SF/F Commentary

SF/F Commentary

Retro Nostalgia: Metropolis (1927) and the Torment of Humanity’s Dreams

I’ve often wondered if there is something unique about the “serious” science fiction of the first 30 years on the 20th century (i.e., non-pulp work).  Surely critics more familiar with the era can attest to this with some degree of authority, but since I do not have that experience, I must speak from what little authority I have as a reader and a relatively new teacher of SF/F literature. From this limited perspective, Fritz Lang’s remarkable 1927 film, Metropolis, resembles visionary works such as E. M. Forster’s “The Machine Stops” (1908) and Karel Capuk’s R.U.R. (1920), each drawing in no small part from earlier SF writings, such as Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) or the lesser known Copellia by Arthur Saint-Leon (among others).  The machinic imagination of mankind, in a sense, has always been a part of SF’s consciousness, right from the earliest “true” SF novel, Frankenstein, to the most important (stylistically and philosophically) productions of the era traditionally know as the “Pulp Era” — a more accurate label would be “The Formative Era.”* It is this machinic consciousness that I think defines the era’s most serious ventures in science fiction — serious is defined here as not written exclusively for entertainment purposes (see the works I’ve already mentioned as examples).  For Metropolis, there is a deeply political motive behind the machinic elements:  1) the mechanization-of-man critique of the industrial revolution (imagined by Lang through the brilliant shots of bodies in perpetual motion while maintaining the “machine”); 2) the terror of the Other as imagined through the Machine Man (in this case, there is a third possible interpretation, which takes into account the film’s overtly religious imagery and the mythological allusions surrounding the feminized machine “monster”).  Plenty of film critics have talked about these issues already, so there’s no point covering them in detail here if I have nothing new to add.  However, so much of the important fictions of the era are so deeply concerned with the development of man in relation to his/her technology that it’s impossible to ignore the issue when discussing a film like Metropolis. In a sense, I think of Metropolis as what E.M. Forster might have written if he had turned “The Machine Stops” into a full novel, or, perhaps more accurately, the combination of Jack London’s political dystopia The Iron Heel (which I discussed here) and E.M. Forster’s technological consciousness.  Lang’s film does not shy away from the profound terror that the marriage of religion (broadly speaking), politics, and industrialization (might have) produce(d) — bodies worn down, bit by bit, until there are no bodies left to move the machine (thus, the machine “stops”); class systems split between laborious dystopias (the under “world”) and glorious utopias (the great city of Metropolis itself);** the religious iconography of the broken utopian dream (all hail the machine) and the socialist revolutionary (she is our savior from evil, for she brings us messages from the heart, not from the machine); and the groundbreaking imagination of Lang himself, who made Metropolis into a reminder that utopia has a cost. No wonder, then, that these writers (Lang, Forster, and London, in particular) were never utopians, but realists who could not fathom the future without the immense, distressing struggle to shatter the machinic nature of man.  Metropolis, as an example, cannot help but tear down the foundations of the Industrial Revolution’s grand dreams by stripping mankind of its humanity, literally and figuratively. On the literal front, Rotwang (the mad scientist) creates the Machine Man, steals the likeness of Maria (the virginal “heroine), and turns the machine into the perfect, sadistic “human” anti-revolutionary, determined to destroy the entire system.  The theme is well known in science fiction circles:  the inhuman is always already a threat to humanity’s “sovereignty.”  Thus, the Machine Man’s destructive tendencies are simply a transplanted fear of the mechanization of man embodied in the distressed/ing “heart” of Metropolis.  That Rotwange creates the Machine Man (and steals Maria’s likeness) for his own ends (revenge) is not insignificant.  For a society that imagines itself as “utopian,” it cannot control the irrational core of humanity:  emotion. On the figurative front, Lang’s repetition of mechanical choreographed “dances” suggest that adhering the machine’s “whims” (or, rather, to humanity’s desire to simplify the labor of life) is sacrificing the fluidity of the human subject.  Thus, we are presented with men rocking back and forth in stiff, “perfect” motions, turning dials as if part of a giant clock, where each individual is a gear that must move at just the right pace to keep the entire system running. Quite literally, a segment of Metropolis’ people have sacrificed their humanity during their 10-hour work day to become the gears of a machine.  Unlike the Machine in Forster’s short story, Lang’s machine is laid bare.  We cannot unsee the machinic degradation of humanity, just as Freder (the “hero” of sorts) cannot unsee the lies told to him by his father (Metropolis is perfect; the workers are OK in their position and there is nothing wrong with the world as it is — enjoy your life, my son).*** That these sorts of narratives appear frequently in the two or three decades after the turn of the century (20th, rather) seems somewhat expected, if only because we have the gift of retrospection.  The Industrial Revolution (the 1st and 2nd, really, since there were two distinct “moments”) promised a “new” world (a frontier, if you will).  Lang is just one of many who apparently didn’t see the “good” in the “new.”  What he saw, if Metropolis is any indication, was the death of the human as an autonomous subject.  It shouldn’t surprise us, then, that the same arguments are being had about the digital technologies of “tomorrow.”  Is our increasingly digital (read “networked”) culture yet another threat to human sovereignty, or will we weather this just like we did the Industrial Revolution?  Let’s wait and see who tries to be the next Fritz Lang… ————————————————————– *The first 20-30 years of the 1900s were instrumental in

SF/F Commentary

Poll: The Retro Nostalgia Film #8 (Mass Selection Time!)

