From Alien to The Matrix 249
From Alien to The Matrix: Reading Science Fiction Film | |
author | Roz Kaveney |
pages | 208 |
publisher | I.B.Tauris |
rating | 4 |
reviewer | Kevin H. Spencer |
ISBN | 1850438056 |
summary | For kooky, way-off-base interpretations of several Sci-Fi films, this is your book. |
The book seemed interesting enough from the cover, given a pleasant upsurge in the number of meaning and philosophy books on many SF films. I was expecting another take on my current joy, The Matrix universe, as well as some tidbits from other movies to get me delving for the hidden jokes and thoughts of a classic or two, like the Alien movies. Despite the title, the book is not all inclusive on film SF and does not discuss with any significance any of the latest Marvel superhero movies, and definitely skips discussion on the the Lord of the Rings trilogy--a tragic omission in light of its popular and Oscar-winning performance that brought SF/Fantasy to Hollywood legitimacy. Specifically, the writer discusses and contrasts elements from a handful of interesting SF movies of the last quarter-century, including
* The Matrix trilogy, including elements from "The Animatrix" and the "Enter the Matrix" game
* The Alien movie saga
* Galaxy Quest
* Dark City
* The Star Wars saga
* The Terminator saga
* Strange Days
* Small Soldiers
Small Soldiers? That was science-fiction? That was worthy of discussion in a book on SF film meanings? Surely there were other films of the last 25 years related to the chapter's subject on robots and AI that were more germane, such as "Bicentennial Man," "I, Robot," "Star Trek: Nemesis," and even the writer's home favorite of Marvin from "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" (not the 2005 release, but the 1980's TV depiction from the BBC, since this book was apparently printed in the early months of this year).
This book was written by someone that doesn't appear to read or watch much in the way of SF beyond what they see at the movies. Realizing that the writer was British, I tried (and failed) to give her allowance for her non-American point-of-view on the topic, hoping for some enlightenment over my decadent Cowboy Way of watching SF here in America. There are many areas in the book where her interpretation simply is misinformed. The writer apparently had chosen to write her book as a self-interpretation of the movies in question, failing almost completely to read other interpretations or discussions from the movie's directors or screenwriters.
The book as a whole, particularly with its monotonous small text and a complete lack of the simplest illustrations or even eye-catching chapter header graphics, feels like a dry collegiate dissertation written by someone who could give a damn about the subject matter and just needs a passing grade.
One example of the author's lack of research or understanding was confirmed by my own mother, a woman of 64 years that enjoys the Matrix movies as much as her son but has developed her understanding of the movies on her own, without my coaching. In one example in the book, the writer says that Neo, in "The Matrix," was told by the Oracle that he was not the One. In fact, the Oracle said no such thing--it was Neo who told himself that he was not the One. The Oracle, after toying with Neo to a degree by examining his hands and face, said, "...but you already know what I am going to say, don't you?" with Neo completing his own assumption, "I'm not the One." The Oracle implied that Neo was indeed in possession of the ability, but that his mind was not ready--a point confirmed by Neo's self-doubt (Neo's pod-name, "Thomas" is a Gnostic Christianity reference to that apostle's doubt of the resurrection of Christ). My mom, of all people, got this, but it was lost completely by the writer.
Other points in the book are just outright wrong and filled with error. Quoting a description about the climatic moments near the end of "The Matrix Revolutions": "Neo sets off to interview the Machines--along the way he is blinded and Trinity killed by a human who has been absorbed by Smith." In fact, Trinity was attacked, but not killed by Bane/Smith -- she would die moments after their hovercraft crash lands near the center of the Machine City.
Bad fact checking is a hallmark of this book. One glaring example was in finding the name of actress Nichelle Nichols of "Star Trek" badly warped to 'Michelle Nichols' in a discussion of the movie "Galaxy Quest." A sentence discussing the kiss between Persephone and Niobe in the cut-scenes of the game "Enter the Matrix" wrongly named Jada Pinkett-Smith's character as "Phoebe." Oh, no. What would Ross and Chandler say?
