2012's Science Fiction in Review.
Science
Fiction in 2012.
Science
fiction has not had a great year in television and movies. No Inception or Moon
was released this year. No Torchwood made it on to the small
screen and Doctor Who mainly sucked again. But the lack of quality on the
big and small screen was more than made up for by what I was reading. I read
some great science fiction this year.
On the Idiot Box.
Even
though I have access to the sci-fi channel on Foxtel, I was thinking there was
very little new science fiction on the small screen this year. That was until I
thought about it, it was more a matter of their being anything to rival Torchwood or The X-Files.
This
year I watched:
·
Alcatraz
·
Terra Nova
·
Doctor Who
·
Warehouse 13
·
Alphas
·
Fringe
·
Revolution
·
Falling Skies
·
Caprica
·
And
a DVD of The Event.
Of
those shows I was impressed by Caprica, Fringe and, surprisingly, Alphas.
Fringe episodes were consistently strong as they
developed a story revolving around a parallel Earth and the attempts to destroy
both Earths. The Fringe department is a near future version of the FBI. A
couple of Aussies occupy two out of the three lead roles.
Alphas has grown on me. It had a strange feel about
it when I started watching it, sort of, this is slightly off skew. It is about
a team of investigators with special, but not super, powers. One can see and hear
electronic signals, another has heightened senses, another can use her telekinesis
type skills to push people into doing what she wants. But all the characters
are troubled by their powers, they find it hard to fit in. And they are lead by
a stuttering psychologist who has no powers. The story lines became stronger
and the characters developed to be more than one dimensional x-men.
Caprica should have been supported by science
fiction fans who like themes to be explored and strong complex plots. But it
wasn’t, and was cancelled long before it could grow into one of the science
fiction greats. Caprica was basically a prequel to Battlestar Galactica. It slowly
explained how the cylons came into being and got religion. Caprica was my
favourite small screen show of the year.
Movies.
I
did not see a lot of science fiction films this year. They ones I saw included:
·
John Carter
·
The Dark Knight Rises
·
Melancholia
·
Prometheus
·
Never Let It Go
·
Looper
·
Total Recall
Melancholia was a surprise, a completely different end
of the world movie set on a large estate in England at a wedding reception. The
bride lacks enthusiasm for the wedding reception as she knows that the
approaching planet will not miss the Earth like scientists say it will. The
film has no riots, no guns, no religion, no panic, no violence.
I
enjoyed Looper, a time travel-film where a man has to kill his future
self or be killed himself. The film made me think, ie why was he killing all
those kids? But yay for thinking during a film.
Prometheus was easily the best film I saw this year. It
left me with lots of questions and things to speculate on. But I recently
watched it a second time and found it was nowhere near as puzzling as when I
first saw it. The only question I still have is why did the alien kill himself
at the start? Wasn’t there an easier way to blend his DNA into the planet’s
environment? Was he on Earth?
When
I saw Prometheus the first time I had such high expectations, with it being a
prequel to Alien and the greatest series of science fiction movies ever made. I
was expecting more horror too. And I think Charlize Theron was a bit of a
distraction because I expected her to have a greater role in what went on,
instead she was just a peripheral character.
I
found it interesting that the parasitical aliens - who Ripley in the earlier
movies was so keen to stop getting to earth and destroying it - had in fact
saved humanity by infecting the engineer aliens who were intent on depopulating
the Earth.
Books.
I
did not read a lot of books this year, but what I read was, for the most part,
very good. These are the science fiction books I read:
·
Machine Man - Max Barry
·
The Courier’s New Bicycle - Kim Westwood
·
The Pursuit of Miracles – George Turner
·
The Dervish House – Ian McDonald
·
Things we Didn’t See Coming – Steve Amsterdam
·
The Passage – Justin Cronin
·
Hydrogen Steel – KA Bedford
·
How to Live Safely In a Science Fictional Universe – Charles Yu
·
11-22-63 – Stephen King
·
Light, Touch Paper, Stand Clear – Edited by Edwina
Harvey
·
The Waterboys – Peter Docker.
Seven
of the eleven science fiction books I read were written by Australians. Only
one was an ebook. The standouts were The
Pursuit of Miracles, Things we Didn’t See Coming and The Passage.
The Pursuit of Miracles is a collection of
eight short stories by Australia’s best ever science fiction writer George
Turner. Three of the short stories were later turned into novels.
Things we Didn’t See Coming is also a set of
short stories, but they are all about the same character and in chronological
order. Each story has an ending or a situation that I didn’t see coming. The
environment is in turmoil throughout the stories as the main character tries to
better his life in a hostile future Australia.
The Passage is about an America devastated by monstrous
genetically engineered vampires. It is a compelling read as the story is told
from multiple viewpoints with flashbacks within flashbacks. Will the surviving
pockets of humanity be overrun by the estimated 63 million vampires in the US? I
will have to wait until I read its sequel The Twelve to find out.
The
Passage was my favourite novel of 2012. I loved the many complex characters and
the suspense.
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