JunkMonkey
Registered User
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2007
- Messages
- 2,641
4. Screamers
I think this is the first time I have ever seen 'Screamers' on an all-time favourite movie list - of any kind.
4. Screamers
The Day the Earth Stood Still (original)
Outland
http://www.streettech.com/bcp/BCPgraf/Media/Outland.htm"Outland" is "High Noon" in outer space. Sean Connery stars as O'Neil, a slightly broken down lawman in a one horse orbital mining colony. And, things are not going so well down at the mines. Workers are losing their minds, hallucinating themselves on fire, and taking one way elevator trips to explosive decompression without their space suits.
I'm curious about this. When was the first time anyone asked whether Deckard was a replicant?
I may be wrong* but I don't remember this idea being in the book (apart from PKD's normal "How real are any of us?" phobias) and I don't remember the idea being tossed about at the time of the movie's release. So. If the idea only came into being after the making of the film, and Ridley Scott did not consider it when he was making it, then his post-hoc interpretation of his own work is surely just the same as anyone else's. He says Deckard was a replicant. I say he wasn't. We can both argue our cases (if we have nothing better to do) but neither of us can 'proove' it. If, on the other hand, Scott 'knew' that Deckard was a replicant when he was shooting the movie, then yes, Deckard is a replicant. No question.
Just because a director, or a writer, or an actor knows certain things about a character they don't have a duty to make those facts explicit to the audience.
On the other other hand if Harrison Ford knew at the time that Deckard wasn't a replicant - then he wasn't. No Question.
Isn't Art wonderful?
*I usually am
ROFL
Sure, you know better than the people that created the stuff.
You can call it something different years later and tell yourself you are correct. Anybody can think and say any nonsense they want. How old were you in 1977 and how much SF had you read before that?
psik
What does 1977 have to do with anything? The movie is still available and still open to interpretation. Not saying I know more then Scott but Scotts control of the movie stopped when he was finished with it (or at least finished with the directors cut) and for him to come out after the fact saying he is a replicant sounds like him calling it something different years later.
What Scott are you talking about in relation to Star Wars? It came out in 1977 and the link I provided was about a comment in Time magazine May 1977.
psik
Off the top of my head:
- Exposure to the sun makes you insane? Who's the first to go insane? The Shrink of course.
- The Human Torch's hand freezes in the liquid coolant after a split second's exposure in one scene, but later he goes swimming in it, not once, but twice with his eyes open and retains dexterity in his fingers long enough to save the ship.
- The guy makes an error in his calculations, which nobody double checks, not even the AI built into the ship, that could endanger the entire mission to save Earth? (Don't forget about the previous scene were we learn that the AI will not allow them to jeopardize the mission in any way.)
- Only 1 guy on the ship knows how to detonate the bomb that is the sole hope of survival for the entire human species? Then, they send that one guy out on the surface of the ship to fix a mechanical problem? The science geek? AND the mission commander? Who's coming back from that outing?
- When outside, they fix the nearest broken panel first and walk away from the safety of the only hatch on the whole bloody ship, towards the terminator line that will kill them if they're exposed, which incidentally is moving towards them and their only escape?
- They detour to go to the other ship why? Well, Insane Man is there! One lame plot device among a plethora.
- Insane Man gets aboard their ship and the AI does not bother to tell the crew until somebody thinks to ask? Even after he stalks and kills 3 crew members?
- When Hero Guy finds out about Insane Man he tells nobody else then goes to find him himself with no weapons?
- He finds Insane Man in the solar room and with the blazing intensity of the nearby sun shining through the window, blinding him in the presence of a homicidal madman, what does he do? Tell the computer to opaque the glass so he can deal with Insane Man and complete the mission? No. He puts up his hand to ward off the sun and squints so he can see the guy that's trying to kill them all, and by extension, the human race, and then he runs away.
- Insane Man shuffles about but can still outpace his victims. (Thanks again Hollywood cliche.)
- Insane Man has the strength of 5 men because insanity in Hollywood lends preternatural strength to the deranged just as dogs, mute children and American Indians have a sixth sense that grown adults lack.
- He can hold our hero straight armed over an abyss even as his muscles are rotting off his bones?
- Why is there an abyss inside the spaceship? What's with all the extra space? Oh, I get. It's a SPACE ship.
I could go on. So much promise and hype and so much failure in Sunshine. It was supposed to be a "smart" SF film. "Not just another summer block-buster." Instead it was a cliche ridden heap rife with stupid plot devices, throwaway characters and crap dialog. What was good? Special effects were top notch and the soundtrack was spacey and ominous as needed. Hey, it was a summer block-buster after all! Bah!![]()
THX-1138
The only place I fudged on my genre rules was with slipstream. I decided to allow 3 films that each had 1 degree of seperation from a major SF writer because in each case the cited film had a lot to do with each writer’s approach to SF.
The 4th slipstream film was the sequal to Alphaville, which probably not too many people know about.
<snip>
A Crash (Cronenberg, slipstream)
B Confessions d'un Barjo (slipstream)
C Allemagne année 90 neuf zéro (sequal to Alphaville, slipstream)
D Empire of the Sun (slipstream)
Why does everyone rank Bladerunner so highly? It seems like it brought up some interesting issues about computers vs. humans and consciousness. But I didnt think the movie was all that great. It seemed like it was more the concepts that made it a hit.
Ditto that. Here's a little micro-review I once wrote of Blade Runner:
Consistently rated as the Greatest Sci-Fi Movie Ever, Blade Runner has it all - fantastic technology, alien landscapes, suspense, romance, action, social import, and memorable characters to spare. Oh wait, it has none of that. But what it does have are androids who look like members of the 80s hair-metal band Poison wearing Dan Rather levels of foundation. And it has an agency dedicated to fighting these menaces-to-society, with secret agents called Blade Runners, possible because they also smuggle swords, possibly because in their spare time they participate in some kind of traditional Hindu foot-injuring ritual. The Blade Runners are armed with - get this - handguns, and in addition are endowed with no apparent special abilities. This would make more sense if the Blade Runners themselves were human, but no - they're actually androids too. So the government is sending wimpy powerless androids up against tough super-androids...why? Is this some kind of strange futuristic sport? Or is it an efficient recycling program - let the new androids kill off the old androids and spare s the trouble? Who knows. But while I was sitting and pondering this mystery, it would have been nice to see some actors doing some actual acting - Harrison Ford was mostly stuck in the "stand there and look concerned" mode that he was later to be stuck in for the rest of his career (Did you know that "Henry" was actually a replicant?). But no. However, I was treated to some great visuals of a dark neon-studded corporate city-jungle...for the first 30 seconds of the movie. After that, I was counting the electric sheep.
![]()
Why does everyone rank Bladerunner so highly? It seems like it brought up some interesting issues about computers vs. humans and consciousness. But I didnt think the movie was all that great. It seemed like it was more the concepts that made it a hit.
Ha Haa! that was a funny post I wish I could write like that.
While we are bashing movies I also didn't like Gattaca and Event Horizon mostly because I thought they were very "anti-science". In Gattaca scientific advancement has made the human will to succeed irrelevant. It also made the future look like a kind of police state. I think all the advancements in genetics etc will be good - cure diseases etc..
Event Horizon was about a "crazy scientist" that opens a doorway to "hell". Again it portrays science as dangerous and scientists as the enemy.
(I guess aliens did this a little but it was more "blame the corporations" instead)
