Ender's Game, a review.
I have not read Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game, or any other book he has
written. But I am aware that Ender’s Game is one of the iconic science fiction books.
I am also aware the Card has controversial views on homosexuality. But if I was
going to boycott a film or book because I did not agree with the personal views
of its writer, actor or director, I would not be reading or watching much. I certainly
wouldn’t be watching any movies involving Charlton Heston, Roman Polanski,
Bruce Willis or even, until a recent change, Harrison Ford. This is why I don’t
read much about the lives of authors of books I like. Otherwise I end up
reading that Margaret Atwood is actually very conservative, perhaps even right-wing.
When I go to writer’s festivals I go to learn about writing, not about the
author. On to the review.
I read a
review of Ender’s Game before I went and saw the movie. That review started by
saying the main character, Andrew “Ender” Wiggin, in the original book was only
six years old, but he is sixteen in the movie. A decade of difference in age should
make the character entirely different: all that life experience, all that loss
of innocence. I imagined fans of the book screaming their dismay.
The movie
begins about fifty years in the future on an Earth that was previously attacked
by aliens, the insect like Formics. Only the heroics of airforce pilot Mazer
Rackham saved Earth from falling to the invaders. Ever since that invasion, the
militaries of Earth have been preparing to defend against another attack by the
Formics. To do this they have created a large force of drone spaceships.
The drones
are remote piloted by teenagers. We are told that teenagers are used because
they are quick to assimilate information and try different strategies. Ender is
recruited by the military to be one of the commanders of these drone pilots. He
is sent to an academy on a space station.
Ender is a
loner and outcast and has to win over fellow recruits and fight off aggressive competitors.
The movie began to feel like Hogwarts set in space. And I am no Harry Potter
fan, but I found Ender’s trials and confrontations interesting. Ender had a way
of ending disputes for good, which is the reason he was recruited.
The film
ends with a twist that dramatically increases the gravity of everything that
has gone before.
I enjoyed
the film and the questions it raises, such as can innocence be used as a
weapon? How far would humanity go to protect itself against potential invaders?
And what if we are totally unable to communicate with the first aliens we come
into contact with?
I did not
find anything homophobic about the film. I think Orson Scott Card should take
some advice from Ender who wanted to try and communicate with the aliens, and
try to communicate with the gay community. He might find they are not that
different from him.
Since
watching the movie I have discovered that Ender’s Game and its sequel Speaker
for the Dead both won the Hugo and Nebula Awards, in 1985 and 1986
respectively. I also discovered that Orson Scott Card is a Mormon, so his views
on homosexuality are probably dictated by his religious beliefs, which is not unusual.
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