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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Firefly and the General State of Sci-Fi... can Joss save our genre?
Saturday, June 12, 2004 9:47 AM
MUTANTFRIEND
Saturday, June 12, 2004 10:05 AM
BLINKER
Quote:Look, what we really need in Sci-fi today is a Lord of the Rings. Hear me out... I'm NOT talking about an epic trilogy that has an immense backstory and all that... what I mean is a movie that is sooooo goram good it breaks through to everyone.
Saturday, June 12, 2004 10:37 AM
SWITCHY
Saturday, June 12, 2004 10:48 AM
MAUGWAI
Saturday, June 12, 2004 12:59 PM
Quote:Originally posted by maugwai: I disagree with you about Pitch Black. It was surprisingly deep. It used the monster movie as a backdrop for a story about what separates humans from monsters, and how bad guys aren't always so easy to define.
Saturday, June 12, 2004 1:02 PM
Quote:Originally posted by maugwai: Chronicles, however, lost that. So you're definitely right about Hollywood mucking everything up. When the story was low-budget, it was brilliantly done with great character development and a good, strong theme. When Hollywood took over, it had great special effects and not much character develoment at all. I've been thinking about it all afternoon, and I still can't figure out what the point of the story was. And I was so hoping it would be as good as the first, but the depth was replaced by eye-candy.
Saturday, June 12, 2004 1:31 PM
THRAWN
Saturday, June 12, 2004 2:00 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Thrawn: Yes, but you have to realize that it isn't just sci-fi. The almighty grand majority of movies simply suck, and the proportion of sci-fi movies to the rest of movies is fairly small. If you do the math, one classic sci-fi movie in the last few years isn't that hard to believe. What do we get, maybe 2 or 3 genuine science fiction movies a year? (I'm not counting stuff like The Day After Tomorrow and comic book spinoffs.) There are more movies in just about every other possible genre per year than that. This being the same movie industry that's existed for a while, you can't expect more than 1 in every 15 of those to be genuinely awesome, much less classic..
Quote:Originally posted by Thrawn: However, I'd disagree with your count anyway - I thought Minority Report was brilliant, for instance..
Quote:Originally posted by Thrawn: And you can't measure how popular a movie is by how many oscars it gets. Oscars are given to (for the flying majority, anyway) Dramatic Performances of Sad People in Movies About Sad People. (I'm not insulting the genre of drama, I'm just saying, it's the spirit of the thing.) Oscars for movies that are mostly action or mostly comedy or even nicely balanced mixtures are rare.
Quote:Originally posted by Thrawn: The three Lord of the Rings movies are the only fantasy movies EVER to be as respected as they were, and given the source material and the cultural influence it had before becoming movies, that's unlikely to happen ever again.
Quote:Originally posted by Thrawn: We don't NEED a classic science fiction movie to sweep the oscars to revitalize science fiction's place in moviedom...it never had that place to begin with. The first Star Wars trilogy maybe, but that's about it, and even that is pushing it. Science fiction is by its very nature a cult genre. While it would be nice for everyone to like it, the simple fact is it'll never happen..
Quote:Originally posted by Thrawn: Be happy that Serenity is even being made. If you hope for more, that's fine, but you can't demand it. You'll just be dissappointed.
Saturday, June 12, 2004 2:17 PM
Saturday, June 12, 2004 4:44 PM
ECGORDON
There's no place I can be since I found Serenity.
Saturday, June 12, 2004 5:32 PM
ARCBEATLE
Quote:Originally posted by Blinker: Quote:Look, what we really need in Sci-fi today is a Lord of the Rings. Hear me out... I'm NOT talking about an epic trilogy that has an immense backstory and all that... what I mean is a movie that is sooooo goram good it breaks through to everyone. I remember a few years ago when "Dungeons and Dragons" came out, and genre websites were pleading "go see D&D, repeatedly, EVEN THOUGH we realize it's total crap... because if this movie bombs, fantasy cinema is FINISHED. FOREVER." Heh... _________ Sliders: Gate Haven - http://slidersweb.net/blinker
Saturday, June 12, 2004 6:10 PM
TIGERLILY
Sunday, June 13, 2004 3:54 AM
Sunday, June 13, 2004 4:48 AM
CHRONICTHEHEDGEHOG
Sunday, June 13, 2004 5:19 AM
EST120
Quote:Originally posted by MutantFriend: OK, so I went to go see The Chronicals of Riddick. Ummmm, how you say? La poo poo? I mean it was ok in parts, but the action was a mess. The editing and cinematography were total crapola. Combine that with overbaked fx and it was just plain "hard to watch". The movie itself was Flash Gordon meets Dune - which taken in the correct context, isn't all THAT bad (well, ok maybe it is - but I like Dune and FG).
Sunday, June 13, 2004 8:37 AM
ZOID
Sunday, June 13, 2004 8:58 AM
PEACE
Quote:Originally posted by ecgordon: The only hope for SF being as good in films as it is in print is if the Hollywood money boys will let the writers tell the story and keep their f***ing hands off! And I'm talking about writers like Joss, who with Serenity has a very good chance of creating a classic. And lets not forget, Tim Minear is adapting Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, which has enough plot elements to appeal to a wide range of movie-goers.
Sunday, June 13, 2004 9:57 AM
Monday, June 14, 2004 2:54 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Peace: Mutantfriend, I must respectfully disagree with part of your original premise-- that a really great, Oscar-worthy sci-fi movie will make studio heads see the light and start making quality sci-fi movies. You give far too much credit to the non-creative pinheads who populate most of the executive positions in most movie and TV studios. When these jokers see a great film, by and large their reaction is not, “gee, let’s make something just like this”, it’s “how can we cash in on this in the cheapest and fast way possible?” This is historically verifiable: when Star Wars came out (a film which fundamentally redrew the landscape in Hollywood), there were a few creative geniuses like Spielberg and Ridley Scott who produced work like Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Alien. The vast majority of productions, however, were quickie dreck, like Battle Beyond the Stars, Ice Pirates, and Battlestar Galactica. This is because the people who by and large run Hollywood are money men and lawyers who haven’t a creative bone in their bodies. This fact affects every movie Hollywood produces, but it is especially acute with sci-fi, because the studio suits also just don’t understand science fiction. And except for individual mavericks like Joss, there is very little prospect of this changing. We should also remember that LOTR itself was a pure anomaly. Even Peter Jackson himself has said that it made no rational sense for New Line to hand this project, with a $300 million budget and an unprecedented shooting schedule, to a comparatively unknown director. LOTR was one of those projects where all the factors lined up in a way that was once-in-a-century and produced something never seen before. But don’t think for a moment that there aren’t any number of execs sitting in their offices right now, saying, “How can we cash in on this?” That’s just the way Hollywood works these days. We can all hope for something on the scale of LOTR to hit sci-fi moviedom, but, frankly, folks, I don’t recommend holding your breath. As much as I expect and hope Serenity will do well and kick butt as a movie and as a money-maker, I don’t expect it will have that level of impact.
Monday, June 14, 2004 4:34 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Peace: We should also remember that LOTR itself was a pure anomaly. Even Peter Jackson himself has said that it made no rational sense for New Line to hand this project, with a $300 million budget and an unprecedented shooting schedule, to a comparatively unknown director. LOTR was one of those projects where all the factors lined up in a way that was once-in-a-century and produced something never seen before. But don’t think for a moment that there aren’t any number of execs sitting in their offices right now, saying, “How can we cash in on this?” That’s just the way Hollywood works these days.
Monday, June 14, 2004 4:58 PM
RKLENSETH
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