I’ve made the following poll open to multiple answers.  If you could, select the three that you’d like to see me cover over for what remains of April.  Only three.  Period.  I’ve come to the conclusion that this will make things easier on me and you (you won’t have to vote every single week to see your film get covered, and I won’t have this constant rush to get to the film in the few days remaining after the poll). So you know the drill — vote!

SF/F Commentary

Dear Media: Please Stop Reporting Things That Ruin the Ending…

I’m talking about this.  Do not click or scroll over the link if you don’t want a beloved science fiction series ruined for you.  There will be no specifics below, so don’t worry. Whether you’ve read the link or not, the basic gist is this:  a certain someone has confirmed that they will or will not return to a TV show, and the media has reported this fact with glee. Why is this a problem?  Because the moment I know an actor or actress is or is not returning to a TV show, I know howhow the show ends.  In this particular case, that is bad news indeed because it means the emotion I would normally feel at the end of a show like this will never come.  I have no reason to be emotional.  I know what’s going to happen before the series is even over.  In this case, the season has already been filmed, which means whatever has happened at the end is already written into the narrative.  Nobody is surprised.  Nobody has to find a way to get this person out of the show (or keep them in) without pissing off the fans.  They’ve already settled the issue. None of this has anything to do with spoilers in and of themselves.  I don’t have a problem with the media talking about things that have or have not already aired.  I do have a problem, however, when the headline is the spoiler.  In this case, that’s exactly the problem.  The headline doesn’t say “Will X be back next fall?  We Ask X About It” or something like that.  It just says “X will be back next fall” or “X will not be back next fall.”  Unless I stop reading stuff on the Internet, I cannot avoid this bit of information. Color me pissed off.

SF/F Commentary

Top 10 Blog Posts for March (Or, Weirdness You People Like in a 30 Day Span)

And they are: 10.  The SF/F and Related Blogs You Read 9.  Adventures in…Cancer?:  If Only You’d Been Bad Asthma (Or, Leading Up to Diagnosis — Part Two) 8.  Hugo Award:  What I Nominated 7.  Literary Explorations:  What the hell is a “strong female character”? 6.  Poll:  The Retro Nostalgia Film (#7) 5.  Death Star Economics and Ethics? (Or, What Would You DO With a Death Star?) 4.  Link of the Day:  Liz Bourke on (Male) Rape in Epic Fantasy 3.  Hugo Awards Finalists (Plus Preliminary Thoughts) 2.  Top 10 Overused Fantasy Cliches 1.  Top 10 Cats in Science Fiction and Fantasy I’m not sure what to make of this mishmash of old and new.  Either certain posts of mind continue to have some kind of lasting impact or aliens have set up some kind of auto-refresher that changes IPs so I can feel special about a blog.  The latter makes no sense… April should be equally interesting, methinks.

SF/F Commentary

Hugo Awards Finalists (Plus Preliminary Commentary)

