RE: My Top 10 Sci-Fi Movies
June 13, 2016 at 3:45 am
(This post was last modified: June 13, 2016 at 3:46 am by Mechaghostman2.)
(June 13, 2016 at 2:06 am)Alex K Wrote:(June 12, 2016 at 7:30 pm)ignoramus Wrote: I think I loved the martian as much or better than interstellar.Ok I'm going to rant a bit. Interstellar isn't a bad film. But - could have been much better.
In hindsight I can't really grog the feeley-lovey BS in interstellar. Loving father connects to his daughter's bookshelf via spacetime rift in order to save the world. As a science nerd, this to me is simply one more scifi movie ruined by liberal artsy types who couldn't bear the thought of having a film about cool spacetime phenomena without it all being a heavy-handed metaphor for human feefees. The no-nonsense plot of the Martian is a breath of fresh air in comparison. Don't get me wrong, a good space movie can absolutely reflect on the human condition, and love, and loss and all that. But why can't you let dead cold space simply be dead cold space - why does the wormhole have to be a daddy-loveotron. That's BS by people lacking the imagination to do anything but love stories. That's the same reason why Lem hated the new Solaris movie - because the director and writers were too dumb to understand the astonishing philosophical point of the novel and made a love story out of it.
I kinda liked that they made scientists as just more than these frizzy haired guys in lab coats that talk about data and nothing else. I like how they made them human characters that had families, and so on. We have enough science fiction that is cold and dry just talking about the science stuff. Now we have a sci-fi movie that does that while also writing in some appeals to emotions. It allows for a bit more depth in the characters, which allows for more than just geeks to enjoy and relate to the film.