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Posts tagged as “Science-Fiction”

Setup

Given that I’m in the middle of writing, or rather rambling, about spoilers (for an upcoming post), I didn’t really have time today to come up with some deep, great, thought-provoking content for you.
I deeply apologize.

Anyhow, there has been a lot of interesting news in the last few days.

For starters, Bryan Singer is set to direct Battlestar Galactica for the big-screen.
Before you ask, this version won’t have anything to do with the current Ron D. Moore canon from the Syfy show.
Universal owns the rights so they can do whatever.
I’m assuming they think they are holding a million-dollar franchise they can reboot whenever they want to make tons of cash (think Superman or Batman).

And since we’re on the subject of Bryan Singer, The Usual Suspect‘s screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie is going to pen the Wolverine sequel set in Japan. The story will be based off Chris Claremont & Frank Miller’s graphic novel.
Lots of work for McQuarrie. Indeed, as you might also recall, he’s also currently working on an NBC show, Persons Unknown.

The X-Files‘ Frank Spotnitz has meanwhile a few new opportunities set at HBO and at FX.
He has indeed penned two futuristic drama pilots that could move into series (though with the current track-record held by HBO, that’s going to be tough).

The first potential show is named Humanitas and is a medical-thriller where advances in medicine have become so massive that doctors face everyday dilemmas while trying to fight against potential pandemics.
Sounds like Medical Investigation meets ReGenesis.

The other project is based on Robert Silverberg’s 1970/1971 novel, The World Inside. The story is set in 2381 where the human population has reached over 75 billion people. And where urban centers (in this case a massive city-tower named Urban Monads aka Urbmon) have been built to control all the hate going on around (all wars and crimes have been eliminated).
Also, bonus points, since we’re talking of an HBO show: there’s lots of sex.
Here’s what Wikipedia has to say about the rest of the story:

The Urbmon population is supported by the conversion of all of the Earth’s habitable land area not taken up by Urbmons, to agriculture. The theoretical limit of the population supported by this arrangement is estimated to be 200 billion. The farmers live a very different lifestyle, with strict birth control. Farmers trade their produce for technology and the two societies rarely have direct contact; even their languages are mutually unintelligible.
The Urbmons are a world of total sexual freedom where men are expected to engage in “night walking”; a woman refusing an invitation for sex is considered a crime. In this world it is a blessing to have children: most people are married at 12 and parents at 14. Just thinking of controlling families is considered a faux pas. Privacy has been dispensed with due to the limited area. Because the need to be outdoors and to travel has been eliminated, thoughts of wanderlust are considered perverse.
[…]Although great effort is spent to maintain a stable society, the Urban Monad lifestyle causes mental illness in a small percentage of people, and this fate befalls the book’s two main characters. “Social engineers” reprogram those who are approaching an unacceptable level of behavior.
Given the extremes of life in the Urban Monads, law enforcement and the concept of justice employ a zero tolerance policy. There are usually no trials, and punishment is swift – anyone who threatens the stability of the Urbmon society (a “flippo”) is forcibly removed by being thrown into a shaft that terminates in the building’s power generator. This gives one of the book’s characters the idea that humanity has been selectively bred for life within the Urbmons.

Frank Spotnitz is, on this one, co-writing the script with The L Word‘s Adam Rapp.

As for his FX show, named Arc, it centers around a Jason Bourne-type character trying to fit into normal life.
Burn Notice anyone?

(not) Promising

As I’m slowly but surely getting back on my feet, I’m catching up on the news of the world.

First, you know how I love to continuously point out how I called the 2009 3-D emergence.
Well now Comic-Con has announced its first ever 3-D panels, including one for James Cameron’s Avatar, and another by Disney showing footage from A Christmas Carol, Alice in Wonderland and Tron.

In other news, Ryan Reynolds is set to star as DC’s Green Lantern movie adaptation, becoming the first actor to both star as a DC and Marvel superhero.

Also, a trailer has been released for ABC’s upcoming new “Sci-Fi” show, Defying Gravity.
The pitch intrigued me (an 8-person team of astronauts travelling through the solar system) as well as the fact that it is an internationally produced show, which means in a way international cast.
But ultimately the show doesn’t look that promising, it just seems like Grey’s Anatomy in space.

And finally, a quick update regarding the 2×2 Russian network case about South Park censoring.
We’ve seen how a case to revoke the channel’s license was dismissed, and now footage from the show has apparently been cut as it mocked Vladimir Putin.
Yay free speech.

Sigh-Fi

Back to news posts today with a few info:

Screenwriter/God Tim Minear is writing a TV remake/adaptation of the 1988 movie Alien Nation which spawned in the 90s a FOX show.

The new “Alien Nation” would include a mythology that evolves over time and will also touch on some of the issues of the day, such as the immigrant experience and how society integrates an incoming culture.

Minear said he’s looking forward to incorporating a mix of all the different kinds of series he’s written in the past.

“It’s genre mixed with procedural mixed with funny and mixed with big, giant scary,” Minear said. “I love serialized stuff, but this is also a cop franchise. That ‘Starsky and Hutch’/’Lethal Weapon’ buddy cop comedy is absent from TV right now.”

Minear is currently busy outlining the “Alien Nation” script and mapping out the project’s mythology. The new “Alien Nation” will likely take place in the Pacific Northwest, and will take place about 20 years after the first ship of aliens – who have been banished as slaves – crash lands into Earth.

By the time the show begins, some time in the 2020s, the alien population has multiplied from a few thousand to 3.5 million. And much of the “newcomers” live their own segregated existence, in what Minear compares to the North African ghettos in France.

“You can take (the original ‘Alien Nation’) a step forward and really do a show that encompasses the clash of civilizations, and the idea of a ghettoized minority,” he said. “You can touch on racism, terrorism, assimilation, immigration. And there’s room for satire.”

I’m assuming it’s going to get pitched to SciFi Syfy.

Speaking of, another sci-fi show is coming to ABC, and this one is interesting.
I present to you Defying Gravity.
Starring Ron Livingston, Laura Harris and Christina Cox, this drama is actually internationally produced and is “also set to air on Canada’s CTV, Germany’s ProSieben and the BBC”. The brains behind the show is non other than an ABC alumni, James Parriott, a former exec on both Grey’s Anatomy and Ugly Betty, and Michael Edelstein, from Desperate Housewives.
The show will center around an eight-person team of astronauts travelling through the solar system in a mysterious 6-year mission.

After Lost with Bad Twin in 2006, another ABC show is getting its own tie-in “ARG-like” book: Castle.
Meanwhile, the ratings for HBO’s Hung were pretty huge.
And no I’m not gonna do a lame pun.