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Science Fiction Genre

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Title: Science Fiction Genre


1
Science Fiction Genre
2
Typical Characteristics
  • Science Fiction Films are a version of fantasy
    films. They are usually scientific, visionary,
    comic-strip-like, and imaginative - complete with
    heroes, distant planets, impossible quests,
    improbable settings, fantastic places, great dark
    and shadowy villains, futuristic technology,
    unknown and inexplicable forces, the dangerous
    nature of knowledge ('some things Man is not
    meant to know'), and extraordinary monsters
    ('things or creatures from space'), either
    created by misguided mad scientists or by nuclear
    havoc.

3
Sci-fi tales have a prophetic nature (they often
attempt to figure out or depict the future) and
are often set in a future time.
4
  • Commonly, sci-fi films express society's anxiety
    about technology and how to forecast and control
    the impact of technological and environmental
    change on contemporary society.

5
Science fiction often expresses the potential of
technology to destroy humankind through
Armageddon-like events, or through the loss of
personal individuality
6
The genre easily can overlap with horror films,
particularly when technology or alien life forms
become malevolent (e.g.Alien (1979))
7
The most memorable blending of science fiction
and horror was in Universal Studios' mad
scientist-doctor/monster masterpiece from
director James Whale, Frankenstein (1931), an
adaptation of Mary Shelley's novel.
8
In response to a growing interest in rocketry and
space exploration, feature-length space travel
films gained popularity in the early 1950s.
9
The Film
  • A Space Odyssey was based on the 1948 short story
    The Sentinel, by English science fiction author
    Arthur C. Clarke. Its screenplay was co-authored
    by Stanley Kubrick and Clarke from an expanded
    novelization . The films title was chosen
    because It was the first year of the new
    Millennium of the next century.

10
  • Kubrick's Science-Fiction Classic
  • The most celebrated, religious, and transcendent
    of all space films up to that time, it visualized
    space travel with incredible magnificence and
    seriousness. Kubrick's respectable, influential
    film was 2001 A Space Odyssey (1968) (with
    only 40 minutes of dialogue), based on Arthur C.
    Clarke's novel, which restored legitimacy to the
    science-fiction genre.

11
Music
  • Kubrick planned to have Alex North (who wrote the
    score for Kubrick's Spartacus (1960)) write a
    musical score especially for the film. During
    filming, Kubrick played classical music on the
    set to create the right mood. Delighted with the
    effect, he decided to use classical music in the
    finished product. North's score has subsequently
    been released as "Alex North's 2001".

12
1968
  • 2001 A Space Odyssey was released in 1968,
    coincidentally, at the height of the space race
    between the USSR and the US.

13
A Space Odyssey
  • This is an epic film containing more spectacular
    imagery and special effects than verbal dialogue.
  • The first spoken word is almost a half hour into
    the film, and theres less than 40 minutes of
    dialogue in the entire film.
  • All scenes in the film have either dialogue or
    music(or silence), but never both together.

14
Kubrick's film won the Oscar for Best Special
Effects in 1968.
15
  • After 2001's success, Hollywood produced many
    more space adventure films, including more
    serious science-fiction films, Robert Wise's Star
    Trek The Motion Picture (1979) and Robert
    Zemeckis' Contact (1997) with Jodie Foster
    examined further space journeys, contacts with
    alien life, and metaphysical questions about
    man's place in the universe.

16
Stanley Kubrick
17
  • According to Katharina Kubrick, Stanley Kubrick
    provided the breathing heard in the spacesuits.

18
The Film
  • According to Douglas Trumbell, the total footage
    shot was some 200 times the final length.
  • Co screenwriter Arthur Clarke said, If you
    understand 2001 completely, then we failed. They
    wanted to raise many more questions than the
    movie answered.

19
To make things creepier
  • Douglas Rain (the voice of HAL) never visited the
    set.

20
  • Much like the Wizard of Oz (1939) and Dark Side
    of the Moon, it is said that the Pink Floyd song
    Echoes from the album Meddle can be perfectly
    synchronized with the Jupiter Beyond the
    Infinite segment of the film.

21
Coincidence?
  • Incrementing each letter of "HAL" gives you
    "IBM". Arthur C. Clarke (co-screenwriter) claimed
    this was unintentional, and if he had noticed it
    before it was too late, he would have changed it.
    HAL stands for Heuristic ALgorithmic Computer.
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