Showing posts with label science fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science fiction. Show all posts

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Why People Read Science Fiction

By OCAL at clker.com
The science fiction reader is a thinker that likes extrapolation. The genre is full of projections into what the unknown future might be like scientifically in a fanciful context. The theoretical elements can be speculated from real science, or hypothesized physical laws.

This reader also likes adventure, action, and speculations about philosophical and political issues. This genre deals with those topics. Though many fans lean more towards hard, or soft sci-fi stories.

There are a lot of sub-genres in sifi. This factor appeals to various reading tastes. The basic division is between hard and soft sci-fi. Hard sci-fi is accurate in its scientific details in chemistry, physics, and astrophysics. It meticulously describes places that forward technology could achieve. It deals with the plausible.That is a working definition that some people would disagree with in some way. This appeals to some readers and puts off others depending on how in depth it is, or if the story ignores the human element.

Soft science fiction relies on economics, psychology, anthropology, and sociology. It explores how people interact in an illusory world. The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction defines it as "science fiction that deals primarily with advancements in, or extrapolations based on, the soft sciences."

In Age of Wonders № 15 D. Hartwell says there are two kinds:  one in which the character is more important than the SF idea; the other focusing on any science other than physics or chemistry (1984).

By OCAL at clker.com
P. Anderson Ideas for SF Writer (Sept.) № 24/2 explains: Two streams run through science fiction. The second derives from H.G. Wells. His own ideas were brilliant, but he didn't care how implausible they might be, an invisible man or a time machine or whatever. He concentrated on the characters, their emotions and interactions. Today, we usually speak of these two streams as "hard" and "soft" science fiction (1998).

Whatever the reader's preference in type of sci-fi, it is an escapist habit like reading fiction in general, but more so because the reader escapes into another world as in the concept of world building. The writer has to create a world the reader will accept.

So, people read science fiction because they like exploring imaginary worlds, experiencing adventure and action vicariously, thinking about philosophical ideas in an entertaining way, and speculating about scientific possibilities.




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Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: Novella and Movies

Stevenson
 In 1886, Robert Louis Stevenson published Strange Case of  Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. It is usually known as The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. It tells the tale of  Dr. Jekyll as seen by Mr. Gabriel John Utterson an attorney friend of Dr. Henry Jekyll that scrutinizes the odd manifestations betwixt the malevolent Mr. Hyde and Utterson's friend.

 Summary

The theme of this novella is the fight between good and evil, although some have redacted the theme to concern a split personality. This modernest approach belies the moral theme, though it is clear that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are morally polar opposites. Stevenson had been pondering how to write a good story about the theme of good and evil for years. As a youth he penned Deacon Brodie; it is a play script about a deacon that has a secret life of thievery.

Utterson becomes concerned, after a relative tells him a story about Mr. Hyde and then Dr. Jekyll  abruptly redoes his will, so Mr. Hyde is the beneficiary of his estate. Gabriel Utterson is very leery of this change. He decides to investigate and see what is really going on. He noses around and locates Mr. Hyde. Utterson gets the creeps around Mr. Hyde, but quizzes him over the change in Dr. Jekyll's will, though Hyde is steadfast in his evasion of the truth.

A year passes and Mr. Hyde callously punches a man to death. The maid sees this incident and fingers Mr. Hyde. A man hunt ensues for the murderer, but they can't find him. Time passes, Dr. Landon become very sick from shock of knowing about Mr. Hyde.

Dr. Landon gives up the ghost leaving behind inscrutable documents with instructions to Utterson to open them upon Dr. Jekyll's death or if he vanishes. Utterson keeps visiting Dr, Jekyll, but he won't see him and Jekyll becomes a recluse.

Upon an evening, the butler of Jekyll decides to go see Utterson. He is vexed about Dr. Jekyll and thinks something is terribly wrong with the doctor, or dirty work has been done against his employer. He talks Utterson into going to Jekyll's home once more to invade the doctor's laboratory, and they discover Mr. Hyde laying deceased on the floor. They don't find the doctor.

Utterson takes the documents that reveal the truth of the mystery. Dr. Jekyll took an elixir to transmute into Mr. Hyde who became the embodiment of evil, and this transformation allowed the good doctor to indulge in various evil deeds, whereas he formerly spent a lot of time doctoring the poor for free.

Poster 1880's

Jekyll and Hyde Movies

This novella was among the first books that were fashioned into a movie. In 1912,  Blackhawk films adapted it for the screen. In 1920, Paramount released Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and three more film adaptions came out that year. The Paramount version starred John Barrymore, the renowned stage actor. This film inserted a music hall damsel into the story and made Dr. Jekyll much younger.



There are at least twenty movies based on the novella and many movie derivations like Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1953), Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (1971) in which the doctor mutates into a woman, and slasher fans can see Daughter of Dr. Jekyll (1957). The Nutty Professor is another version in which a cockamanny professor transforms into a cool dude. The estimate goes as high as 50 interpretations of Stevenson's  novella.

The physical aspects of the two main characters have been reversed in a couple of movie adaptions: The Two faces of Dr. Jekyll (1960) and Dr. Heckyl and Mr. Hype (1980). In the two faces version, the doctor is hairy, badly dressed, ill-mannered and rude, while Hyde is dressed well, well mannered, and urbane and in the hype version the doctor is unattractive and Hype is handsome.

Original Title Page



The versions and adaptions are growing as time passes because the tale's original theme lends itself to reconstructions, parodies, and adaptions, as the novella is rich in its use of a universal theme.

10 Interesting Trivia Points About the Story, Watch Video

The picture of Stevenson is public domain covered under {PD-US} – published before 1923 and public domain in the US. All picture or prints used are in the public domain.

Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Tales (Oxford World's Classics)

Jekyll & Hyde - The Musical

Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Blackstone Audio Classic Collection)