That's not to say the the whole book is totally tainted. At worse, this book is no less informed than your non-fannish significant other, a person that most of us will still take some time to listen to for wisdom or enjoyment, even if their views seem stupid initially. One quote I will leave to your enjoyment or disdain regarding a take on Darth Sidious from the Star Wars trilogy: "Palpatine is not just a machine politician, but a Dark Lord in the manner of Tolkien, and his corruption of Anakin Skywalker to the point where he becomes Darth Vader parallels the seduction of the human kings who became the Nazgul."
Her discussion on the Alien movies, particularly "Aliens," showed some insight, indicating the writer was more familiar with this material, or just more attentive. I'd guess she was most comfortable with the Alien saga--more than one-third of the book was devoted completely to the Alien movies. The book's title would be more appropriate as From Alien to Alien and More about Alien: And Some Meaningless Discussion About Some Lesser Science Fiction.
The writer name-drops Philip C. Dick, William Gibson, and Heinlein in an attempt to sound knowledgeable. "Big whoop," you might say,"as fanboys to various interests, we ALL do that kind of thing." But like the most decrepit and ill-informed of us non-mundanes, the writer seems to do this more to impress and less to inform, compare or contrast. The names just stick out like they're supposed to have meaning just because they are in the book.
Maybe this is a British thing. Maybe I'm wrong or not as enlightened while scanning this book (which is, unfortunately, the best I could do while trying to read it before I began stammering uncontrollably to myself moments later about some bad interpretation). Maybe I need a book on interpreting this book. I'd like to keep my mind open to the possibility (however unlikely) that this was really not such a bad book for most of us. Buy the book if you like Alien saga interpretations or if you like to invoke apoplexy in yourself or others. Otherwise, look for my copy of this book at your local discount used book store--and don't mind the drink stains and coffee cup rings. The book also doubles as an excellent coaster.
You can purchase From Alien to The Matrix: Reading Science Fiction Film from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:5, Funny)
And this is our website!!!
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
That's probably only part of it. The other part of it was that the Wachowski Brothers originally wanted to make only one movie. When they couldn't fit all the material into a single movie, they decided to stretch it out into three. The results are quite obvious as the first one got the bulk of the intrigue, while the remaining movies were required to be less story dense and packed with more filler.
A similar situation can be seen with the new Star Wars Trilogy. Lucas obviously tried to plan things a bit on the fly, and ended up with 60-70% of the story packed into the last movie. Some estimate that as much as 15-20% of the material intended for the trilogy got cut from the movies. That's what left such a large gap for the "Clone Wars" animated series, and the new up-coming television show.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Also consider that their motivation here was to do a live-action 'anime', not a mind-bending sci-fi intrigue-a-thon. It was a loose plot intended to tie together some strange kung-fu scenes. They said almost as much in the Matrix Revisited DVD.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
I'd never heard this before. It appears that she won, and won big: $2.5B for matrix and terminator. I'm guessing the axe that killed them was that she submitted it to "to an ad placed by the Wachowski Brothers" in the mid 80s. Wow.
I did some looking on the net and came up with a few links, but one will cover it for most who only want confirmation of the win:
http://www.femmixx.com/matrixlawsuit.html [femmixx.com]
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
$2.5B is the total gross from all of the Matrix and Terminator films. She did not win this, nor would she. Furthermore, the "official" site (linked by the parent) says that the "big" court date is set for July 2005.
Don't believe everything you read.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Traditionally, Hollywood doesn't mind movies with revolutionary overtones.
I alomst said:
Traditionally, Hollywood doesn't mind revolting movies.
Also true, but a different thing all together.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
This would run counter to the basic mythological premise of the hero. He is the object of the story, and he must redeem and save humanity, because it cannot do it on it's own.
IMHO, the sequels were bad enough because they diverged from this. They'd have been worse if they demoted Neo to "just a leader".
But of
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Apparently they are still telling the story, using Matrix Online. I have no idea wtf is going on in there, but they can have fun with that.
I almost wish that they could've made a lot more out of the series. They could've made a dozen Matrix movies, all fit in between 1 and 2. Even at the end of 1, Neo was just figuring out what a badass he was... they could've run that out for a bunch more. And should've!
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Why could Neo kill Sentinels in real life? Because he, uh, could. All of a sudden. Yeah.
