StarRider1701":1ia3neld said:
It is all too true that the "Hollywood" movie makers haven't really gotten down with making good, Hard SF movies. Even today one can still see signs of the attitude: "What the heck, they believe in aliens, heck they'll buy anything!" The folk who make movies don't understand the concept of sticking to any type of rules. "Its Sci-Fi, we can do anything and get away with it!" Another movie makers attitude. These days having the special effects folks going goofy to outdo each other (see 2012 for some way overdone fx) doesn't help to make better movies.
Like it or not, 'splosions and robots sell tickets and the story is simply secondary. That's why most Sci-Fi movies I've seen recently simply suck... no friggin story worth watching. I threw up a little when I saw the last Terminator movie...
I agree that Avatar was done pretty well as SF movies go. But there were probs in that one (see the Avatar thread for more details) too. If one wishes to nit-pick (as many here do) one can find problems in every SF movie. Or for that matter, any movie. (Western, War, Horror, etc) "Hollywood" almost never gets it totally 100% correct.
For truly hard SF one must really turn to books. I loved reading SF, not so fond of most Fantasy. Yes, I know the line between those two is blurring these days. Books truly open up the Universe. Movies are only brief and shallow glimpses into the world of books.
Picking out the faults in just about any movie is easy. However, if the movie is good enough, you don't care about its faults. Even better; if it is excellent, you don't WANT to know about its faults. "Suspension of Disbelief" is the goal of every fiction movie maker. Their job is to make you want to believe in what you are seeing and to refuse to critique their movie from the perspective of a disinterested third-party. They want you intimately involved in the viewing experience and completely willing to follow whatever it is they put on the screen. But, one serious gaff, one huge blunder, one outrageously innacurate mistake can ruin their chances of creating "Suspension of Disbelief" if their movie and story are not entertaining and involving enough for their viewers.
I'm a sci-fi and fantasy book lover. But, it has to be good. In a book, I don't care too much about the author taking some liberties with reality. As long as whatever it is they have constructed is logical and rational from their particular perspective, then I'm find with it.
Here's a weird example: In Brandon Sanderson's "Well of Ascension" series, the author uses a unique magical hook. Magic is performed by eating metal...
Yes, characters actually consume different metals and digest them (called "Burning" in the book) in order to perform magical feats. OK, that's pretty ridiculous, right? When I first came across that mechanic in the book, I was a bit put off. However, it is introduced and maintained in such a way that it does not take very long for the reader to be willing to Suspend their Disbelief even on such an absurd notion. In fact, a little way into the first book that particular mechanic "Works" very well in the story that is woven around it. I ended up enjoying that aspect of it. It's a decent series but, it sort of wears on you after awhile and when it's over, you're kind of glad... not a stellar recommendation but, there ya go. I didn't mention it because it was great, only because it really used a radically different way of constructing a mechanic for "Magic."
In the sort of Space Opera, High Science Fiction work by Peter F. Hamilton, "The Night's Dawn" series, we have an author that weaves hard science fiction elements willy nilly with straight fantasy and classic horror along with heavy religious undertones. In short, the Night's Dawn series, IMO, represents the best attempt by any author I've read to bring every genre to bear in order to tell a story. EVERYTHING is in that series. You want Sci-Fi? Done. You want Hard/Soft Sci-Fi? Done. You want Fantasy? Done. You want Horror? Done. You want Religion? Done. You want commentary on Politics, Economy, Socio-Cultural issues? Done. You want Military Sci-Fi? Done. You want ___? DONE! Hamilton weaves them all together flawlessly and so thoroughly that you're willing to Suspend your Disbelief almost immediately as soon as the first main plotline element is revealed. Shockingly enough, it's not some high sci-fi gimcrackery - It's magic. It would pass for being a proper description of magic in any Fantasy series. But, by that time, you don't care about genres. You could care less about some of the scientific "impossibilities." You don't care that some things are never really explained. You don't care that the religious elements are prominent. You don't care if what you are reading is Science Fiction, Fantasy or some deeper socio-political or cultural commentary. All you care about is the story. (Admittedly, some people are put off by the complex weaving of all those elements. It does demand a bit of work from the reader to be willing to slog through some of it in order to keep reading. But, it's worth it just to see how it's all weaved together.)