Gabriel Girard wrote:There's also Sunshine of course... I think that sci-fi, like horror or musicals will always be there but will spark in popularity once in a while, it's a cycle thing. Personally I'd rather get one great sci-fi flick every few years than a lot of crappy ones on a daily basis...
molly1216 wrote:...we even had a cluster of more realistic space travel on film: Blade Runner, Outland, Soldier then Misson to Mars, Red planet, supernova, Event Horizon, Pitch Black then not so much...
Well don't let the æsthetes get you down about Avatar. The star ship was beautiful, as well done as any of Cameron's ships. Remember, Cameron did the model ships for Battle Beyond the Stars (yes, I remember that ship too, let's move forward together). Roger Corman's commentary mentions Cameron could explain the function of all ships' parts. Probably can now as well.Steve T Power wrote:I dunno, Avatar felt like a nice return to old school sci-fi for me. I know how most people feel about it, so I kind of regret bringing it up now.
molly1216 wrote:Caught Pandorum....another in a line of flesh eating mutant humans chasing a few people around sets that could be a munitions factory, an underground bunker or in this case a space ship. what could have easily been a video game film, but it was bookended into a story about a post apocalyptic flight to a new planet...la ti da. but the absolute worst thing is....i liked it. it had good suspense if predictable results...the science is kinda wonky i wouldn't advise overthinking it. but definitely i wasn't tempted to turn it off.
Paul Kile wrote:The lack of new ideas coming out of Hollywood, and the reticence to back any project that isn't a "sure thing". You end up with a bunch of lousy remakes (oh, sorry..."reimaginings") of classic films. A perfect example is "War of the Worlds" - the 1953 Gene Barry version was so quintessentially '50s, with those cool George Pal spaceships and the attempt to nuke them with...the Northrop YB-49 Flying Wing! Great stuff. Then we get the Tom Cruise horror with his two sniveling kids that made the movie virtually unwatchable. As I watched, I kept wanting someone to slap whiny little Dakota Fanning upside the head and yell at her - We are in the middle of a !!@#@! alien invasion, so stop your bellyachen and SHUT UP!
molly1216 wrote:http://www.npr.org/blogs/13.7/2010/08/16/129229730/where-have-all-the-giant-robots-gone?sc=fb&cc=fp
Where Have All The Giant Robots Gone?
by ADAM FRANK
So enough about economics in the age of limits, the true relationship between science and religion or the fundamental nature of time. Lets talk about something really important.
Where are my dang summer science fiction blockbusters?
Burson_Fouch wrote:molly1216 wrote:http://www.npr.org/blogs/13.7/2010/08/16/129229730/where-have-all-the-giant-robots-gone?sc=fb&cc=fp
Where Have All The Giant Robots Gone?
by ADAM FRANK
So enough about economics in the age of limits, the true relationship between science and religion or the fundamental nature of time. Lets talk about something really important.
Where are my dang summer science fiction blockbusters?
I have to think that much of it has to do with the popularity of super-hero based action movies supplanting space opera's as this generations special effects movie of choice.
That said, I recently read where Ridley and Tony Scott have purchased the rights to Joe Haldeman's The Forever War. I'm hoping that Ridley is the brother who directs it and not Tony. This is hopefully a sign that the success of Avatar will lead to some more interest in making more hard science fiction genre films.
Steve T Power wrote:Burson_Fouch wrote:molly1216 wrote:http://www.npr.org/blogs/13.7/2010/08/16/129229730/where-have-all-the-giant-robots-gone?sc=fb&cc=fp
Where Have All The Giant Robots Gone?
by ADAM FRANK
So enough about economics in the age of limits, the true relationship between science and religion or the fundamental nature of time. Lets talk about something really important.
Where are my dang summer science fiction blockbusters?
I have to think that much of it has to do with the popularity of super-hero based action movies supplanting space opera's as this generations special effects movie of choice.
That said, I recently read where Ridley and Tony Scott have purchased the rights to Joe Haldeman's The Forever War. I'm hoping that Ridley is the brother who directs it and not Tony. This is hopefully a sign that the success of Avatar will lead to some more interest in making more hard science fiction genre films.
That's been kicking around for about two years now... It's an amazing story that would be very well suited to Ridley with some minor tweaks here and there (a more ambiguous ending wherein Mandella returns from his last assignment to a future where it isn't revealed to the audience that Marygay survived would be a must.)
It would undoubtedly mark a triumphant return to science fiction for Scott, if handled with the same sense of passion and ingenuity that went into Blade Runner.
I have my doubts that we will ever see it, but i'd be overjoyed if we did.
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