Tuesday, December 30, 2014

12 Monkeys: Moral Sacrifice


12 Monkeys premieres Friday, January 16 at 9pm|8c

The stars of 12 Monkeys -- Aaron Stanford, Amanda Schull, Kirk Acevedo, Barbara Sukowa -- discuss the influence of fate and morality in the show. 

Based on the 1995 film directed by Terry Gilliam, "12 Monkeys" follows the journey of a time traveler from the post-apocalyptic future who is on a mission to eradicate the source of a deadly plague. The series stars Aaron Stanford, Amanda Schull, Noah Bean, and Kirk Acevedo. Additional cast members include Tom Noonan as the enigmatic face of the Army of the 12 Monkeys, and Emily Hampshire as Jennifer Goines, a dangerous and unstable mental patient.

Monday, December 29, 2014

Sci-Fi Classic Book Review: Planet of the Apes


There are SPOILERS ahead, so if you have not read the book or watch the movies, turn away now.  You have been warned.  

Author: Pierre Boulle

Planet of the Apes was written by Pierre Boulle and published in 1963 in French as La Planète des singes which translates into Monkey Planet.  Mr. Boulle also penned The Bridge over the River Kwai.  Pierre Boulle’s biography is as interesting as his novels. 

According to Wikipedia, at the outbreak of World War II, Boulle enlisted with the French army in French Indochina. After German troops occupied France, he joined the Free French Mission in Singapore.  Boulle served as a secret agent under the name Peter John Rule and helped the resistance movement in China, Burma, and French Indochina. In 1943, he was captured by the Vichy France loyalists on the Mekong River and was subjected to severe hardship and forced labor. He was later made a chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur and decorated with the Croix de Guerre and the Médaille de la Résistance.  After the war, Boulle used his war experiences in writing Le Pont de la rivière Kwaï (1952; The Bridge over the River Kwai), which became a multi-million-copy worldwide bestseller, winning the French "Prix Sainte-Beuve".

In 1963, following several other reasonably successful novels, Pierre Boulle published his other famous novel, La Planète des singes (Planet of the Apes). The novel was highly praised and made into a successful movie.  He also wrote a sequel script for the film titled Planet of the Men. The producers of the original film turned his script down and named the second film, Beneath the Planet of the Apes. This sequel, which was released in 1970, was also very successful. This film was followed by Escape from the Planet of the Apes in 1971. Then came Conquest of the Planet of the Apes in 1972. The last of the sequels was Battle for the Planet of the Apes in 1973. Pierre Boulle died in Paris, France on January, 30 1994, at age 82.

Summary

One of my favorite Sci-fi movies of all time is Planet of the Apes (1968 version) and I like most of the subsequent movies that followed.  But, Planet of the Apes is still in my top five best Sci-fi movies.  I even enjoyed 2001 remake even though it lack the social drama of the original.  While watching Planet of the Apes (1968 version) again over the New Years Holiday I decided to track down the original novel and see which movie followed the original source more closely.  Both the original movie and the remake take ideas from the novel but the novel goes in many different directions than either movie dared to. 

In the novel, it is the year 2500 and 3 men head off into space towards a super-gigantic star named Betelgeuse.  Betelgeuse is sun that is three to four times greater than our sun.  According to the novel the sun is three hundred light years away and with a discovery of a new drive system it will take 2 years of travel time but 350 years will pass on Earth.  So a round from the Earth to Betelgeuse and back, almost 800 years would have passed away on Earth.  This pretty typical of 1960’s Sci-fi. 

The novel follows a journalist by the name of Ulysse Merou.  When they reach Betelgeuse they discover a planet that is eerily similar to Earth and name it Soror, which is Latin for Sister.  The next parts are similar to the 1968 Movie.  The explorers discover humans that are closer to animals in their mentalities and social interactions.  The humans have no ability to speak or reason and just exist day to day. Ulysse becomes attracted to one of the females and names her Nova.  Soon after, the human tribe and Ulysse are rounded up and captured by Apes.  Not just any Apes, but Apes that have all the same abilities that humans did on Earth.  It is a world turned upside down.

Here is where is novel diverges from either movie.  Yes, all your favorite Apes are well represented.  Zira is the understanding scientist with a big heart.  Dr. Zaius is old guard scientist who can’t overcome his prejudices towards human.  The only character that is somewhat different is Cornelius.  He is portrayed as new generation of forward thinking scientist but becomes afraid when he discovers the truth behind Ape evolution.  He also has ambition with regards to his career which causes him to do some unscrupulous things.

