, get online and watch with us, if you can’t make it to this week’s venue.  If you would like to come along to the designated venue, log on to the forum and PM this week’s host for details.

The Melbourne Science Fiction Club is holding a Whedonverse night on 15 April, which will be hosted by us! So come along for a lively night of Whedon fun!

There’ll be some very cool videos screened, a shiny round of trivia with cool prizes, and lots more … you won’t want to miss it!

MSFC meets at:
St. David’s Uniting Church Hall
74 Melville Road, West Brunswick
Hall opens at 8pm for a 9pm start (usually finishes by 11pm)
(Melway ref 29 C5, or catch a 55 tram from William Street in the city, to tram stop 36).

Friends, visitors and guests are welcome – gold coin fee on your first visit, and $5 door fee for second and subsequent visits. The Kitchen serves hot and cold drinks and snack foods for a small cost.

PopMatters.com continue putting the spotlight on Joss Whedon lately, with a series of articles that are both fun and facinating.

In this article, Leanne McRae presents her thoughts on A Postcolonial Provocation: ‘Serenity’.

“As far as Firefly is concerned, that will always be unfinished business. Serenity was a Band-Aid on a sucking flesh wound. I think every day about the scenes that I’ll never get to shoot and how badass they were. It’s nice to know that people still care about Firefly but it’s actual grief that I feel. It’s not something you get over, it’s just something you learn to live with.”
—Joss Whedon, SFX World of Whedon, 2011

Joss Whedon evocatively conveys the mourning he still experiences when his short-lived series Firefly was cancelled by network executives in 2003. The demise of this program created a special moment in popular culture when something unexpected emerged from the crisis. What was created activated a transformative dialogue between the postcolonial and the popular that generated space for questioning and representing processes of power that normally remain unseen. Serenity operates in unclear spaces of meaning as it was conceived as a brokered attempt to extend the life of a severely curtailed plot envisioned for Firefly.

Through the series, Whedon would have been able to map out the complexities of characters and plot trajectories to provide challenging televisual terrain for a new generation of TV fans post-Buffy and -Angel. Instead, Whedon had to make do with the temporal compressions of cinematic viewing to do justice both to the narrative and to the characters who provided the paradoxes and paradigms of story motivation. As a result, Serenity was composed of half-truths and conflicted contexts where the spaces for unconventional and unruly meanings were able to emerge from the diegesis. These meanings offer insight into the political trajectories of colonization and the creation of Empire that are difficult to control.

Click here to read the full article.

We’ll be at Supanova all weekend, so come along and say hello! You’ll find us in the Exhibitors Hall near the celebrity areas. We’ve got lots of goodies on offer, including t-shirts, books, DVDs and badges. We only take cashy money, all proceeds are being donated to the Red Cross, and our limited items will sell out fast so come see us early!

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