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Starlog Numbers 311 to 320 Magazine Back Issues

01-10 | 11-20 | 21-30 | 31-40 | 41-50 | 51-60 | 61-70 | 71-80 | 81-90 | 91-100 | 101-110 | 111-120 | 121-130 | 131-140 | 141-150 | 151-160 | 161-170 | 171-180 | 181-190 | 191-200 | 201-210 | 211-220 | 221-230 | 231-240 | 241-250 | 251-260 | 261-270 | 271-280 | 281-290 | 291-300 | 301-310 | 311-320 | 321-330 | 331-340 | 341-350

Starlog # 316
Starlog # 316 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 316

Features
Watch Enterprise Wednesdays! Connor Trinneer Says
Smallville Lex Luthor's Heroics
On Location In NYC: Is There Room Enough In The TV Jungle For The WB's New Tarzan?
Duck Dodgers Animated Escapades

 


Starlog # 319
Starlog # 319 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 319

Features
Free DVDS! Win Babylon 5 Jeremiah Lost In Space Witch Hunter Robin
I'm Forever More The Guy Who Did
The Epic Peter Jackson Interview!
Plus Battlestar Galactica Lady Starbuck Doctor Who Secret Origins

 


Starlog # 320
Starlog # 320 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 320

Features
Walter Koenig's New Star Trek Movie Nightmare
Mark Hamill's Latest Adventure - Why He's Directing
Tim Burton's Enchanting Catch Big Fish
Lord Of The Rings Miranda Otto

 


Starlog # 321
Starlog # 321 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 321

Features
Win Voyager, Xena, Red Dwarf & Running Man DVDs!
Century City: Tomorrow's Legal Cases Today!
Creator Mike Mignola & Star Ron Perlman Explain All About
Lord Of The Rings Ian McKellen Spellbound As Gandalf

 


Starlog # 322
Starlog # 322 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 322

Features
The Punisher Wants To Kill You! And You! And You ! You ...You...And You, Too!
Orlando Bloom Speaks! He's Off To War In Troy!
Making Hellboy The Great Adventure
Hugh Jackman Goes Hunting Monsters As

 


Starlog # 323
Starlog # 323 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 323

Features
Will You Survive The Day After Tomorrow?
Van Helsing Still Hunting Movie Monsters!
Hellboy's Pal Unmasked! Meet Abe Sapien!
Shrek & Fiona Are Back For More Happily - Ever Aftering - Or not!

 


Starlog # 324
Starlog # 324 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 324

Features
The Day After Tomorrow Welcome To The New Ice Age
Harry Potter The Movie Magic Begins!
Amazing Previews: Alien VS Predator I, Robot Around The World In 80 Days
Behind The Mask: Sam Raimi Unveils

 


Starlog # 325
Starlog # 325 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 325

Features
Harry Potter Thunderbirds Alien VS. Predator Sky Captain
Spider - Man Kirsten Dunst, Heroic Sweetheart!
Riddick Vin Diesel's Born To Be Bad!
Will Smith Investigates Metal Murder Mystery In Isaac Asimov's

 


Starlog # 326
Starlog # 326 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 326

Features
Robot, Sky Captain & Hellboy: Fantastic Art Designs & Sketches
Science Fiction Films TV DVD
At Last, Their Savage War Erupts On Screen!
Super Friends On DVD

 


Starlog # 327
Starlog # 327 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Starlog # 327

Features
Ghost In The Shell The Village
Spider - Man Manchurian Candidate
Smallville Tom Welling Superman Grows Up
Jude Law The Hero Speaks Out!

 

Starlog was a monthly science fiction magazine that was created in 1976 and focused primarily on Star Trek at its inception. Kerry O’Quinn and Norman Jacobs were its creators and it was published by Starlog Group, Inc. in August 1976. Starlog was one of the first publications to report on the development of the first Star Wars movie, and it followed the development of what was to eventually become Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979).


Starlog was born out of the Star Trek fandom craze, but also was inspired by the success of the magazine Cinefantastique which was the model of Star Trek and Star Wars coverage. Starlog, though it called itself a science fiction magazine, actually contained no fiction. The primary focus of the magazine, besides the fact that it was mostly based on Star Trek fandom, was the making of science fiction media - books, films, and television series - and the work that went into these creations. The magazine examined the form of science fiction and used interviews and features with artists and writers as its foundation.


Science fiction fans, such as those who follow the television channel SyFy, have voiced that Starlog is the science fiction magazine most responsible for cultivating and exhibiting fanboy culture in America during the magazine’s heyday in the 1970s through the early 1990s. Not only did the magazine cover media, the way it was created, and by whom, but they also attended conventions such as the “Ultimate Fantasy” convention in Houston, Texas in 1982 (which was a legendary flop) and kept fans updated on the current events in their respective sci-fi fandoms. Starlog itself followed the marketing strategy of labeling it “the most popular science fiction magazine in publishing history” which allowed the creators to home in on their fanboy market and use that advertisement strategy to their advantage. In later years many of its long-time contributors had moved on. Nonetheless, it continued to boast genre journalists such as Jean-Marc Lofficier, Will Murray, and Tom Weaver.


Starlog ended its run as a digital magazine published by The Brooklyn Company, run by longtime Fangoria President Thomas DeFeo. In April 2009, Starlog officially ended its time in print, with 33 years of material (374 issues).

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