Dec. 28th, 2008

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The Day After, 1983, USA   DIRECTED BY NICHOLAS MEYER
The Day After has been described as the most educational two hours of Ronald Reagan's presidency, as this film persuaded him to soften his belligerent stance towards the Soviet Union. He even mailed Nicholas Meyer to tell him as much, and there rests the best testament on the usefulness of speculative fiction. Science fiction it is not, strictly speaking; though it shares many of the elements of a typical post-armageddon movie (something like Panic in Year Zero that was derived from Ward Moore's 'Lot' stories) the intent here was always to inform, not to entertain. In that respect it's more often compared with the BBC's Threads, the unforgettably visceral rendition of the same idea. The Day After depicts the lives of some ordinary families after a Russian nuclear strike on an ICBM silo outside Kansas City; it has a good cast with the only real star at the time being Jason Robards; also there's Steve Guttenberg, John Lithgow, and Bibi Besch (who had played the mother of Kirk's son the previous year in Meyer's Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan), though the most understated and magnetic performance is undoubtedly from John Cullum. Some of the effects are memorable with the best involving matte paintings, though the animated sequences of mushroom clouds and people being vapourised unfortunately now look rather dated. As a made-for-TV film, ABC gave Meyer endless hassles with their imposed and over-sensitive studio editing, all of which made him vow never to work in television ever again, but what he finally wrought was the sort of film that ought to be required viewing for anyone entering American government, a film that quietly screams at you in a very dignified sort of way.

2008 books

Dec. 28th, 2008 07:19 pm
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85 books read this year, of which 51 were SF – a much higher percentage than last year. It's been a busier year than previously in other areas of my life which has cut down my reading of actual books (and I still haven't got round to Matter), but on the other hand my online short story reading has gone up exponentially. I'd guess that all this accounts for falling well short of 100 this year.

Top 10 of 2008 (alphabetically):
Martin Amis, Heavy Water
Bruce Chatwin, The Viceroy of Ouidah
Ted Chiang, Stories of Your Life and Others
Thomas M. Disch, Camp Concentration
Graham Greene, Brighton Rock
Ken MacLeod, The Night Sessions
Ian McDonald, Brasyl
Walter M. Miller, A Canticle for Leibowitz
George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four
Christopher Priest, The Dream Archipelago

I'm not going to pick a favourite of the year because that'd entail some pointless hair-splitting between Brighton Rock, A Canticle for Leibowitz and Nineteen Eighty-Four. Two of these were re-reads, but all three were equally memorable as probably being the whole point behind the invention of the typewriter.

All books, plus review links... )

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