The following quote from another thread got me thinking:
Sadly and true. But why?
Why is it something so hard to conceive? Perhaps because SF authors are rarely involved in SF oriented films?
Most often in SF films (and television) we get one or two examples of advanced science and technology and everything else seems pretty much familiar. But real science and technology doesn't work that way. If you introduce something new (like new tech) into society it relatively quickly is adapted to new applications. The future would be no different.
If you look at a film like Metropolis (1927) the most advanced looking thing there is humanoid robotics and a flatscreen television like viewer. Yet most everything else is very rooted in 1920's technology. Even their "flying cars" are just an elaboration of early air flight. And Metropolis isn't a sole example, but merely one of the first in a long line of films.
Jump decades later and look at the Star Wars films. It's sword and scorcery dressed up with spaceships and lightsabers. Okay, in fairness, SW isn't serious science fiction, but it does speak to my point.
We look around at our everyday world and accept it without thought. But how would even an enlightened citizen of Earth from even 100 years let alone 500 or a thousand years past see our world today? It would be mostly unrecognizable.
I say "mostly" unrecognizable, but there are things that should still be somewhat familiar. A table fork is a fork, a house is a house, a road is a road, a bridge is a bridge, a boat is a boat and so on...
I'm really challenged to recall films that really make an effort to look genuinely futuristic. Today "futuristic" seems to have a very industrial look to it and often doesn't really seem very much advanced over what we already have.
It's sad really because I've read quite a bit about speculative science and technology and there are so many things that one can speculate with to fashion reasonably plausible ideas that while seemingly farfetched to the everyman are not really completely dismissible when you examine them.
I also think that viewers today can be more receptive and less intimidated by grand ideas then they are given credit for. Even if they don't immediately understand the ideas presented they initially can still enjoy the spectacle of it if it's within the context of a good story.
And story is key. An engaging story with good characters is the most effective way to present futuristic ideas.
I think many people fall into the trap of believing that far future SF is something that would intimidate average moviegoers. The flip side is that often we see examples of things (design wise) that are just arbitrarily weird and not well thought out to be convincingly futuristic.
Yes, it's a challenge to do something smart as well as entertaining. Although rare it's been done often enough in film (and television) over the decades. Now if we could only see it applied to far future SF (and note that far future can be as little as 100 years though usually distinctly more than that).
Film examples I thought futuristic when they were released (and I still don't think they're bad):
The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951)
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Logan's Run (1976)
Star Trek - The Motion Picture (1979)
Minority Report (2002)
What films do you think seemed convincingly far future (at least passably so at the time)? And do you think such films can find an audience?
Don't hold your breath. They are a rare beast and always have been.My peeve is I so much want to see a genuine and well thought out far future space adventure, the kind of thing we sometimes get in SF literature.![]()
Sadly and true. But why?
Why is it something so hard to conceive? Perhaps because SF authors are rarely involved in SF oriented films?
Most often in SF films (and television) we get one or two examples of advanced science and technology and everything else seems pretty much familiar. But real science and technology doesn't work that way. If you introduce something new (like new tech) into society it relatively quickly is adapted to new applications. The future would be no different.
If you look at a film like Metropolis (1927) the most advanced looking thing there is humanoid robotics and a flatscreen television like viewer. Yet most everything else is very rooted in 1920's technology. Even their "flying cars" are just an elaboration of early air flight. And Metropolis isn't a sole example, but merely one of the first in a long line of films.
Jump decades later and look at the Star Wars films. It's sword and scorcery dressed up with spaceships and lightsabers. Okay, in fairness, SW isn't serious science fiction, but it does speak to my point.
We look around at our everyday world and accept it without thought. But how would even an enlightened citizen of Earth from even 100 years let alone 500 or a thousand years past see our world today? It would be mostly unrecognizable.
I say "mostly" unrecognizable, but there are things that should still be somewhat familiar. A table fork is a fork, a house is a house, a road is a road, a bridge is a bridge, a boat is a boat and so on...
I'm really challenged to recall films that really make an effort to look genuinely futuristic. Today "futuristic" seems to have a very industrial look to it and often doesn't really seem very much advanced over what we already have.
It's sad really because I've read quite a bit about speculative science and technology and there are so many things that one can speculate with to fashion reasonably plausible ideas that while seemingly farfetched to the everyman are not really completely dismissible when you examine them.
I also think that viewers today can be more receptive and less intimidated by grand ideas then they are given credit for. Even if they don't immediately understand the ideas presented they initially can still enjoy the spectacle of it if it's within the context of a good story.
And story is key. An engaging story with good characters is the most effective way to present futuristic ideas.
I think many people fall into the trap of believing that far future SF is something that would intimidate average moviegoers. The flip side is that often we see examples of things (design wise) that are just arbitrarily weird and not well thought out to be convincingly futuristic.
Yes, it's a challenge to do something smart as well as entertaining. Although rare it's been done often enough in film (and television) over the decades. Now if we could only see it applied to far future SF (and note that far future can be as little as 100 years though usually distinctly more than that).
Film examples I thought futuristic when they were released (and I still don't think they're bad):
The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951)
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Logan's Run (1976)
Star Trek - The Motion Picture (1979)
Minority Report (2002)
What films do you think seemed convincingly far future (at least passably so at the time)? And do you think such films can find an audience?
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