Copyright © A.P. Fitzgerald
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T’pockit, t’pockit, t’pockit, BARSOOM!! The dreaded mind numbing warning that

often preceded landing came `a juddering through Blodwin’s Osiris Space Pod

like a muted sonic boom. As the sleek craft spurted into the hovering

mists swathing Gannymede Minor his mind raced:

“Must be the Sniveling factor,” he thought as his steel grey orbs fell upon

the Hawking Temporal Differential Extrapolator stapled to his wrist. The

zirconium HTD had been a grateful gift from Kud, king of the ruminant Klingons

from the bicuspid stellar artery of the Anthrax Nebula. These unfortunates he

had saved from the Ringworld Moorlocks of Epsilon during the Sirocco and the

Fohn Wind Wars. He gulped down his fear and flicked a thoughtful glance at his

pregnant wife Barbarella that was glued to the computer console.

“Say it with flowers: give her some Triffids,” piped in the mincing voice of

JCN the super computer, who, like his second cousin HAL from 2001 was named as

an Irish acronym for IBM and could read human thought with consummate ease.

Meanwhile, back on Eo, the Gamma Mutants of the Omegatron had penetrated the

Sony Cobalt shield, and Hydra Blue and the Sleep Wizards were interfacing with

Kurt Vonnegut’s Tralfamadorians…… who could only communicate by farting and tap

dancing at the same time… which explains why when the first peaceful

Tralfamadorian landed on Earth and immediately ran to a nearby alfalfa farm to

warn the Scientologist occupant that his house was on fire, the redneck beat him

to a pulp with a nine iron and……and..”

And, like garlic pizza, yodelling and boot scooting, SF is an acquired

taste, even though in a sense it’s been with us since most human beings lost

their tails, learnt to perambulate as bipeds and started telling the first mono

syllabic tales, probably with the visual aid of a dead gecko. According to the

mythologist Joseph Campbell, there are only twelve stories, and each is

borrowed from, warped, tweaked, and often immersed in loghorraeic jargon

and pseudo-science to become hi fi sci fi.

Humanity’s search for worm-holes and the meaning of the universe, its desire to

transcend its mortal coil and the constraints of gravity, or even its need to be

able to walk and chew betel-nut at the same time, reaches back to an era when

fire-side chats constituted not only the main form of entertainment but also the

best opportunity of learning how to survive puberty. When the greater part of

every day equated with a sustained sprint through an over-crowded zoo without

bars, when a twenty eight year life span qualified you as a geriatric, and

when death by tusk, tooth, claw, or simian SARS, was virtually guaranteed,

it’s not surprising our venerable ancestors wanted to escape to some imaginative

place, a better place or a more interesting place in their imaginations.

Freedom of flight: `here’s a cliff, so make like a Pteradactyl Grug’; or Icarus

attempts the Immelman turn with the wax in his ears; immortality (`Methuselah

makes a horse’s bottom of himself at his 601st birthday bash); and enterprising

sand viper snaffles Gilgamesh’s tad-awkward-to-replace elixir of life; conquest

(Charlemagne’s Paladins: Have Armies Will Travel); Heaven (a celestial

place with a good dental care system and no sabre toothed tigers); Xenophobia

(stranger danger)and the riddle of the stars, represent some of the themes

and ideas in the earliest Science fiction.

Way, way, back in time, when “Fast Food” was a reference to speedy gourmet

Marsupials or monitor lizards, the pride of the tribe were the story tellers,

but the only sure-fire method of curbing the wandering ways of these

yabberers was to poke out their eyeballs with a burnt stick. This

practice of the blind leading the bland became so widespread that the Celtic

word `bard’ for a story-teller also meant `blind’. These days Hollywood gives

these hacks three million smackers and locks them in a piano bar at the Beverley

Wiltshire with a laptop and ten crates of DOM for six months at a time to punch

out humanistic SF like Star Troopers and Cyborg, originally titled Jo Zeff and

his Full Metal Jacket.

All ancient societies had their concepts of Creation, ranging from the sexually

charged Big Bang theory to the more scientifically convincing Rainbow Serpent

and Ra. Astronomer, novelist and futurist Arthur C. Clarke even speculated that

nebulous cloud floating in the seventh heaven viewed through the Hubble Bubble

Technical Trouble Telescope may actually be composed of amino acids, those

gregarious little boogers that are the building blocks of life. He further

speculated that if he is correct, it could mean the universe was seeded, much

like your Johnny Apple-seed, but on a more ambitious scale. Let’s hope that if

he’s right, that most of the potential weeds get winnowed in the direction of

the sun or some lunar icescape with a diurnal range of 2000 degrees.

Likewise in his follow up novel 2010, Clarke opined that Europa, a celebrated

moon of Jupiter, might support life. This theory, like Europa, and the beers

served at my pub – “The Wookie and Child” – is said to hold substantial water.

The recent finding of a bottle of Mylanta tablets on Pluto have engendered a

Scientific rethink on the matter.