Lame answer.
I didn't care for either the 1000 Smiths fight, nor for the Smith-Neo fight at the end of Revolutions. Neither was as tight or beautiful to watch as the fight between Morpheus and Neo in the dojo. Yeah, they were all special-effecty, but not as beautifully choreographed. Even the Neo-Seraph fight (
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Another thing to add to the complaint list on fights...the final battle between Smith and Neo. 1. Too much CG. 2. It felt like a live action Dragon Ball Z fight (read lame) and 3. Why would Smith fight Neo with a hundred copies earlier, but in this fight the millions of smiths all just sit and watch?
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Blade Runner
Total Recall
A.I.
Minority Report
Paycheck
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
But maybe Aldiss was influenced or inspired by Dick? I don't know.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
If you want a good book on Aliens, you could do worse than look Google for Screening the Sacred which isn't specifically focused on Sci-Fi but does contain a brilliant chapter on Alien / Aliens by Janice Hocker Rushing.
She also has another book called Projecting the Shadow: The Cyborg Hero in American Film. which is specifically sci-fi but predates the Matrix.
I definitely recommend anything by this woman for those who want genuine depth and insight.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Granted, the reviewer neglects to mention that the two chapters on the aforementioned movies are labelled "Comedy 1" and "Comedy 2." His omission seems a bit disingenuous, as if his primary goal is to condemn the book and any information that does not support his thesis can be ignored.
Indeed, complaining that a book with the subtitle "Reading Science Fiction Film" does not include anything about the Lord of the Rings trilogy is not unlike bitching that your fruit salad has no bacon.
From what I gather from the description I've read [dymphna.net], the book is less an examination of the philosophical underpinnings of individual science fiction stories, and more about the affect that science fiction films have had on both filmmaking and science fiction storytelling.
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Yep, that is the slashdot folks!!! (Score:2)
"There was a typo where an 'N' was supposed to be but there was an "M" instead. Inconceivable!"
I also like the fact that this Spencerian fellow advises me to dump my girlfriend if she doesn't like the same movies I do. Excellent love advice from slashdot.
Hmmm. (Score:5, Funny)
Is it published by Microsoft?
Re:Hmmm. (Score:2)
No, wait... the case is different. A Microsoft product WILL be pissing you off REGARDLESS of whether you bought it or not.
Re:Hmmm. (Score:2)
- Companies bribing politicians in order not to pay taxes (hurts everyone, obviously)
- lots of companies gaining advantage of Iraq's war by rebuilding the country
And much more. Sad!!
Fact Checking (Score:3, Funny)
Contradiction (Score:5, Funny)
Blasphemy!
Re:Contradiction (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Contradiction (Score:2)
I have time to read SF, I have loads of computers to play with, a cool mom, AND a hot fangirl girlfriend. I am living a fucking dream, man.
Re:Contradiction (Score:2)
Realistically... (Score:3, Insightful)
When authors need to appropriate someone else's creation instead of coming up with their own, you can't expect much.
Re:Realistically... (Score:2)
Philosophy of the Matrix [amazon.com]
The D'oh of Homer [amazon.com]
Seinfeld and Philosophy [amazon.com]
Re:Realistically... (Score:2)
"Like a Splinter in Your Mind"
available from Amazon. There is a successor book to the first link you note, which I also highly recommend.
Re:Realistically... (Score:2)
I totally agree with your comparison though
Exactly (Score:2)
Most anything that is mass marketed is dumbed down as the suits think that most audiences are stupid hicks. I'm kinda sorry for the author of this review. It's obvious he hasn't experienced any really good SF, and so has nothi
Trans atlantic (Score:5, Funny)
No - this book just confirms what some people suspected for many years : that bad writers are not the exclusive domain of the United States.
Philip C. Dick? (Score:3, Funny)
I have just finished reading 'The World Jones Made' by Philip K. Dick, if he's any relation?
Re:Philip C. Dick? (Score:5, Funny)
>
>I have just finished reading 'The World Jones Made' by Philip K. Dick, if he's any relation?
"No, we don't have Philip C. Dick's "Do Androids Dream of Elektrik Sh33p" with two "K"s and l33t-speak "3"s! Why doesn't the author try W. H. Smith's?"
