Singularity: The Motion Picture

From: Rick Knight (rknight@platinum.com)
Date: Thu Jul 31 1997 - 11:13:00 MDT


     Rick Knight wrote:
     
> Ultimately, I'd like to provide a story that could be made into film
> that has the optimistic impact of "Contact" and not promote the scare
> tactics of oldies like "Colossus: The Forbin Project" or newer ones
> like "The Web" or (gag!) "Virtuosity" just because the
> artistically-deprived and generally bored people of our culture will
> lap up anything ...
     
     YakWax replied:
     
     I've been trying to do the exact same thing. The problems I find are:
     trying to be optimistic and still hold the attention of todays audience
     (who have been made to believe genetic engineering will create monsters and
     AI's will eat their children) and trying to present highly complex, world
     changing technologies in a way the audience would understand. For
     instance, how do you show nanotechnology or uploading in a movie (without
     resorting to "I can feel something... something strange... entering...
     my... body... something small... almost nanoscopical in size" or "as you
     can see, virtual reality technology has progressed so far that everything
     in here looks _exactly_ like it does in the real world!").
     
     I reply (whimsically):
     
     In the words of Ellie Arroway's dad: "Small steps". An unfortunately large
     percentage of American culture will still keep movies like "Face Off"
     chugging away making millions when it was an incredible joke of a film. I
     still believe "Contact", despite its less than stellar box office return
     makes it impact, perhaps on the people that matter. It doesn't take a
     majority of all people, it takes a majority of the movers/shakers to
     guide/direct/inspire the rest.
     
     You figure out ways to convey the possibilities so that the broadest range
     of people can understand/appreciate/enjoy it. The goals are to make a
     positive-image film that promotes the notion that such incredible change
     doesn't strip us of our humanity, make us something less, something immoral
     or evil. Look at all the 50s alien-encounter movies. All shtick-horror or
     alarmist in nature. I want to transcend that rather monkey-brained
     tendency that pervades in our culture that our survival hinges on physical
     predisposition and our more recent (last few millennia) traditional notions
     on immortality.
     
     A film about Singularity (the kind we'd like) could happen. Film is one of
     the most potent mediums of communication available to us.
     
     Rick



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