See, for me this is a tough one. I liked I, Robot quite a bit, despite some shortcomings, put a different spin on the three laws. But I'd also like to see Lije Baley on screen.
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
I think Caves of Steel would end up looking, to most people, like a remake of I, Robot, with Lije Baley replacing Del Spooner. One problem with Caves is that it's fairly simplistic as a mystery; Ebert's "Law of Economy of Characters" really works against it because the cast is small and the plot is straightforward. I think you'd have to ramp up the stakes in a Caves movie -- if Baley can't solve the crime and crack the conspiracy before such-and-such a time, the Auroran spaceflight will start shelling Chicago from orbit -- to make it more cinematic.Caves of Steel, just to see how Hollywood would f-up another Asimov concept.
I say make them both. I'll watch them at least once and then make a judgement afterwards.
Nah, see, I tried that with I, Robot and got a Will Smith shoot-em-up where any similarity between it and the stories it was supposed to be based on was purely coincidental. The director's excuse was "Well, we tried to make a prequel to the book, where Susan Calvin was just young enough to be smokin' hot." I added that last part, but that's where the mentality was.
And yet, Harlan Ellison never grasped this simple fact.Yes, it tweaked the storytelling to fit the modern idiom of summer action blockbusters with attractive leads, but what else could it have been? No major studio would've been willing to spend money on it if it had been a sedate, talky drawing-room mystery whose lead character was a plain-looking, antisocial, middle-aged woman.
Nah, see, I tried that with I, Robot and got a Will Smith shoot-em-up where any similarity between it and the stories it was supposed to be based on was purely coincidental. The director's excuse was "Well, we tried to make a prequel to the book, where Susan Calvin was just young enough to be smokin' hot." I added that last part, but that's where the mentality was.
And there's nothing wrong with doing it as a prequel. I, Robot isn't a novel, it's a collection of nine separate stories set in the positronic-robot universe, only five of which are even about Susan Calvin (the first four, one complete standalone and three about the team of Powell & Donovan, are framed by new bridging material with Dr. Calvin describing their events to an interviewer). So the title isn't linked to a specific set of events, just to the general concepts of the universe -- positronic robots, the Three Laws -- and the character of Susan Calvin. And the movie included all those things.
Yes, it tweaked the storytelling to fit the modern idiom of summer action blockbusters with attractive leads, but what else could it have been? No major studio would've been willing to spend money on it if it had been a sedate, talky drawing-room mystery whose lead character was a plain-looking, antisocial, middle-aged woman. So accepting that inescapable reality, the question that matters is, is it a smart action blockbuster, is it well-made, and is it reasonably respectful of the concepts within the limits of what that kind of adaptation will allow? And I think the answer is yes.
So accepting that inescapable reality, the question that matters is, is it a smart action blockbuster, is it well-made, and is it reasonably respectful of the concepts within the limits of what that kind of adaptation will allow? And I think the answer is yes.
However, the screenwriters of I, Robot were quite clever in figuring out that the Zeroth Law (which is basically unnamed, but kind of what VIKI adapted) might not be a good thing...
I don't know that taking over the world by turning on an EVIL red light and corralling humans up is remotely "smart." The problem with I, Robot is that is completely pales next to "The Evitable Conflict," which is one of the best, most thought-provoking, most unsettling sf stories written.
So accepting that inescapable reality, the question that matters is, is it a smart action blockbuster, is it well-made, and is it reasonably respectful of the concepts within the limits of what that kind of adaptation will allow? And I think the answer is yes.
I don't know that taking over the world by turning on an EVIL red light and corralling humans up is remotely "smart." The problem with I, Robot is that is completely pales next to "The Evitable Conflict," which is one of the best, most thought-provoking, most unsettling sf stories written.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.