I do find Hunger Games dystopian. Because at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter who is in charge, bad things go down. I certainly never found Hunger Games or any of the other YA shit you’re speaking of “fun.” A cautionary tale for sure.
Okay, interesting, because then you & me have quite different opinions on what defines a "dystopia".Yes, season 1 of Disco could be considered dystopian.
Because for me that's pretty much only about the setting - after a sort of "downfall" (catastrophic or long decline) - NOT about the story itself.
As I said, I don't consider DIS season 1 a dystopia - it's just a pretty dark story. But I DO consider season 3 a dystopia, because of the "burn".
E.g. Battlestar Galactica is a dystopia, because if the whole human holocaust thing. Not for the daily violence on the show.
"Game of Thrones" is not a dystopia. It's quite violent, but they're trying to STOP said catastrophe before it happens.
"Alien" franchise is a dystopia - but not because of if the Alien & it's violence, but because of the oppressing corporate setting that clearly doesn't care about humans & sends them to a gruesome death.
"Event Horizon" on the other hand is just a horror movie in space. It's even more disturbing and violent. But humanity as a whole seems fine, flourishing even, and the "evil" in this story is some dark, Lovecraftian ancient horror - not a recent downfall or catastrophe. And everyone outside the titular ship seems fine.
I really do like this description - "post-dystopian".But that is very much turned around by season 2. A dark story with Control and Section 31, but definitely one with hope at its core. Season 3, sure, if that’s really how you want to describe it, why not? But season 4 and 5 are far more hopeful and optimistic. I’d call it post-dystopian. And I find absolutely nothing about SFA dystopian. It is certainly more than hopeful.
I think it fits very well with SFA & late DIS. I think I'm going to use this going forward.

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zoinks. i remember that newsgroup