"He did, the article submitter sent him here!"
Re:Philip C. Dick? (Score:2)
Nitipicks . . . (Score:5, Funny)
(emphasis mine)
. . . you have to wonder if all the mistakes he was complaining about were due to his own innattention to detail. Pot calling the kettle black, and all that.
Fanboys? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fanboys? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fanboys? (Score:2, Funny)
That proves it... (Score:2)
Goes out of there way to point out they are a girl.
Then goes out of there way to point out that they are an Lesbian.
Yep, your a guy....or a neo pagan.
Thank you, I'll be here all week!
Re:Fanboys? (Score:3, Funny)
Mmmmm, Geek lesbians.....
A Mature Review? (Score:2)
Don't judge a book by its cover. Or in this case, dont' judge a book by the layout/appearance of its contents. This hardly useful in a book review. When I read, I like to read the author's words; I do not care
Note to the reviewer (Score:3, Insightful)
- Sci-fi is easy-to-get-into science fiction, like Star Trek, Matrix and I, robot. In short, sci-fi is more like a regular story, or show, set in some futuristic universe
- SF is hard-core, or "serious" science fiction. That includes, for example, books from Iain M. Banks, and movies like 2001: A Space Odyssey. SF works are usually space operas, well researched on the (possible) technical plan, and can plunge the reader/viewer right down the weird and absolutely alien, which not all may like.
Note to poster (Score:2)
I have seen the term 'Hard' sci-fi to mean a more grounding to reality. That may or may not be an space opera.
Star wars is a space opera, and it is not hard sci-fi.
The ease to get into it depends on the presentation of the story. Nothing more.
Re:Note to poster (Score:2)
There's more to it than that: if you tackle a SF work featuring many alien races, with different levels of technology, and complex interactions between then, and/or with a convoluted storyline, then it can get quite hard to get into it, simply because it's too departed from normal reality. But otherwise you're right.
I guess the real difference between sci-fi and SF is how consistent and plausible the futuristic environment is.
Re:Note to poster (Score:2)
Sci Fi and speculative fiction seem to have a much stronger grounding in reality. SF doesn't need the obvious cues of laser/robot/AI/nanotech/etc to hit the reader off that something is altered away from the universe we know (which we'd just call fiction.) SF could be about an alternate timeline with the exact same technology. I
Re:Note to poster (Score:2)
Also, in Star Trek, you hear things in the void of space, "
with the exception of ships and music from the sound track, when has sound every been in space in the star trek universe.
I'm no ST fan boy, but I honestly can't think of a time it is incorrect.
Re:Note to poster (Score:2)
explosions
ships moving about
the magnetic boots in First Contact
And I seem to recall an episode of Classic Trek where an enemy ship was destroyed using a giant directional speaker, blasting out sound waves through space.
(Just to name a few)
Re:Note to the reviewer (Score:2)
Re:Note to the reviewer (Score:3, Interesting)
Sci-fi is as you say. A regular story set in the future or focusing on technology (i.e.: Star Trek--although, not all episodes)
Science Fiction (SF) specifically refers to any fiction that put humans in a futuristic environment to illuminate and reflect on the human condition, culture and society. The classic example is showing tension between alien species that is derived essentially from their physical dif
Re:Note to the reviewer(you're a moron) (Score:3, Insightful)
If the reviewer is going to bash someone for including Small Soldiers, he
Re:Note to the reviewer (Score:2)
Er, SF (or what most people term as "hard SF") works are usually space operas?
There are many definitions of "Space Opera", but Wikipedia's definition is probably close enough
Re:Note to the reviewer (Score:2)
dump (Score:3, Funny)
um, why would anyone want to cut off their own hands?
Quick Correction (Score:5, Informative)
It is fair to say that Thomas is a reference that can be understood as generically Christian, not just "gnostic," since the account of Doubting Thomas is in the orthodox canon. The author is probably asymilating the apostle Thomas with the author of the pseudopigraphal "Gospel of Thomas," which was a gnostic document.
