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The Aesthetics of Ambivalence: Rethinking Science Fiction Film in the Age of Electronic (Re) Production
Hardback

The Aesthetics of Ambivalence: Rethinking Science Fiction Film in the Age of Electronic (Re) Production

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Brooks Landon’s book concerns science fiction film and, toward the end, almost becomes SF in its provocative speculations on the future of such film. His study is really two books in one. The first part argues that most criticism of SF film has been inadequate because it is based on literary rather than film-specific standards. The second argues that SF film will soon become either obsolete or be totally transformed through new computer technology. What ties them together is the author’s concern with what might be called the SF ethos or SF thinking , so that science fiction can be seen to encompass not only SF in print, film, TV and comic books, but also has become all-pervasive in contemporary culture. At present, Landon argues that SF film may have exhausted itself as a genre but new electronic technology - computer animation, interactive narratives and virtual reality - promises to radically transform SF film and possibly create a synthesis of the divergent trends of SF literature and film. Production technology has become the new story, one more interesting than the narrative it ostensibly supports. Landon believes we are at the threshold of a new age, similar to the pioneer years of filmmaking a hundred years ago.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
ABC-CLIO
Country
United States
Date
30 August 1992
Pages
224
ISBN
9780313256875

Brooks Landon’s book concerns science fiction film and, toward the end, almost becomes SF in its provocative speculations on the future of such film. His study is really two books in one. The first part argues that most criticism of SF film has been inadequate because it is based on literary rather than film-specific standards. The second argues that SF film will soon become either obsolete or be totally transformed through new computer technology. What ties them together is the author’s concern with what might be called the SF ethos or SF thinking , so that science fiction can be seen to encompass not only SF in print, film, TV and comic books, but also has become all-pervasive in contemporary culture. At present, Landon argues that SF film may have exhausted itself as a genre but new electronic technology - computer animation, interactive narratives and virtual reality - promises to radically transform SF film and possibly create a synthesis of the divergent trends of SF literature and film. Production technology has become the new story, one more interesting than the narrative it ostensibly supports. Landon believes we are at the threshold of a new age, similar to the pioneer years of filmmaking a hundred years ago.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
ABC-CLIO
Country
United States
Date
30 August 1992
Pages
224
ISBN
9780313256875