I'm not getting into this argument here. I'll leave that in the Trek XI and TOS forums. I've already said my peace about it. I don't care what other movie goers may think I'm just stating my opinion.Trek XI works and gets leeway if you perceive it like Star Wars. But it suffers if you compare it to what came before because it fails to achieve that adventure/drama balance that many people remember TOS for.
Apparently it doesn't suffer, according to most. Not to me. I thought it struck that balance just fine.
They are better realized onscreen nowadays with CG effects as a tool.Science fiction is primarily about ideas, the far flinging of the ideas is what separates it from most other genres.
After just watching the film The Island (2005) again which is another scifi-action-thriller film from director Michael Bay I must admit the first 45 minutes are a great science fiction film that reminded me of THX 1138 (1971) in the location, costumes, production design.Better as in story and visuals?
I've said before and agree with the others "Primer" (2004) is the best Science Fiction film of the past 10 years.
In honesty, I enjoyed The Island in general. The only problem is that I'd seen it already, on MST3K, when it was called Parts: The Clonus Horror. I wonder how that lawsuit's going.After just watching the film The Island (2005) again which is another scifi-action-thriller film from director Michael Bay I must admit the first 45 minutes are a great science fiction film that reminded me of THX 1138 (1971) in the location, costumes, production design.Better as in story and visuals?
I've said before and agree with the others "Primer" (2004) is the best Science Fiction film of the past 10 years.
The movie as a whole not great but anyone agree with me on the first 45 minutes of 'The Island' being pretty good science fiction in mainstream filmmaking?
Not a chance in hell.
The forties, fifties and early sixties were the decades of science fiction gods and the works they wrought. Even the best sci-fi of today can't hold a candle.
SOURCE from his article “In Defence of Science Fiction”Science fiction is good for us. Politically, morally, aesthetically, even cognitively. In plain language, it makes us think more critically about our world, to appreciate beauty in new ways, and to be better people.
In that sense, science fiction is by far the best genre of pop culture, as it’s the only genre that consistently entertains and enlightens us at the same time.
Not a chance in hell.
The forties, fifties and early sixties were the decades of science fiction gods and the works they wrought. Even the best sci-fi of today can't hold a candle.
You mean the era of utterly ridiculous B-Movie monster flicks? I think not. I say the 1970s through the 1990s.
I agree and thanks for mentioningModern sci fi is of course more about the action and effects but not all of it is.
It's about the ideas and concepts. The actual direction of TV & films and the screenplays turned into images can't always carry over those ideas and illustrate them the best.That's what sci fi is always about; questioning the modern day mindset with "how will this look in the future if we keep up?"
Movies are not the be-all and end-all of scifi. In fact, they are a poor representation of the genre. In the written word you will find the truth.
Written science fiction was and is so far beyond films
I had posted in this thread Why is there no pure Sci-Fi on TV today?modern written scifi faces bleak times.
It's an Wired Magazine article worth reading.You guys may want to read what Clive Thompson wrote a year ago on this:
Clive Thompson on Why Sci-Fi Is the Last Bastion of Philosophical Writing
1.18.2008
a nice tidbit from the great article:
If you run a realistic simulation enough times — writing tens of thousands of novels about contemporary life — eventually you're going to explore almost every outcome. So what do you do then? You change the physics in the sim. Alter reality — and see what new results you get. Which is precisely what sci-fi does.
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