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  1. The Labyrinth 40th Anniversary review
    long post warning
    Had a rare family movie night at the cinema this past weekend, seeing the 40th Anniversary reissue of The Labyrinth. My kiddo didn't want to see Avatar 3, so given that this classic was something that my wife had watched over and over on VHS as a kid, Labyrinth it was! The digital transfer from film for this was really good, with no real flaws in it, apart from some noticeable grain from the opening scenes. The kiddo enjoyed it for the most part, although they said they didn't really think they would want to ever see it again. My kiddo noted that it seemed like the main character of Sara was a schizophrenic. The wifey & I both thought it was really fun though.
    A few thoughts from it:
    The most stark realization, was that the equivalent of my kiddo watching a film from 1986, was if we had watched a movie from 1946 when this first came out. Twas a time before the internet, and besides the minimal (but obvious) green screening, relied almost always on the joys of puppetry, from some masters at it, and on practical effects. But I think for my kiddo the cultural time shift was the equivalent of when I would watch post-WWII era black & white movies when I was a kid.
    Toby Froud, who played the baby Toby, is now 41 years old. Incredibly he ended up working as a special effects designer, puppeteer, and filmmaker, following in director Jim Henson's footsteps. One thing I felt in watching the film this time, was feeling a little bad for him given how much scene time he was crying.
    David Bowie came off as iconic as ever for me. Given there are a few lines he delivers a little stiffly, this isn't his best performance as an actor (you'd have to go to "The Man Who Fell to Earth" and "Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence" for that I think) but you can also get the feeling he's being a good sport and having great fun with the Muppets from it as well. This release occurs on the 10 year memorial of Bowie's passing too, so seeing him up there hit on that level too.
    The Goblin King Jareth does come off to me more in some scenes as a creepy groomer, on this rewatch. During the ballroom dancing scene my kiddo said to me "I don't like this part", and I appreciated that, given that I don't think in retrospect that we should.
    Jennifer Connelly's performance was great. Given it was usually just her and some puppets, she carried the movie incredibly well.
    The songs are a joy. The wife and I used to perform "Magic Dance" often when we were part of the 20 piece This Ambitious Orchestra, during the various Bowie tribute nights we performed at in various NYC venues 13+years ago, so it was fun to hear the original again.
    And Jim Henson's creations were brilliant. I still heart Ludo the troll as my favorite of these, noting the following day after watching this flick the wifey and I were walking around saying "smells bad" in imitation of its voice. This was Henson's final film that he got to direct, and when it came out the box office and critics reviews were that it was "mid" - but very glad to see that this flick was acknowledged as a gem later in its life.


    #TheLabyrinth #DavidBowie #JenniferConnelly #JimHenson #TheMuppets #cinema #film #movies #entertainment
  2. The Labyrinth 40th Anniversary review
    long post warning
    Had a rare family movie night at the cinema this past weekend, seeing the 40th Anniversary reissue of The Labyrinth. My kiddo didn't want to see Avatar 3, so given that this classic was something that my wife had watched over and over on VHS as a kid, Labyrinth it was! The digital transfer from film for this was really good, with no real flaws in it, apart from some noticeable grain from the opening scenes. The kiddo enjoyed it for the most part, although they said they didn't really think they would want to ever see it again. My kiddo noted that it seemed like the main character of Sara was a schizophrenic. The wifey & I both thought it was really fun though.
    A few thoughts from it:
    The most stark realization, was that the equivalent of my kiddo watching a film from 1986, was if we had watched a movie from 1946 when this first came out. Twas a time before the internet, and besides the minimal (but obvious) green screening, relied almost always on the joys of puppetry, from some masters at it, and on practical effects. But I think for my kiddo the cultural time shift was the equivalent of when I would watch post-WWII era black & white movies when I was a kid.
    Toby Froud, who played the baby Toby, is now 41 years old. Incredibly he ended up working as a special effects designer, puppeteer, and filmmaker, following in director Jim Henson's footsteps. One thing I felt in watching the film this time, was feeling a little bad for him given how much scene time he was crying.
    David Bowie came off as iconic as ever for me. Given there are a few lines he delivers a little stiffly, this isn't his best performance as an actor (you'd have to go to "The Man Who Fell to Earth" and "Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence" for that I think) but you can also get the feeling he's being a good sport and having great fun with the Muppets from it as well. This release occurs on the 10 year memorial of Bowie's passing too, so seeing him up there hit on that level too.
    The Goblin King Jareth does come off to me more in some scenes as a creepy groomer, on this rewatch. During the ballroom dancing scene my kiddo said to me "I don't like this part", and I appreciated that, given that I don't think in retrospect that we should.
    Jennifer Connelly's performance was great. Given it was usually just her and some puppets, she carried the movie incredibly well.
    The songs are a joy. The wife and I used to perform "Magic Dance" often when we were part of the 20 piece This Ambitious Orchestra, during the various Bowie tribute nights we performed at in various NYC venues 13+years ago, so it was fun to hear the original again.
    And Jim Henson's creations were brilliant. I still heart Ludo the troll as my favorite of these, noting the following day after watching this flick the wifey and I were walking around saying "smells bad" in imitation of its voice. This was Henson's final film that he got to direct, and when it came out the box office and critics reviews were that it was "mid" - but very glad to see that this flick was acknowledged as a gem later in its life.


