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Showing posts with label Science Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science Fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2020

The Movie I Need to Make

The movie, this time science fiction, that I want to make and that needs to be made--

MICHAEL RENNIE, THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL, 1951 Stock Photo


About this planet, ours, Earth, that these these aliens that come at us, finally, at long last. We immediately think they've come to attack, kill and destroy us so naturally, that is for what we all, the world over, prepare for.

But these are advanced beings. These are truly advanced beings. They're peace-loving. And peace-living.  And they have the technology to take and keep it.

After this big, suspenseful build-up, in the movie, of us getting ready, the world over, for interstellar war, they come. They do come here. But instead of attacking us, their weapons shut us down. All of us. The world over.

And then they force us into peace. Peace. Across the planet. And then across the solar system and universe.

And we stop our wars. We stop fighting one another. We stop killing one another.

It becomes all the more relevant to us all, the world over, what with global warming and climate change now. We finally, finally start all working together to end and even reverse climate change and global warming and war and all the rest.

And we all start cooperating. And collaborating. And helping and nurturing one another.

The world over.

The end.


Friday, August 10, 2012

Irony: Maybe the robots will get it right



How would that be for irony?

We--humankind--created computers. Computers, therefore, enabled us to also create robots. At first, they were to do our work for us and that's where we are today.

It has been projected by some scientists--futurist scientists--that robots with their own artifical intelligence will, yes, take over the world.

If given enough time, it rather makes sense.

They already reprogram themselves and make themselves smarter and smarter. Smarter than we humans can make them.

So let's go with that thought--that is, robots "take over" the world. They then:

--do away with pollution since they realize it makes them work worse (sick) and eventually kills them;

--never experience any form of racism or discrimination of any kind because, after all, they're all just machines and therefore, equal;

--do away with war, wars and all warring weapons since it occurs to them that a) they need to work together and b) that logic, reasoning and communication are the way to handle problems and solve differences.

If it only stopped right there, the robots would be far, far ahead of humankind, to date.

Kind of sad, isn't it?

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Entertainment overnight

One of the best "Star Wars" scenes ever. Right from the opening scene of the first film of the entire series, they had us. What a time that was.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

The irony of "Captain America" coming out now

Chris Evans in Captain America costume (from fan-made poster)
I can barely get over the irony of the movie "Captain America" coming out right now.

I confirmed, in researching, that this comic was begun in the 1940's, during the Great Depression.

That it would come back out now, in our "Second Great Depression" or the "Mancession" or whatever you want to call it, since it's the worst economic times since then, over the last 80 years, is just too great.  A subtle comparison it's not, but still, there it is.

And sure, we have far better technology now and it's been wholly refreshed and it's great for, what?  15-year-old boys or some such but, come on, the timing of this is just too rich to pass on.

The thing that gets me most about it is the whole "bringing back the America we once knew" aspect of it.  Clearly, we'd like to pretend we live in a bygone era but we can't go back to when it was all white people and no global warming or pollution or Mexicans coming into the country or Japanese earthquake/tsunami/nuclear meltdown, etc., etc.

Besides blowing great wads of money, I think our civilization--the US--will also, one day, be known for not learning (e.g., Vietnam, housing booms and busts, Afghanistan, etc.), ignorant, obnoxious bravado (Geo. W. Bush, the Iraq War, etc.) and sticking our collective heads in sand, at minimum.

Pass the popcorn.

Links:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_america
http://captainamerica.marvel.com/

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

On the launch of a "solar dynamics observatory"

In case you missed it, there is a solar dynamics observatory going up into space today, thanks to NASA--and our tax dollars--that is going to study the sun for the next 5 years, inside and out, literally.

And while I find this fascinating, I can't help but also think that, between this new instrument, the Hubble telescope already looking into the far reaches of space and the Hadron collider in Switerland, looking back to the original, creating "big bang" that made us all, the universe, really, that somewhere we don't have one hell of a lot of information out there on this crazy universe of ours.

I mean, think of it. The Hubble alone is collecting so much data NASA said they can't keep up with it.

What if they found there was no God?

Or what if they found there was--but she/he was unlike what anyone had proposed to date? (Which, after all, is highly possible and even likely).

So it makes me want to propose two thoughts:

1) What if the US government learned something particularly incredible about us, about the universe--and then could not/would not tell us?

I think it makes a great story line.

Which brings me to my 2nd point:

2) Wouldn't this make a terrific sci-fi movie?

If only Rod Serling were alive.

"Calling Mr. Spielberg..."

Saturday, May 30, 2009

A "Twilight Zone" someone should make

A "Twilight Zone" episode I'd like to see because it would be fun and provocative and, hopefully, educational for all of us is one where the director/producer assume, to begin, that the universe is huge (as it is, of course) and that there is life out there.

In fact, there's life on multiple planets. Different life forms on each.

And guess what?

They're all advanced.

And they all know each other.

And they communicate with each other and have incredible transportation between one another's planets that we can only dream of.

And they have all their energy and production and pollution (there isn't any) and all other "problems" worked out and all of them live in what we'd consider to be Nirvana ("heaven" for the Americans out there reading this).

They all live in these perfect worlds. They're perfect unto themselves and each one works completely.

And the reason is because on each planet and in the rest of the universe, so the movie goes, they've all learned to cooperate with one another.

Everyone on every living system is educated (as educated as they need and/or want to be) and healthy (they have universal health care in all situations because they accept it should be a right instead of a privilege) and they share all land and resources--everything.

And the thing is, they've been aware of our little green planet earth for millenia.

And guess what?

To all of them--all the "perfect worlds" and perfect being out there--we are the "white trash" of the universe.

Think about it.

We view each other with only suspicion--individually and collectively.

All we do is fight each other. Heck, there are whole races that have spent hundreds and thousands of years just fighting and killing each other (e.g., Jews/Gentiles/Islamists, Catholics/Protestants, Catholics and everyone else, Muslims and virtually everyone else, etc., etc.).

We don't share anything. We pollute everything. We don't work together on enough things AT ALL.

Heck, all the "big religions" have fought and died and killed each other for thousands of years over what they all perceive to be the "holy ground".

We let people create artificial entities (read: corporations) just so those same entities can exploit people--both their own workers and their "clients" or customers. We let those same corporations kill other people so they can get natural resources like oil or whatever (e.g., Nigeria right now, etc.).

We let certain people and groups become obscenely wealthy (in terms of money and goods) (e.g., the Cote du Zur in Southern France and too many other wealthy enclaves around the world), but we let many more millions starve or die from disease or just be killed for one insane reason or another, rather than help them.

And we're okay with this system.

So in the movie, we see all these planets and beings and civilizations and societies getting along and existing and having a beautiful, big old time--but they merely observe and avoid us, here on planet Earth, until such time as we realize we're all in this together and that we could feed, clothe, house and nurse each other if we would but choose to cooperate, share and help one another.

Instead we exploit the planet and each other, as much and frequently as possible.

And we think we're civilized and intelligent.