Frankly, any show where FTL travel is possible seems remarkably optimistic....
Not necessarily look at Blake's 7 and nuBSG.Lindley said:Frankly, any show where FTL travel is possible seems remarkably optimistic....
An advert for Pre-Crime within the movie claimed that the murder rate in the US had reached "epidemic proportions", whatever that means. That doesn't seem too optimistic.Minority Report was in a future that seemed pretty prosperous, clean, and upbeat, aside from the ethical dilemmas of the Precrime program (and the annoying, ubiquitous ads that addressed you by name).
An advert for Pre-Crime within the movie claimed that the murder rate in the US had reached "epidemic proportions", whatever that means. That doesn't seem too optimistic.Minority Report was in a future that seemed pretty prosperous, clean, and upbeat, aside from the ethical dilemmas of the Precrime program (and the annoying, ubiquitous ads that addressed you by name).
2001 and 2010, thought technically in an alternate past now (neo-Steampunk) are both pretty optimistic.
An advert for Pre-Crime within the movie claimed that the murder rate in the US had reached "epidemic proportions", whatever that means. That doesn't seem too optimistic.
But I have a hard time thinking of too many 'good' futures. Do they feel good sci-fi can only come from bleak futures?
Again, my point was only that it wasn't a dystopia. How many times do I have to say that? I wasn't claiming my examples depicted especially optimistic or utopian futures; I was merely offering them as counterexamples to the OP's observation that most cinematic futures are bleak and hopeless. A future that's no worse than the present does count as an example of a non-dystopian future.
(Unless you believe that the present constitutes a dystopia.)
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