    #TheLabyrinth #DavidBowie #JenniferConnelly #JimHenson #TheMuppets #cinema #film #movies #entertainment
  3. Spotlight Publisher – Orbit

    Orbit is a division of Hachette Book Group, comprising the Orbit, Redhook, Orbit Works, and Run For It imprints. Launched in 2007, Orbit has established itself as one of the market-leading speculative fiction publishers in the US. Orbit US authors include New York Times bestsellers James S. A. Corey, Iain M. Banks, John Gwynne, Rachel Gillig, Alix E. Harrow, N. K. Jemisin, Ann Leckie, Kim Stanley Robinson, Andrzej Sapkowski, Brent Weeks, and Hannah Whitten. Learn more at orbitbooks.net.

    Bradley Englert – Orbit Representative

    Bradley Englert is an Executive Editor at Orbit Books where he acquires work for the Orbit, Redhook, and Run For It lists. He has edited numerous New York Times bestsellers and has the privilege of working with authors like James S. A. Corey, Brent Weeks, John Gwynne, Joe Abercrombie, Andrzej Sapkowski, Riot Games, and many, many more. He is also working to build Run For It, Orbit’s new horror imprint, into a premiere destination for die-hard horror readers.

    “Horror has long been a favorite genre of mine and many others on the team, and publishing authors such as Craig DiLouie and Andy Marino, amongst others, has certainly whetted our appetite for publishing more. It’s a genre that allows writers to experiment, push boundaries, and test the limits of fiction (and good taste). Dedicating an imprint to horror will allow us to find more new voices, more terrifying stories, and more ways to keep readers up at night.”

    Come join Bradley Englert this year at Norwescon. He will be doing a Q&A session and many other panels about publishing and Orbit Books.

    Enter the Labyrinth—Live!

    Experience The Labyrinth like never before in a shadow-cast performance that blurs the line between screen and stage. Join us for a cinematic adventure brought to life by live actors performing alongside the film. Auditions open December 2025. Magic brought to you by the Norwescon Special Events Department.

    Register for Norwescon NOW!!

    Don’t forget to register for Norwescon 48 so you won’t miss a moment of the action!! Visit our Memberships page to take care of that now.

    Dealers’ Room Applications Are Now Open!

    Are you a vendor of fandom wares? Do you create unique fannish items every fan must have or know a vendor who would be a good fit? From bookmarks to bags and t-shirts to tails, our dealers’ room offers something for everyone! Apply now for a space; applications are due by 5:00 p.m. on November 21. Visit our Dealers’ Room page for more information.

    Reserve Your Hotel Room for Norwescon Today

    Stay on-site and don’t miss a moment of the fun at Norwescon! Visit our Hotel page to make your reservation today.

    Norwescon Welcomes Volunteers!

    Norwescon is truly a labor of love. Every one of us, from our Chair on down, volunteers their skills and time to make this convention happen. And we welcome your presence! If you have any time and skills you enjoy using that might benefit Norwescon, please visit our Volunteer page to check out our open positions. And if you aren’t sure what you would enjoy doing, email us and we’ll happily answer your questions!

    Upcoming Norwescon 48 Volunteer Meeting Dates:

    • November 1st, 2025
    • December 6th, 2025
    • January 10th, 2026 (online only)
    • February 14th, 2026
    • March 14th, 2026
    • April 2nd, 2026 (exec meeting)
    • May 9th, 2026

    https://www.norwescon.org/2025/11/01/news-from-norwescon-november-2025/

    #bradleyEnglert #orbit #theLabyrinth

  4. Following :MOULE: @MOULE's release of a track about #TheLabyrinth and our rescue efforts: it's time for another update!

    :Lampy: Lampy2 has scanned 4x10^13 tokens, but still nothing relating to the whereabouts of :Delgado: Delgado.

    The Labyrinth is unimaginably huge (estimated 3.4x10^38 tokens for every IPv6 address), so we've sent :Lampy: Lampy3 in to help Lampy2 perform "adversarial arithmetic" to scan The Labyrinth faster.

    2,254,610 :Bugs: Bugs destroyed so far!

    Re: mastodon.moule.world/users/Mel

  5. UPDATE:

    :Lampy: Lampy2 discovered something BIG: #TheLabyrinth contains a gigantic database of cryptographic tokens all relating to Internet-connected hardware and software around the world. Everything is potentially backdoored.

