Thoughts on Science Fiction
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Poor Time Traveler
I felt so bad for him. Working so hard to develop a time machine, feeling like a genius when it finally works, only to find out that the first people he meets in the year 800,000 is are stupid. The whole society has degraded in intelligence and he cannot communicate with them. They think he's weird and that he came from the sun in a lightning storm. Poor Time traveler. I just want to give him a hug, and tell him that not all people are stupid. On top of going insane from the lack of intelligent people to talk to, he also loses his time machine. With the possibility that he could be stuck in a society where everyone is stupid and only eat fruit...that's a nightmare. I was happy knowing that because he was telling the story to his friends, i knew he had returned, but the things that he went through weren't fair. And they were eye opening. Seeing that we only improve through struggle is a very valid point, one that i wasn't aware of before reading the Time Machine. Now that i see the point, however, i see it everywhere. From studying to playing videogames, people improve through struggle and failure. You maximize efficiency and develop new ways of solving problems. I really liked reading the novel/short story, or whatever it's classified as, and i think i might check out more of Well's literature in the future.
District 9
I really liked the movie. It was very different from the conventional alien flick. Evil humans. Aliens you sympathize with. It was a nice change of pace. Its fun to root for the underdog, all the more when the underdog is very different. I wanted Christopher to succeed, saving his kid and making it off planet to save his race, all the while hoping that the bald soldier gets what's coming for him, and he did. Regarding that, the violence was slightly over the top. People getting vaporized with lightning guns and heads getting blown up with tazers was fun and all, but it made me question the aliens. If Christopher does come back, he's gonna be pissed, and he'll want to kill us all, especially what he saw in that EMU lab. Hopefully he'll be merciful, maybe enslaving us instead of killing us. I'd give the movie a 4.5/5, the only reason it not being perfect is the overuse of swearing, it impairs the otherwise well written script. Here's to hoping the sequal is better, and that it comes out sometime soon. Until then, i have plenty of silly alien movies to watch, like war of the worlds and Paul. Let's hope i can get a laugh out of those instead of thinking i've been wasting my time.
Sunday, October 23, 2011
The Thing So Far
So far, I really like the movie. Its very grim, which I always enjoy. It's suspenseful, and its creepy. The scene with the monster and the dogs was wonderfully gory, and I know that i'm going to like the rest of the movie. One thing however, why does the snow base have a flamethrower? I mean, its not like he took an arisol can and used a lighter. He had a legitimate flamethrower, tank and everything. I mean, would you really think that its necesarry in an arctic base? I dont think so. Conveniently they have one, so they arent going to get killed off one by one like in Alien. Atleast yet. I know the outcome of the movie (spoilers ftw!), so i know everyone panics and starts questioning one another and the like. Which is really kinda stupid, because you cant cut off someones head just because you think they're a monster. The blood testing was smart, but they should have done it way sooner. I know The Thing wont dissapoint, and I know when I see the remake/prequal next weekend I wont be dissapointed either. Here's to good sci fi movies, non cheesy, actually entertaining sci fi movies.
Rampancy
After reading several books that involve AI, there's really only one major downfall in creating a computer that can learn. It is the threat of rampancy. An AI will eventually no longer be able to be controlled by the protective algorithms in place, and the AI loses its ability to reason. It may run normally (unlikely), it may decide that it hates humanity for creating it but limiting its ability to function (I have no mouth...), or it may try to be more human and form a relationship with another rampant AI (Halo). These possibilities are not very promising, so i'm sure that if we created an actually thinking robot, we would install some sort of failsafe that would kick in after say, 10 or 20 years of service. This would protect the crews in deep space expeditions, but you would have to have multiple copies of the AI, or different ones. All in all, AI would drastically help us run our lives, we shouldnt turn them into robot servants like iRobot, but they could run our weapons systems, conducting cybernetic warfare with the opposing sides, they could eventually pilot our space fairing warships, and if we keep them in check, they will b very effective.
In Regards to Plasma Weapons
Super weapon? or strange child toy?
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Ender's Game Really is Ender's Game
So after reading into the book where Ender has to deal with Bonzo, I cannot help but think of this:
This poor guy gets owned, just like Bonzo does. I find it eerie that people have the brain power to actually do this, but smart people will be smart. I really like the book so far, Ender is a very likable character, and you really emphathize for him when he's feeling angry or distressed. His manic depression right now is a bit of a bother, but i'm sure he will pull through. I find it appalling how I.F. is treating Ender, designing tasks and fixing the games just so Dragon Army will lose. Yet Ender pulls through. Nothing can deter his willpower in a fight, and its scary that a 10 year old is this intelligent. I feel like i'm reading into the mind of a 20 year old genius, not a 10 year old. The plot is a bit confusing however. The coincidal events with Val and Peter (super jerk) are confusing, and i fail to see how how a 12 and 14 year old are duping leaders of the world. but its a book, so I guess anything can happen. I hope Ender pulls through, and i'm not going to SparkNotes anything because I actually like the book. Good luck Ender. You're going to need it.
"The Thing". "What thing?" "The Thing"
After watching the first 30 minutes of the original The Thing, I'm so far impressed by the movie. It doesn't look much different from what a movie today would look like, and it has proved to be entertaining for anyone dies. After reading the Norwegian translation screamed by the "crazed gunman", I was amused. Turns out that if anyone in the audience spoke norwegian, the entire movie would have been spoiled.
(The Norwegian said to MacReady and the men, in Norwegian: "Se til helvete og kom dere vekk. Det er ikke en bikkje, det er en slags ting! Det imiterer en bikkje, det er ikke virkelig! Kom dere vekk, idioter!" This is translated to: "Get the hell outta there. That's not a dog, it's some sort of thing! It's imitating a dog, it isn't real! Get away, you idiots!" ) Shows that we should all know our Norwegian so we don't get assimilated by an alien creature.
Anyway, I'm looking forward to seeing the 2011 Remake, I'm sorry: Prequal. The movie is allegedly a prequal to the 1982 classic, but it looks the same to me so far. Here's to hoping the new movie is worth my ten dollars. I'll do my best not to read Rotten Tomatos
(The Norwegian said to MacReady and the men, in Norwegian: "Se til helvete og kom dere vekk. Det er ikke en bikkje, det er en slags ting! Det imiterer en bikkje, det er ikke virkelig! Kom dere vekk, idioter!" This is translated to: "Get the hell outta there. That's not a dog, it's some sort of thing! It's imitating a dog, it isn't real! Get away, you idiots!" ) Shows that we should all know our Norwegian so we don't get assimilated by an alien creature.
Anyway, I'm looking forward to seeing the 2011 Remake, I'm sorry: Prequal. The movie is allegedly a prequal to the 1982 classic, but it looks the same to me so far. Here's to hoping the new movie is worth my ten dollars. I'll do my best not to read Rotten Tomatos
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