Re:Quick Correction (Score:2)
Man, posting that on
Re:Quick Correction (Score:2)
Re:Quick Correction to the Correction (Score:2)
They are assumed to be the same. That is, whether you accept it as authentic or not, the supposed author of the text (if not the document) is the same as the doubting Thomas.
Re:Quick Correction (Score:2)
Re: Interesting book was: Quick Correction (Score:2)
The Matrix (Score:4, Insightful)
I think that so many people thought that the Matrix was a literary masterwork because not many people have read many actual literary masterworks.
Bottom line (Score:4, Insightful)
They were thinking about something other then 'cool explosion' and chicks in leather. I eman, that came up, but it wasn't the ONLY thing they talked about.
I consider that good.
Persoanlly, I found that it pointed out central themes in religeon and rather nicely brought them together. Plus, hot chicks in leather.
Re:The Matrix (Score:2, Insightful)
The thing that makes the Matrix better than 90% of movies is that two weeks after you've seen the movie, you're still discussing things with your buddies. That doesn't happen very often in Hollywood... in fact, it's rare now for me to remember anything about a movie even a couple days after I've seen it. (Of course, that might say more about my memory than anything...)
Now I'm not saying that the Matrix were excellent movies, or that they're at the level of, say, 2001: A Space O
OMG No Pictures? What use is this book? (Score:5, Insightful)
Of all the things to object to, this one shouldn't even have made the list. It's a book. It mean for those who can read. And this particular complaint puts me in mind of a child complaining about how "real books" are "too hard".
Most of my library is full of great books that lack the simplest illustrations (even though I have more than a shelf's worth of Hellboy, Sandman, Far Side, Calvin & Hobbes, and suchlike; lest you get the wrong idea, be assured that I'm not opposed to illustrations) or eye-catching chapter-header graphics. I like books where the type is monotonous; anything eye-catching catches my eye, disturbs my reading, and derails my concentration.
Some of the worst books I've encountered rely on ever-changing fonts, plentiful illustrations, eye-catching graphics, all to hide the fact that the author isn't saying much, or even saying it well.
If the reviewer has come to rely on that sort of reading experience, perhaps it's because they've not been reading the right sort of books. Put down those technical manuals and pick up a volume of Wodehouse. Set aside that Learn-in-21-days tome and grab some Kipling. Whatever you do, go read something by someone who can entrance you with words, where the illustrations are created by your own imagination, where what catches your eye is the next sentence, and the next, and the next...
This isn't to say that the book may be any good. I don't know, I haven't read it. I can imagine that it's a hard thing to do, to identify and discuss the themes of SF movies, much less more than one or two, in a single book. To cover the genre would likely result in a three-inch coffee-table book, four columns of tiny (monotonic!) type on every family-bible-thin page.
Which wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing.
Re:OMG No Pictures? What use is this book? (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you have any examples that are not narratives?
I find that for narratives (either fiction or non), a lack of formatting works very well because your imagination is carried smoothly through the text. In a non-narrative, though, some formatting can aid greatly in the readability. It can help your eye flow down the page, it can break up the monotony (even if it's well-written and interesting, reading it in unbrok
The Matrix: Reformatted (Score:2)
I was thinking this is probably the first book he's read since mgrade school. All his reading since has been on the web. That explains the whole review, not just the one point. 8^)
They seemingly feature one VERY popular plot... (Score:2)
This is a plot that SF cannot seem to transcend. Neo of The Matrix has to save the human race? Oh wait, no, Sarah Conner from The Terminator is supposed to do that. Or is it young Master Skywalker? Or Paul Atreides from Dune? (He's only saving one planet's worth, really, I guess). The guy from Dark City also only saves a city's worth, but the story's the same. Even the best Superman movie (TWO, DERF) featured the Kryptonian as reluctant to save the whole frigging planet. Not really
Re:They seemingly feature one VERY popular plot... (Score:2)
There's no affiliate shit on that link, btw. I don't give a shit if you don't buy the book.
Re:They seemingly feature one VERY popular plot... (Score:2)
Don't suppose that it mentions... (Score:2)
Oh, and the setup it would have left for #4 would have been awe-inspiring. Leave it to hollywood to fuck up unfuckupable trilogies...