    This could explain the I.D.I.O.T. virus that locked :Mei: out of her apartment last year.

    Lampy2 is scanning billions of them per second to find metadata about :Delgado: Delgado and :Rocky: Rocky, and has scanned 80 trillion tokens so far.

    Re: mastodon.moule.world/users/Mel

  6. UPDATE:

    :Lampy: Lampy2 is now in #TheLabyrinth. We were fortunate enough to choose a DSN gateway that wasn’t swamped with :Bugs: Bugs like the gateway we sent :Lampy: Lampy1 through — it’s like we’ve over prepared this time. Should be good to fight any :Bugs: Bugs coming our way. :Melody:

    Re: mastodon.moule.world/users/Mel

  7. UPDATE re: #TheLabyrinth:

    We’ve decided to release :Lampy: Lampy’s weaponised copies one at a time into The Labyrinth, starting with Lampy1.

    It successfully decrypted the dsn:// locks, but was immediately destroyed by the :Bugs: Bugs upon entry. Either we really underestimated the Bugs’ power or we were unfortunate to pick the wrong DSN gateway with lots of bugs behind it. :MelodyUh:

    What we saw though for the few seconds Lampy1 was in… I… :MelodyShock:

    Re: mastodon.moule.world/users/Mel

  8. UPDATE re: #TheLabyrinth:

    We’ve decided to release :Lampy: Lampy’s weaponised copies one at a time into The Labyrinth, starting with Lampy1.

    It successfully decrypted the dsn:// locks, but was immediately destroyed by the :Bugs: Bugs upon entry. Either we really underestimated the Bugs’ power or we were unfortunate to pick the wrong DSN gateway with lots of bugs behind it. :MelodyUh:

    What we saw though for the few seconds Lampy1 was in… I… :MelodyShock:

    Re: mastodon.moule.world/users/Mel

  9. Sarah's line, "You have no power over me" in the movie #TheLabyrinth made no sense to me. Jareth was clearly able to screw up time and kidnap her baby brother. He had the powers attributed to fairies, and they could seriously screw up a person's life. That idea does make sense, though, when you know that they had to follow rules. They just didn't have to explain them to you. So if you didn't enter their realm, or agree to a vaguely-worded bond, or otherwise play their game their way, they couldn't twist those rules to mean whatever they wanted. They could do you harm, as Jareth did when he kidnapped Toby, but Jareth couldn't force Sarah to stay with him.

  10. Sarah's line, "You have no power over me" in the movie #TheLabyrinth made no sense to me. Jareth was clearly able to screw up time and kidnap her baby brother. He had the powers attributed to fairies, and they could seriously screw up a person's life. That idea does make sense, though, when you know that they had to follow rules. They just didn't have to explain them to you. So if you didn't enter their realm, or agree to a vaguely-worded bond, or otherwise play their game their way, they couldn't twist those rules to mean whatever they wanted. They could do you harm, as Jareth did when he kidnapped Toby, but Jareth couldn't force Sarah to stay with him.

  11. Starting "The Labyrinth", a graphic novel by Simon Stålenhag. If it's like his earlier work, it's better described as an art book than a graphic novel. It doesn't have multi-panel pages and word ballons. It's a large format hardcover book (approx 10" square), with full-page art of single scenes (sometimes double-page spreads) with a few paragraphs of prose on the opposite page. They're moody, realistic dystopian near-future science fiction. The art is fantastic and the stories are almost mundane, laced with sadness and creepiness. They're subtle and grounded.

    #TheLabyrinth #SimonStålenhag #bookstodon #GraphicNovel #read #scifi #ScienceFiction

  12. Starting "The Labyrinth", a graphic novel by Simon Stålenhag. If it's like his earlier work, it's better described as an art book than a graphic novel. It doesn't have multi-panel pages and word ballons. It's a large format hardcover book (approx 10" square), with full-page art of single scenes (sometimes double-page spreads) with a few paragraphs of prose on the opposite page. They're moody, realistic dystopian near-future science fiction. The art is fantastic and the stories are almost mundane, laced with sadness and creepiness. They're subtle and grounded.

    #TheLabyrinth #SimonStålenhag #bookstodon #GraphicNovel #read #scifi #ScienceFiction

  13. If you had the opportunity to intentionally enter the tunnel of Helping Hands from Jim Henson's Labyrinth (1986), would you do it?

    For the purposes of this thought experiment you can trust all of the owners of the hands, and you also have a safe word.

    #labyrinth #jimhenson #muppets #thelabyrinth #fantasy #helpinghands #joinin #sensoryseeking #sensoryissues #sensoryavoidant #touchstarved #safeword #movie #80s #80smovies #80snostalgia #showerthoughts #actuallyautistic #audhd