I’m too lazy to offer a proper introduction, so I’m just going to dive in (give me a break; I walked over five miles today).  The only thing I will say is that most of these are preliminary, most-likely-haven’t-read-it thoughts.  For the most part, I will have nothing to say about a work except why I didn’t pick it up during hte year.  The sad truth is that most of the stuff I nominated this year (my first nominating year) didn’t make it. Here goes (Hugos): Best Novel 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson (Orbit) Blackout by Mira Grant (Orbit) Captain Vorpatril’s Alliance by Lois McMaster Bujold (Baen) Redshirts: A Novel with Three Codas by John Scalzi (Tor) Throne of the Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed (DAW) Nothing I loved last year made it on the list.  The only book I’m particularly excited about is Ahmeds, but that’s based on what others have said.  I haven’t read anything on this list and probably won’t read at least two of them (nothing interests me about Scalzi’s nostalgic book and I just can’t bring myself to read Mira Grant’s novels, even though I probably should — I blame that on people frequently telling me to read something, which turns me into a rebel).  But since I’ll get copies of all these books in my Hugo voting package (right?), I’ll probably read them anyway. Overall, I’m sort of “meh” about this particular category, though.  It’s too…familiar. Best Novella After the Fall, Before the Fall, During the Fall by Nancy Kress (Tachyon Publications) The Emperor’s Soul by Brandon Sanderson (Tachyon Publications) On a Red Station, Drifting by Aliette de Bodard (Immersion Press) San Diego 2014: The Last Stand of the California Browncoats by Mira Grant (Orbit) “The Stars Do Not Lie” by Jay Lake (Asimov’s, Oct-Nov 2012) I’m pleasantly surprised to see Nancy Kress on the list.  I quite like her work, though I must admit to having missed the work in this category.  I’m already rooting for her and Aliette de Bodard, who is another one of those really good writers currently, well, writing.  I’ll profess complete ignorance about Lake’s new story, though his recent work has greatly impressed me.  Grant and Sanderson?  The one thing going for Sanderson is that Tachyon published The Emperor’s Soul.  I feel mostly the same about the Grant as I did in the previous category. Best Novelette “The Boy Who Cast No Shadow” by Thomas Olde Heuvelt (Postscripts: Unfit For Eden, PS Publications) “Fade To White” by Catherynne M. Valente (Clarkesworld, August 2012) “The Girl-Thing Who Went Out for Sushi” by Pat Cadigan (Edge of Infinity, Solaris) “In Sea-Salt Tears” by Seanan McGuire (Self-published) “Rat-Catcher” by Seanan McGuire (A Fantasy Medley 2, Subterranean) Aside from the excessive number of nominations for Seanan McGuire on this ballot (she is also Mira Grant), I quite like this list.  I’ve not heard of Heuvelt, but Postcripts is a damned good publication.  I’ve also quite liked some of Valente’s work and I am pleasantly surprised to see Pat Cadigan making an appearance. I should note that I don’t actually have anything against Seanan McGuire.  I’ve not read most of her work.  I’ll probably change my tune in a few months.  As a rule, though, I am skeptical about any author who appears more than twice on a ballot.  There is so much good work out there that I find it a little weird that one author could suck up so many votes in one nomination cycle.  But what do I know?  I’m a curmudgeon who likes to complain… Best Short Story “Immersion” by Aliette de Bodard (Clarkesworld, June 2012) “Mantis Wives” by Kij Johnson (Clarkesworld, August 2012) “Mono no Aware” by Ken Liu (The Future is Japanese, VIZ Media LLC) Now this is interesting!  I quite like Ken Liu’s work, and I did nominate de Bodard’s “Immersion” (happy).  I’ve not read Johnson’s newest story, though I’m told by fellow literary curmudgeon Adam Callaway that it is one of her best. I am, however, disappointed that the votes were so divided among various stories that these three were the only ones to pop out of the crowd.  It’s not right… Best Related Work The Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature Edited by Edward James & Farah Mendlesohn (Cambridge UP) Chicks Dig Comics: A Celebration of Comic Books by the Women Who Love Them Edited by Lynne M. Thomas & Sigrid Ellis (Mad Norwegian Press) Chicks Unravel Time: Women Journey Through Every Season of Doctor Who Edited by Deborah Stanish & L.M. Myles (Mad Norwegian Press) I Have an Idea for a Book… The Bibliography of Martin H. Greenberg Compiled by Martin H. Greenberg, edited by John Helfers (The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box) Writing Excuses Season Seven by Brandon Sanderson, Dan Wells, Mary Robinette Kowal, Howard Tayler and Jordan Sanderson In order: 1) Cambridge Companion = wonderful! 2) Chicks Dig Comics (same folks who did that other one, I think) 3) Chicks Unravel Time (bored of Doctor Who appearing on everything; yeah, it’s really great, but it’s really not the greatest science fiction TV show EVER — it just happens to be the only good one on the air right now, one which I happen to like, of course) 4) I Have an Idea for a Book (never heard of it; sounds interesting) 5) Writing Excuses (yeah, it belongs here and I’m happy to see it get nominated in the proper category) What?  No VanderMeer or what not?  Pah! Of course, I would laugh my toosh off if this list were dominated by academic books.  It will never happen, but my pretentious side is plotting and cackling… Best Graphic Story Grandville Bête Noire written and illustrated by Bryan Talbot (Dark Horse Comics, Jonathan Cape) Locke & Key Volume 5: Clockworks written by Joe Hill, illustrated by Gabriel Rodriguez (IDW) Saga, Volume One written by Brian K. Vaughn, illustrated by Fiona Staples (Image Comics) Schlock Mercenary: Random Access Memorabilia by Howard Tayler, colors by Travis

SF/F Commentary

The SF/F and Related Blogs You Read

I follow a bunch of genre-related blogs, but I always have this feeling that I’m missing something.  And so this post is about that. What are your favorite SF/F and related blogs?  I want to know.  Leave a comment with links and maybe I’ll find something new! That’s it.  Nothing more exciting than that!

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