Unfortunately, with much SF today, the reader or watcher often gains a nagging

feeling of déjà vu…..didn’t I just say that? I mean, it’s always the twenty

ninth century (and I thought MY watch was fast), youth is still rebellious, more

of those ratbag gung Ho Outcasters want to take over the planet and vaporize

anyone with a mullett, essentials such as Moet and other creature

comforts still cost a fistful of plastic, there’s yet another heretical mystic

on the Jihad horizon, and as Woody Allen once avowed, Epsilon girls still prefer

French kissing to hand shaking. I also have to agree with him that what most

people want to know about the universe is not so much whether there’s life in

outer space, but, do they have Ray Guns?” Film title idea flash: Venus in Blue

Genes AKA Sheer Folly.

Science Fiction as a genre is a shape changer and a shameless plunderer of

everything from myths and magic to high science. Science versus Creationism led

to ripping yarns like the one about that big goombah, Frankenstein’s monster, a

man of many parts. Unknown to many SF afficionadoes is the fact that the first

SF story was not Goethe’s cerebral talking food opus “Die Meisterschnitzel”

but the sublime novella “The Dream of Ogg”, a pat mini epic written in

tapir-stool. Its protagonist was a precocious prehistoric Neanderthal Goliath

with halitosis -a “C’ Class Honours student of the University of Tundra and

Cavern who attempted to build a space ship made out of a mussel and oyster shell

midden to carry him out of the Dordogne Valley to greener pastures and forty

leagues closer to the burgeoning Pinot wine district. Not surprisingly the

would-be astronaut died of bivale cigeuretea just before blast off.

Given the onerous task of identifying some very readable SF literature (a

Visigoth to a Vandal: eaten any good books lately Genseric?), even

devotees, Sfans, Trekkies, Vogons and the like, would vacillate, obfuscate and,

most likely, oscillate before plumping for SF such as:

Edgar Rice Burroughs’ John Carter of Mars series (Tarzan masters Physics) Wells’

Time Machine (Eloi! Eloi! oi oi oi! AKA “Cannibal Tours”; Herbert’s DUNE

(The Worm Turns); Robert Heinlein’s “Stranger in a Strange Land” (a Literary

companion for celebrity assassins in the U.S); Paul Theroux’s “Ozone” (3 Mile

Island goes continental); Orwell’s “1984” (Mogadishu on a Sunday night); “The

Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” (A “How To” book for restaurant bolters at the

end of the universe); or Dan Simmons’ Hugo and Nebula award winning “Hyperion”,

in which budding Starship captain Het Masteen twigs that it’s time his tree ship

Yggdrasil branched out for Hyperion, where hurricanes hoften happen in pursuit

of the deadly Shrike…(I kid you not).

So when the temperature reaches “Fahrenheit 451”, drop the burning book and

seek out searing titles like H Potter inspiration “A Wizard of Earthsea” where

you’ll find Ged, a “Speaker for the Dead” who’ll tell you to head to Westworld

thence navigate the drowned “Riverworld” und……blah blah “und zo it goes” alzo

sprach sour kraut Vonnegut. Ergo, if you’re gonna read a classic, gonna read a

Jurassic, gonna read it in an attic…better read the guide first.

On celluloid though, the SF best” lists could comprise: “Metropolis” (New York

without the traffic snarls); The old eastern bloc’s Solaris (Spaced out Spouse);

“The Omega Man”(Charlton Heston’s last Swiss watch); “Logan’s Run” (The Old and

the Dutiful)”; “Village of the Damned” (Cuckolds Anonymous); “A for Andromeda”

(a B.B.C dramatization of the alphabet); “2001” (My Mentor Woth a Monolith, or

1470 man finds atomic inspiration before lunch); Ridley Scott’s “Alien” (Jaws on

acid); “E.T.(a Bell TELEPHONE CO promo spectacular);”Blade Runner”(`I Robot You

Jane)”; “Star Wars” (Merlin, Arthur and Mordred transmogriphy in a galaxy far,

far, away); the mind boggling 3D PANDORA (“Dances with Wolves” reconstituted

meets The Navii Gator and Beyond Blue); and the high tech/low plot Arnold

Schwarzenbeefeneggenberger blockenbusters “Total Recall” and the Terminators

(“It’s not a toomer!” I tink maybe it is) The sequels were both scary: “The

Governator”; and The Presidentinator”

Another film that could be included is the Close Encounters of the Worst

Kind megahit was “Independence Day – I.D. 4”. essentially summarised as follows:

(U.F.O’s. stop./ NYC RSVP E.T’s. Stop./ FBI, CIA S.N.A.F.U stop./ E.T’s

S.O.B’s. stop./ S.O.S I.B.M, F18’s. stop./ E.T’s D.O.A. stop/ U.N. A.O.K.stop.

Over and out.

Or, also on ID 4: Israelis, Palestinians and interested parties vigorously

reject Alien Middle East solution; Inter Galactic Terra-formers Poleaxed by

Computer Nerd; or “Feisty President kicks arses of Aliens with Altitude Problem”.