Re:Don't suppose that it mentions... (Score:2)
Re:Don't suppose that it mentions... (Score:2)
Sadly, the reviewer is off base as well. (Score:2)
Sadly, the LOTR trilogy did no such thing - it rode on the legitimacy built by the Star Wars series, the Terminator series, and others. It came to be not just because SF was seen to be legitimate, but because it had legions of fanboys who would drool over it's presence on the screen and tons of
What's Next? (Score:3, Funny)
Roz Kaveney (Score:3, Informative)
She has co-written stories with Neil Gaiman [isfdb.org], and was a Contributing Editor to John Clute and John Grant's Encyclopedia of Fantasy
She's no stranger to Media Fandom, either, being one of the major figures in UK Buffy Fandom (possibly in part because, if they were real, she would have likely been an Oxford classmate and fellow inhabitant of low dives with Rupert Giles and Ethan Rayne).
In addition to knowing more or less everyone who is the least bit connected with SF in the UK, she has lead a life which can, perhaps, best be understood as science fiction, of the Late Heinlein or John Varley variety, in that, like all good posthumans, she has actually changed genders and sexual orientations during her lifetime [dymphna.net].
If that isn't demonstrative of a true dedication to science fiction, I don't know what is.
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2)
Mr. AC -- quite likely one of the best observations to be made in this thread.
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:3, Interesting)
Alien wsa a horror flick, in a sci-fi setting.
Aliens was a action flick, in a sci-fi setting.
Terminator was a horror film. in a sci-fi setting.
Give Mel Gidson a flying car instead of a truck in Lethal weapon, and you would have a buddy cop movie, in a sci-fi setting.
I would like to hear of 1 sci-fi movie that tells a story that couldnt be told in a different setting?
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2)
There's more to science fiction than robots and spaceships, but most films are very shallow. However, that makes the argument into one about definitions, i.e. pointless.
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:4, Interesting)
Now, if you view movies as simply a collection of scenes then, sure, Alien could be set on earth and the Alien could be a vampire or just a very big guy with a knife. However, taken as a whole, Terminator doesn't work without time travel (firmly entrenching it in science fiction) and Alien doesn't work without a manned spaceship visiting another planet. Science fiction is very much its own genre of movie, just as much as action, comedy or horror. That one can make a science fiction movie with action, comedy or horror in it doesn't detract from that in the least.
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2)
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2, Interesting)
You have a point.
The point is all the more interesting in light of the quite deep sci-fi content of the original stories I've read:
Alien was loosely based on one of the four short stories comprising the novel "The Voyage of the Space Beagle" by A. E. van Vogt. The main point of the novel wasn't a crew's rather helpless fight for survival against a nearly invulnerable enemy; it was the struggle for acceptance by specialists by an "holistic scientist," and it falls somewhere between the gritty-utopian a
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2)
I'm kind of curious how you'd re-tell Terminator or Short Circuit in a non sci-fi setting.
I don't really mean this as a bitterly sarcastic jab, I am genuinely curious.
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2)
Where do you place Gattaca?
Re:The Matrix universe (Score:2)
Sci-fi films are more than about science, they're films as well. The Matrix worked incredibly well as a film. It had a decent pace, good editing, great soundtrack, a couple of decent actors (Fishborn
Re:Have fun (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Sounds like Slashdot (Score:2)
Re:Sounds like Slashdot (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sounds like Slashdot (Score:2)
Best response I've read all day. You, my friend, just made my "friends" list.
Mind if I join you for coffee?
Re:Sounds like Slashdot (Score:2)
Re:Is this a review? (Score:2)
If the woman in question was Ayn Rand, that's exactly what she'd enjoy.
Re:Obligatory piss-taking of the piss-taker... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Obligatory piss-taking of the piss-taker... (Score:2)
you mean 'K'?
that's right, J.
Re:Obligatory piss-taking of the piss-taker... (Score:2)
again namedropping "Philip C. Dick" could have been pointed had he meant it be a point about the erroneous fact checking of the material..but sadly I think the reviewer has made an error there.. and saying that 'C' is nowhere near 'K' on the keyboard I cannot rightly call it a typo..
so...
umm.. well, we now have a review of a SF book by a guy who doesn't even know the important authors.
doubly sad...