Showing posts with label The Forever War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Forever War. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Forever War Movie
I know I'm probably one of the last to hear this, but when I saw that The Forever War was being made into a movie, I really didn't know how to feel. At first I was excited, but then realized that to put this masterpiece into a film format that would appeal to a general audience would likely require the butchering of the book's plot and dialogue. Sure there is some epic action, but the segments in between the battles are integral to the book as a whole, and I really doubt the action movie seeking public has the attention to stand watching the complexities of the human drama within The Forever War. I would love to see a strict adaptation of the book, but I don't see how the true storyline can remain un-altered in a film adaptation. Regardless, I will most likely end up seeing the movie, perhaps just to see the words put to life, even if it is some sort of dummed down, Michael Bay-esque mainstream material. Perhaps Ridley Scott can work a masterpiece like he did with Blade Runner, we shall see.
Monday, March 7, 2011
The Forever War - Joe Haldeman
The Forever War by Joe Haldeman is quite possibly the best SciFi novel out there, ever. I'm even going to go as far as suggesting that my previous statement is redundant in making that claim. This novel changed the way I look at SciFi, so that automatically makes it even that much more amazing. Even with a minor in English, I had never been so emotionally impacted by a book, maybe I'm a bit weird, but I venture to say that I'm not alone in that statement. Haunting, magnificent, tender, and enraging are all words that describe the complexity of the feelings that this novel induces. The book starts in the 20th century and ends in the 31st. The pages in between the different era's in Major Mandella's are blank, save for the rank and dates of the era enclosed. It's fairly well known that Haldeman's experiences in the Vietnam war are significant influences on the book, and when looking at the novel from that angle, it makes sense.
Haldeman's use of the time distortion from interstellar travel forms a key part of the book. Its haunting to see the different chapters taking place hundreds of years apart, even more so to think that a soldier could get caught up in a thousand year war without aging ten years. The resignation of Mandella to his fate is paralled with his passive defiance to the madness around him. Throughout it all, Mandella retains his humanity with his combination of sarcasm, indifference, and love for his girl. Even with humanity evolving around him. being one of a handful to actually survive the whole war makes it that much more significant. There's nothing like a tour of duty survival rate of less than one percent to force a deep internal analysis of identity. In conclusion, The Forever War is one of the defining works of SciFi as well as American literature.
Haldeman's use of the time distortion from interstellar travel forms a key part of the book. Its haunting to see the different chapters taking place hundreds of years apart, even more so to think that a soldier could get caught up in a thousand year war without aging ten years. The resignation of Mandella to his fate is paralled with his passive defiance to the madness around him. Throughout it all, Mandella retains his humanity with his combination of sarcasm, indifference, and love for his girl. Even with humanity evolving around him. being one of a handful to actually survive the whole war makes it that much more significant. There's nothing like a tour of duty survival rate of less than one percent to force a deep internal analysis of identity. In conclusion, The Forever War is one of the defining works of SciFi as well as American literature.
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