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One of our Forbidden
Planet Stores is missing (can you guess which one)
In the UK,
if you are into science fiction and fantasy in a big way, than the
chances are that you have visited one of the Forbidden Planet bookshops
set up (or franchised out) by Nick Landau of Titan Publishing.
These specialist
book, comic and merchandise shops have been the saviour of many
a green horn fan.
Why, we at
the Nest were mere strapplings rather than the oaks we were to become,
when we attended the opening of Nick's first shop, the Denmark Street
Forbidden Planet.
That's the
good news. Here's the bad …
In those days
the only competition was a Soho-based store called Dark They Were
With Golden Eyes, which went down the swanny when the FP quickly
out sci-fi'ed them - expanding into distribution (Titan Distribution
- now owned by Diamond), and Titan Publishing.
The latter
has manga magazines, graphic novels, and share-cropped media novels
under its belt. But alas, we fear for the Forbidden Planet, in these
days of Amazon 50% off all book type category killers.
Has the Forbidden
Planet been Amazoned too? They seem to be diversifying into toys
in a big way now, perhaps as a way to survive (maybe they haven't
heard of e-toys.com or the orbitaltradingpost.com).
But the 100
million $ question is where the fick are Titan or the FP's web site?
Even a shallow piece of brochureware would be welcome as a sign
of life.
Our pals at
Internic tell us that Titan has registered the URL www.forbiddenplanet-stores.com
- but when we surfed on over today, we got a site registered but
does not exist message.
They are in
a tricky situation, because they can't out shoot Amazon on the pricing
front, and their lack of a virtual presence midway through 1999
hardly denotes a web savvy attitude.
When they launch
on the Web, will it be too little too late?
Nick Landau
has often been characterised to us as a cautious man - a trait we
share and understand, but we do hope that his outfit is going to
survive into the next century.
It'll leave
a sad and gaping hold in the UK professional scifi scene if the
Forbidden Planet becomes another statistic in the commercial Killed
by the Net massacre that is going on at the moment.
Out take on
the situation? Get jiggy with the web stuff, Nick, or get ready
to be spending a lot of time on a Spanish beach enjoying your hard-earned
old media loot.
Books
on the Forbidden Planet (the film, not the store)
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