Tag Archive: Science fiction


BRAVE NEW WORLD by Aldous Huxley (1931)

huxleyIn his foreword, Aldous Huxley wrote that “A book about the future can interest us only of its proficies look as though they might conceivably come true”. Unfortunately for us, his nightmarish visions are increasingly coming to seem all too accurate.

Almost half a century before the birth of the world’s first ‘test tube’ baby, Huxley imagined how “newly unbottled babes” might be used to “improve on nature” by replacing the need for parents and what he provocatively defined as the “appalling dangers of family life”. In the ‘new world’ human genes are manipulated to produce docile and efficient workers and consumers.

The promise of sexual freedom and the encouragement of promiscuity serves as a compensation for the absence of political or economic liberty. Dumb movies known as ‘feelies’ have an additional sedating function while a legal drug called ‘soma’ is taken to avert any lingering gloomy thoughts. Continue reading

WALKAWAY – a novel by Cory Doctorow (Head Of Zeus, 2017)

220px-walkaway_28a_cory_doctorow_novel29_book_coverWhat is it that derails dreams of utopia and resigns us to the notion that the future is fated to turn out dystopian? Cory Doctorow‘s ambitious and entertaining novel doesn’t provide any definitive answers to this plight but asks plenty of thought-provoking questions.

The problems of the soul-corroding world of work in the modern world are vividly described by Doctorow as one character  remembers a daily routine consisting of “early mornings crunched on meaningless deadlines with the urgency of a car-crash for no discernible reason”.

Cory Doctorow poses the question : If another world to this is possible, what would it be like? His answer comes in the form of a utopian vision of a “better nation” which takes the sociopolitical aims of the Occupy Movement to their logical conclusion. Continue reading

WALDO – REALITY TV

THE WALDO MOMENT by Charlie Brooker

(Season 2 Episode 3 of The Black Mirror – Channel 4 Television)

Waldo - the future face of politics?

Waldo – the future face of politics?

Waldo is an animated bear. His colour, like his jokes are blue. He appears on a late night satirical ‘youth’ TV show where he specialises in exposing the pomposity and/or ignorance of public figures.

If this sounds a bit Brass Eye to you, then it will come as no surprise to learn that it is based on an idea by Brooker and Chris Morris while working on the sit-com Nathan Barley.

Waldo is voiced by Jamie Salter (Daniel Rigby) a failed comedian whose personal life has hit rock bottom. The venom he pours into the character strikes a chord with the public. As a publicity stunt, Waldo stands as a candidate in a by-election in a safe Tory seat. Waldo’s rants go viral on You Tube and the possibly of him (‘it’) winning a seat in parliament becomes a real possibility. Continue reading

DOWN BY THE JETTY WITH THE 12 MONKEYS

LA JETÉE directed by Chris Marker (France, 1962)
12 MONKEYS directed by Terry Gilliam (USA, 1995)

Chris Marker's The Jettygilliam's 12 monkeysIf you have a good story, you don’t need elaborate sets or A-list actors. This is probably why most Science Fiction works better in books or graphic novels than in big budget movies. These two movies illustrate this point perfectly.

They each tell the same story but in very different ways. In both, a time traveller is sent on a mission from the future to find the origin of a deadly virus that has all but wiped out the human race. Continue reading

Octavia E. Butler was a six-foot tall lesbian who described herself as “a pessimist if I’m not careful, a feminist always, a Black, a quiet egoist, a former Baptist, and an oil and water combination of ambition laziness, insecurity, certainly and drive”.

She spoke of perpetually feeling to be an outsider and the fact that she wrote mainly science fiction didn’t endear her to the literary establishment.

Sci-fi is to fiction what heavy metal is to music – continually sneered at by critics and rarely perceived as cool or trendy but ,for all that, a genre that remains hugely popular.

I’m ashamed to admit that I have only recently discovered Butler; I chanced upon the collection Bloodchild And Other Stories in my local library while looking for a book by Margaret Atwood.

This contains just five stories which turned out to be the sum total of Butler’s short fiction; in the preface she explains this unproductive output: “The truth is, I hate short story writing. Trying to do it has taught me much more about frustration and despair than I ever wanted to know”. Continue reading