Feb 122013
 

According to Deadline.com, Phillip K. Dick’s novel The Man In The High Castle is scheduled to be transformed into a four-part miniseries for the Syfy Channel. The series is to be produced by none other than Ridley Scott (Blade Runner, Prometheus) and X-files writer Frank Spotnitz. According to the source the miniseries has been in development hell since 2010 when production started at the BBC. Perhaps because of the fact that the story is set in America it would indeed find better prospects with the Syfy Channel. No release date has been given. As for Ridley Scott’s involvement, he is following the example of several directors with directing the pilot episodes of new series. So it is unclear whether he will direct the entire mini-series.

As for the original story…

I have read The Man In The High Castle a great many years ago, and though I liked it I found the historic revisionist aspects to be under par compared to the works of Harry Turtledove and Robert Harris (The Fatherland). A lot of the criticism can be explained by the fact that the book was written so relatively soon after WW2 during the height of the cold-war. The novel is unusual in that it has a very independently minded female protagonist who doesn’t eschew using violence. I can only speculate who may play the character of Juliana Frink. Perhaps Rachel Weisz might be a good choice. I also remember that the storylines of the male protagonists Tagomi and Frank Frink remained frustratingly unresolved. Because historical revisionism is involved the story is light on the sci-fi aspects. Essentially it is Mad Men meets Sliders. Which sounds fantastic!

More on ‘The Man in the High Castle’ as it comes in…

The man in the high castle cover - Philip K. Dick

The man in the high castle cover – Philip K. Dick

Source; http://io9.com/5983415/syfy-plans-a-miniseries-of–philip-k-dicks-the-man-in-the-high-castle

Jun 262012
 

Blade Runner - Harrison Ford as Deckard

Today, 30 years ago, Blade Runner hit the cinema’s in the US, though its performance at the box-office was lackluster it certainly shined as an example of thought-provoking science fiction. Ridley Scott’s movie had a difficult start in production. The movie is of course based Philip K. Dick’s ‘Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep’, after its publication there was much interest in producing a film but none really managed to ferment. Strangely enough Gregory Peck had a role in keeping the project alive before it was optioned by producer Michael Deely who tasked Hampton Fancher to write a script, after many rewrites and even a second writer taking over the job the script landed at the Ladd Company where it finally was made into the Blade Runner we know today. If your interested in the difficult history of Blade Runner, read Paul M. Sammon’s Future Noir: The Making of Blade Runner, it gives an accurate picture of the cutthroat world of the movie business in Hollywood.

Blade Runner - Zhora - topless nude boobs

As for Blade Runner itself, is it still relevant? It think so.. One of the challenges of today is the ongoing encroachment of Artificial Intelligence, and it is not the fear that one day they would either take over the world or that we would become so feeble for relying on them, but that without knowing how or seeing the moral dangers that we will create artificial beings that have true feelings, emotions and even a soul while treating them as disposable machines with a ’4-year lifespan’. To me that has always been the true message of Blade Runner, the message that was executed so deftly with realistic sci-fi instead of ray guns and unrealistic utopian worlds.

Blade Runner - Eyes, just eyes!

Now I can only hope that the rumored sequel to Blade Runner will either keep that message or create a new one just as good.

Kane2026.

Blade Runner - Flying car

Dec 012011
 

The buzz surrounding Ridley Scott’s prometheus is definitely increasing. The last weeks or so has seen the revelation of murky set pictures and trailer. Suffice it to say Twentieth Century Fox was not amused by the leak of either material, complaining the piss-poor quality of the trailer would be a let down.

The real version of the trailer has been promised to be released soon in all it’s 3d glory, until that time we have to make do we these high res stills from the set of Prometheus. Here too is a snippet from a press release….

Ridley Scott, director of “Alien” and “Blade Runner,”  returns to the  genre he helped define. With PROMETHEUS, he creates a  groundbreaking  mythology, in which a team of explorers discover a clue  to the origins  of mankind on Earth, leading them on a thrilling journey  to the darkest  corners of the universe. There, they must fight a  terrifying battle to  save the future of the human race.

As for the pictures…

 

Aug 182011
 

IGN.com has an interesting story, apparently Ridley Scott is working towards Blade Runner 2, a sequel to the 1982 original starring Harrison Ford. Though rumors first started to seem about two years ago on a Blade runner sequel things took a turn when Prometheus was announced, the long awaited prequel to Alien. Now it would appear Blade Runner 2 is back in the works. I still think the original is the best sci-fi movie ever so my expectations for the sequel are mixed. On the one hand I would very much like to see Ridley’s hand in a sublime sequel but on the other hand the original could be polluted by a weak sequel.

In the coming weeks expect to hear more rumors about Blade Runner 2, which will by then include a in-depth commentary on how a sequel can succeed to eclipse the original. Prometheus will of course also be discussed as will be the news on Mute (Duncan Jones’s cyberpunk movie).

Perhaps they will call this time, the golden age of neo-cypberpunk.