And as for the genetic engineering romp “Jurassic Park”, basically it was “What

Dinah Saw”.

Then there were major Directors’ shots at the genre:

Spielberg’s “Minority Report”-(Foxy Precog gets bad vibe about Cruise marriage);

SIGNS (Mel’s Field of Bad Dreams – If you build crop circles They Will Come);

and “Matrix Reloaded” and “Matrix Revolution” (NEOphyte Computer Whiz Hacks Into

Techno Babble and SFX MOTHERLODE). And with “I Robot”, “the first two rules of

robotics are that a robot cannot harm a human”. Riii—ight, Even Godiva’s Peeping

Tom, Blind Pugh at the Admiral Ben Bow Inn and Tutenkamen’s mummy saw that

one coming!

Steven Spielberg’s disconcertingly discomforting take on H.G Wells’ “War of

the Worlds”, however, managed to be something altogether different again: a

chilling thrilling visual parable for the holocaust and other genocides from the

primordial murk of human behaviour and history.

Every viewer of this film possessing a modicum of grey matter and humanity,

regardless of their ethnic and cultural origins, was left in absolutely

no doubt about what genocide must be like for the victims.

And just like the S.S and all malevolent maggots before them and after them,

Spielberg’s alien Martians articulated the same timeless catch cries of all well

armed, strongly motivated and viscerally ambitious “Visitors”: We come in peace,

come in peace: Shoot to kill! Shoot to Kill!

In the past half dozen years the SF fare has been popularised and diversified

immensely, in terms of imaginative scope not so reliant on SFX. Of course

when you’re on a good thing in terms of Box Office receipts, general advice

says don’t mess with it! Which is why “Star Wars” released prequels like “Attack

of the Clones”, and why Terminator and its kind become franchises that could

even release Parts 11 and 12 if they so wished. There will, however, always be

some adolescent pap with laconic heroes comprised of teak or mahogany

propped up by high tech SFX excess as in “Transformers”, and a spate of teen

angst SF like “Twilight”-inspired “I am Number Four” (I vote to retitle it, “I

am Number two”)and forget the spate of expensive Hollywood schlock stuff based

on join the dots, writing by numbers scripts like “Battle for Los Angeles” and

“Chronicles of Riddick”. That said, there is also a growing number of thought-

Provoking and insightful audio-visual material for viewers who are tired of

seeing a predictable plot plodding from A to E, and who really hope for a plot

ranging from A to J via P and a secret LBJ home movie and the discovery of giant

mutant marine life in Fukushima.

There is arguably a rising standard in the best of SF branching into hybrid

genres (not “Cowboys and Aliens so much), including Comedy, Drama and

Psychological genres.

Other relatively recent offerings like SF comedy “PAUL” managed to break some

new ground despite trotting out myriad homages to so many Alien on

Earth stories that came before it, which included the story of Jesus.

The best SF comedies so far were the laugh out loud John Carpenter film

“Dark Star”, whose evil alien closely resembles a large $4 K Mart beach ball

with legs and attitude.

He deviously and hilariously torments the space ship’s crew, whose job entails

an endless trip through the galaxies exploding potentially unstable stars and

this crew’s very existence has been forgotten by NASA decades earlier. They

encounter an unexpected problem though when one of their talking bombs develops

a “personality disorder” and starts to channel Rousseau, Sartre and a plethora

of other philosophers and argues the logic of “his” purpose and his very

existence shortly after being armed for release and detonation. The countdown

continues with the increasingly “ticked off” and terrified crew desperately

trying to convince him his purpose is to head for the targeted star immediately

or “stand down”.

The ironic and darkly hilarious South Efrikaaner Dramedy/mockumentary “AREA

9” is almost as good. It features giant intelligent prawn-like aliens

incarcerated in a Soweto style township outside Johannesburg after their

space ship encounters mechanical trouble. Seeing these repugnant and terrifying

looking monsters being racially maligned by their intolerant tawny Soweto human

neighbours, and watching them having their citizenship documentation checked by

dull Government officials who address them by their newly allotted names, such

as Charles Potts or Alistair Smith, produced much spontaneous audience laughter

in the movie session I attended and was well worth the price of the ticket.

The new Tom Cruise SF film “Oblivion” is close to being the goods but some

critics and audiences have targeted a few the script’s burgeoning black holes

and that appears in Act 2, as well as its unevenness.

The film “Gravity”, by Alfonse Cuaron, is, however, a breath of fresh air

for SF lovers – though not so fresh for its two protagonists – and this

inventive original audio-visual alchemy truly mines space-junk for a golden seam

and it is film storytelling at its finest.

So, irrefutably, SF is a rapacious looter of the entire world catalogue

of histories, mythologies, yarns and ideas, but it has also added a new

dimension to literary storehouses for an aeon and a millisecond; and inarguably,

in Hollywood, When an Alien Stalks, Money Talks.