I've never actually seen the second season of BUCK ROGERS since it debuted when I was starting college and I wasn't watching much TV at that point . ...
The second season was mostly trash
I've never actually seen the second season of BUCK ROGERS since it debuted when I was starting college and I wasn't watching much TV at that point . ...
Isn't that true of most countries?
Reading quickly, I thought you had a hard-boiled noir Godzilla book in mind.I have the opposite attitude. I love tearing down genre barriers and and mashing them together...hard-boiled occult noir, superheroes vs. Gothic![]()
It depends on the work, of course. I'm not going to insist on inserting a leprechaun into a "serious" hard-sf novel, unless you're talking a holodeck or "Shore Leave" planet scenario, but when in doubt I tend to lean toward playful if you can get away with it. If genre conventions block you from doing something cool and fun and interesting, damn the conventions, full speed ahead. "Playful" is generally a positive in my book.
And, to my mind, a cross-genre story doesn't have to be writing about writing (although I confess I enjoy that kinda thing sometimes). Sticking an ancient Egyptian mummy into a space opera doesn't mean you can't get invested in the characters and their challenges and feelings. An alcoholic starship captain wrestling with the demons of his past can still have "real emotions" regardless of whether he's tracking down a space pirate or a cyborg or a were-coyote.
Or a cyborg were-coyote space pirate.
As for "grotesque" tonal shifts, I gotta admit that one of the things I most enjoyed about writing for DC years ago was that sometimes I got to write a different genre every other scene: I could do spooky horror stuff with the Spectre, Greco-Roman fantasy with the Amazons on Paradise Island, and gritty urban crime stuff in Gotham City . . . all in the same book!
It was a blast.
(That being said, I did once ask an author to delete an extreme gross-out horror scene from a novel just because it felt out of place with the rest of the book, which was more of a romantic fantasy about elves and fairies. But that wasn't a case of genre conventions so much as that one particular scene standing out like a bloody, dismembered thumb.)
There's a difference though. Vampires are supposed to be dead and kept in motion by some outworld magic. That's where conventional sci. fi. and fantastic part ways.Star Trek had a salt vampire and a vampire cloud (neither of which annoyed me).
Well the UK is literally 4 nationsIt’s true of China and India but not of smaller countries.
It depends on the work, of course. I'm not going to insist on inserting a leprechaun into a "serious" hard-sf novel,
Eh, folk mythology, fiction, and film have envisioned vampires in so many ways that it's nigh impossible to say what vampires are supposed to be in any definitive sense. They are always whatever the writer/creator determines them to be. That has covered a lot of ground down through the ages. It is nice to see western media get out of the western version of them whenever possible. Can't say I have much use for sparkly goth vampires, though.
This stylistic choice is at odds with fantasy, a style of fiction where the fantastic is prized precisely because it interrupts, disrupts, replaces, displaces, underlies our boring science/technology, with all its reliance on social production and industry and transportation and so on. .
An alcoholic starship captain wrestling with the demons of his past can still have "real emotions" regardless of whether he's tracking down a space pirate or a cyborg or a were-coyote.
Or a cyborg were-coyote space pirate.![]()
Doesn't Switzerland have four official languages and cultures to match?It’s true of China and India but not of smaller countries.
As a genre, I don't care much for horror, but I do like Gothic Horror, I guess because it serves more as story structure and as ways to explore things more than it does to expressly scare which modern horror has evolved to. In that vein, it's interesting to see just how much the language and how it's interpreted has changed. In the past, you'd get a description of a "hulking horror", mostly referring to a thing we didn't understand or some creation. Now it seems like it's more about jump-tactics and eliciting strong reactions. On the other hand, supernatural thrillers and psychological thrillers seem to be more like the horror of old.
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