Welcome to Reactor’s yearly round-up of some of our favorite articles from the last twelve months! In case you missed it, there’s a separate list for discussions about fiction, reading, writing, and all things book-related; the list below highlights essays about other aspects of popular culture, with a focus on film and television in particular.
We’ve focused on standalone essays and articles, here, but we’re also quite proud of all the film and television coverage we’ve published all year long, as well as our regular columns and rewatches, including Keith R.A. DeCandido’s Babylon 5 Rewatch, which began early this year. Fans of manga and anime should check out Leah Thomas’ Anime Spotlight column, which covers everything from newer shows like Delicious in Dungeon to classics like Cowboy Bebop and the Ghibliverse. Also new this year is Kali Wallace’s weekly Science Fiction Film Club—every month, Kali explores a new theme, from time travel to weird futures to alien invasions to city-stomping kaiju, digging deep into each film’s history and legacy along the way…
We truly hope that you enjoy the selections below, and please feel free to tell us about the articles and columns (and movies and shows) that struck a chord with you over the last year…
SFF, Storytelling, and the Larger Culture
That Megalopolis Trailer Snafu Sure Could Teach Us a Lot About Art Criticism by Emmet Asher-Perrin
Black Futuras: How Three Pop Divas Adapted the Image of Metropolis’ Maschinenmensch by Kristen Patterson
What One Horror Action Figure Line Taught Me About Fear by Jonathan Alexandratos
How Polite Society Conveys Its Characterization Through Martial Arts by Aamir Mehar
WrestleMania and the Cure to Recursive Mythology by Dylan Roth
Marvel Comics and the MCU
Madripoor Examined: Orientalism and the MCU’s Fictional City by Thom Truelove
She-Hulk: Attorney at Law Asked Queer Questions, and Empowered Us to Use FanFic to Answer Them; or, My “Date” With She-Hulk by Jonathan Alexandratos
Agatha All Along Nailed Some Profound Truths About Witchcraft by Asa West
Dune, Dune, and More Dune
Adapting Dune to the Screen: Three Different Interpretations of Herbert’s Vision by Kara Kennedy
Dune: Part Two Asks Questions That the Original Never Dared by Emmet Asher-Perrin
How Dune Solves the Problem of AI by Tenacity Plys
TV-Inspired Joy and Nostalgia
Butterfly in the Sky Will Make You Fall in Love With Reading, and Reading Rainbow, All Over Again by Leah Schnelbach
A Work of Artiphys: The Crowning Glory of Xena’s Campiest, Queerest Episode by Nathan Tavares
A Love Song to the Walker, Texas Ranger Lever, on the Occasion of Its 20th Anniversary by Leah Schnelbach
Meditations on Fandom and Community
I Saw the TV Glow Is a Meditation On Becoming That Will Haunt You by Emmet Asher-Perrin
The People’s Joker Re-Mixes and Re-Mx-es Our Modern Myths with Sheer Trans Joy by Leah Schnelbach
The Power of Positive Fandoms: A Reminder That Not Everything Is Terrible by Joe George
Looking Back at Classic SF Series
On Watching Farscape in an Election Year by Jenny Hamilton
Babylon 5 Was the Ultimate Exercise in Plotting vs. Pantsing by Tim Ford
Deep Space Nine and the Most Fantastical Concept in All of Fiction by Robert Repino
Deep Dives into Characters and Representation
Dear Hollywood, Where Are the SFF Book-to-Movie/TV Adaptations From Black Writers? by Melody L. Simpson
Furiosa and the Disability Wasteland by Elsa Sjunneson
You Fabulous Thing: Furiosa and the Struggle for Personhood by Sarah Welch-Larson
Our Flag Means Death and the Thematic Problem of Izzy Hands by Lindsay Ribar
Filmmaking and Filmmakers
A Grand Unified Theory of Oppenheimer and Art That Speaks the Unspeakable by Leah Schnelbach
David Lynch’s Weirdness Cannot Be Separated From His Empathy by Joe George
The Artistic Bravery of Jonathan Glazer’s Under the Skin by Leah Schnelbach
Reconsidering the Monstrous
His Mother’s Monster: Percy Jackson’s Nuanced Take on Medusa by Leah Blaine
How Interview With the Vampire Remixed Its Source Material Into a New Kind of Classic by Tyler Dean
And finally: The Weirdness of Madame Web…
Madame Web, Reviewed by the Spiders From Arachnophobia by Leah Schnelbach
The One Truly Great Scene in Madame Web by Leah Schnelbach
As always, there’s so much to talk about, so let’s continue this in the comments—let us know what you think about all of the above, and please recommend any favorite shows, movies, or articles that haven’t been mentioned yet! And as always, if you’re feeling nostalgic or just looking for more deep dives into pop culture, you can always check out our “Some of the Best…” article round-ups from previous years. Thanks for reading!