The big change in the novel is the Ape society.  They are much more advanced than either movie portrays.  They are at the 1960’s technology level, Apes drive cars, live in residences and have even sent a satellite into orbit (with a human as pilot).  Ulysse is put into a cage and is studied by the Ape scientists.  Through a daring plan he does win his freedom and is allowed to live as an equal member of Ape society for a time.  Eventually, Dr. Zaius and his views towards humans win the day among the other Ape citizens and they become distrustful of humans.  Ulysse and Nova are forced to flee the planet in an ingenious ploy.     

Ulysse and Nova return to Earth some 800 years later only to discover a big surprise.  Think of the 2001 remake ending rather than the 1968 ending.  There is also another semi-surprise at the end, but you will need to read the novel to discover this for yourself. 

What I liked:   

I really like old school Sci-fi novels.  The lesson behind the novel is usually more important that many other elements, such as character development, dialogue, etc.  Mr. Boulle wrote this novel as a comment upon modern society, a sort of role reversal or how a person’s viewpoint changes when standing in someone else’s shoes.  This is what Sci-fi does best, makes you think and challenges your beliefs in an entertaining manner.   No other genre does it better. 

What I didn’t like:   

The novel is far from prefect.  At times it is choppy and uneven in its story telling. 

Last word:  

This novel spawned one of the greats of Sci-fi entertainment that has earned the right to be considered a classic.  

                                                         My Rating

     
 

Friday, December 26, 2014

Book Review: Death with Interruptions

Author: Jose Saramago

This was a difficult decision and I debated whether I should post a review of book that I couldn’t finish.  In the end, I decided to let you know what I thought about the book and you can make the decision whether it’s for you or not.  

The reason I decided to consider reading this novel was that I discovered he had written the novel that movie Blindness was based on.  I really enjoyed many aspects of the movie, especially how one simple crisis such as everyone going blind would crash our entire civilization.  How some people retain their humanity while others revert back to their animal instincts.       

Death with Interruptions has an interesting premise, a sort of Death takes holiday story but taken seriously and a debate about the real world consequences.  Mr. Saramago’s story takes place in fictional country where people suddenly stop dying.  All the surrounding countries people continue to die.  Mr. Saramago’s explores how this affects every aspect of society. 

The novel was translated from Portuguese and I not sure if this was the problem or not.  Basically, to me, it was unreadable.  The story itself is not confusing but the writing style is impossible to follow and gives me a headache after 15 minutes. 

Dust Jacket Summary

On the first day of the new year, no one dies. This of course causes consternation among politicians, religious leaders, morticians, and doctors. Among the general public, on the other hand, there is initially celebration—flags are hung out on balconies, people dance in the streets. They have achieved the great goal of humanity: eternal life. Then reality hits home—families are left to care for the permanently dying, life-insurance policies become meaningless, and funeral parlors are reduced to arranging burials for pet dogs, cats, hamsters, and parrots.

Death sits in her chilly apartment, where she lives alone with scythe and filing cabinets, and contemplates her experiment: What if no one ever died again? What if she, death with a small d, became human and were to fall in love?

What I liked:   

It is only 238 pages.  It has a cool cover. 

What I didn’t like

As I stated earlier, the story is not overly complex, it was the writing style that did me in.  Mr. Saramago used what I like to call “run on sentence paragraphs.”  Most of his sentences were as long as a paragraph and littered with a ton of commas.  In Portugal, the writers must get paid by the comma instead of by word because there are at least 20 to 30 in each paragraph.  Instead of using quotations, guess what is used, if you said commas, then you win the prize.  One sentence could contain an entire conversation separated by commas and I eventually would lose track of who was speaking.  

For example, I picked a sentence at random to give a taste (I won’t reprint the entire paragraph because it ran for 6 pages):

For two weeks, the plan worked more or less perfectly, but, after that, some of vigilantes started complaining that they were receiving threatening phone calls, warning them that, if they wanted to live a nice quiet life, they had better turn a blind eye to the clandestine traffic of the terminally ill, and even close their eyes completely if they didn’t want to add their own corpse to the number with whose surveillance they had been charged.

This is one of the shorter sentences.  Maybe, it’s that he adds way too many thoughts in sentence or reverses his idea within sentences.  Either way, I did not enjoy this novel and to me it was unreadable.  Which is strange, Cormac McCarthy uses a similar style of writing but I don’t ever remember getting lost or confused. 

Last word

This book is not for everyone and as always, I advise that you read it yourself and form your own opinions.  Let’s put it this way, The New York Times, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, John Updike, The Washington Post, LA Times all liked it and Publishers Weekly gave it a starred review, so to each his own.  

                                                             My Rating