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*WOOKIE

wishful thinker
Articles Posted: 1  Links Seeded: 10
Member Since: 3/2006  Last Seen: 2/24/2012

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SciFi books that ought to be movies

Tue Nov 7, 2006 10:03 AM EST
entertainment, arts, books, movies, artsvine, science-fiction
By *wookie
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The recent articles Your Favourite Science Fiction Book and Top Ten Sci Fi Movies of All Time for me naturally lead on to the question - What SciFi films would I like to see made? So rather than sit around wondering I figured it'd be a perfect subject for my first proper vine article by asking the question: What SciFi books do you think ought to be given the big screen treatment?

I think we'll need a few proviso's to trim the field down, if anything goes then we'll just end up with another list of favourite books!…

  • Let's say we're aiming for blockbuster hits here, the book will need to work as something that could reasonably be pitched to a profit/numbers driven studio exec. We can all think of books we'd personally like to see made but would have limited appeal. This needn't mean 'mass-market', but at least 'commercially viable'.
  • It'll need to be a story that can feasibly be told within the length of an average movie, or lend itself to being split into smaller parts that each stand in their own right (ala LOTR)
  • I think we can include films that exist already but are either looking a bit dated or you think were poor adaptations in the first place and could benefit from a fresh take and/or the full 21st century effects treatment.

I'll start the ball rolling with the following five. I'm no cinema buff so my pitches may be somewhat weak and I've left out potential directors and actors, but it would be interesting to hear suggestions…

The Stars My Destination- Alfred Bester
Alfred Bester's classic has a revenge driven anti-hero character, lot's of fast paced action, deception, twists and turns (and teleportation) and a generally non-stop storyline to make for a great action movie. But there is also a deeper substance to the story in the way Gully's sense of morality grows from nothing in a believable manner as the events unfold and the story reaches it's climax, and also in it's commentary of a society ruled by a rich elite. A SciFi Count of Montechristo in many respects.

Consider Phlebas- Iain M Banks
Set within the context of a violent intergalactic battle between a super-advanced society (the Culture) and a religiously fanatical enemy (The Iridians), the story follows a Shape-changer agent in a race to recover a highly advanced artificial intelligence from an abandoned and desolate world. This is Iain M Bank's first SciFi novel and one of his best, with well drawn characters and witty dialogue, an epic space opera backdrop, super-advanced technology, weird looking aliens and lots of big weaponry! I think this one has already been 'optioned' as I believe the lingo goes? Banks' Against a Dark Background would be a good'un aswell.

Grass - Sheri S Tepper
Slower paced than the two above but with a dark and menacing alien feel to an otherwise familiar pastoral and aristocratic setting. As our protagonist goes about her mission on a backwater planet in search of a cure for an epidemic threatening to wipe out civilisation across the galaxy she uncovers dark secrets of the sinister native species, building to a surprising and satisfying conclusion. Along the way there are interesting strands about her growing estrangement from her husband and possible love interests elsewhere, and interesting supporting characters - something for everyone. Not guns and spaceships SciFi, but altogether more subtle - like Dune in it's best moments.

The Star Fraction - Ken Macleod
From the cover notes: "In a new world order where the peace process is deadlier than the wars, a security mercenary with a smart gun and reflexes to die for, an on-the-run memory scientist and a geeky teenager with a wad of illicit cash are about to set of the countdown to a devastating international conflict" - Sums it up I think! Elements of cyberpunk, touches of Sneakers and War Games but set in a balkanised future Britain with puritanical religious mini-states, radical green enclaves, shady global organisations and an emergent AI. The cast of characters are thrown together from diverse backgrounds and don't really know what they're doing or the import of their actions, but figure it out in the end for a satisfying conclusion. The three subsequent novels would make great sequels too.

The Stainless Steel Rat - Harry Harrison
I think this series has the potential to be really entertaining movie franchise, I see it as a kind of space opera Indiana Jones sorta thing - the type of character a younger Harrison Ford would have carried off perfectly. Slippery Jim diGriz, a criminal mastermind of epic proportions is captured and co-opted into the intergalactic cops (and slips in and out thereof afterwards) - fast moving action, evil bad guys, frequently hilarious scenarios and dialogue and, of course, the ruthless and beautiful Angeline heading up a great supporting cast of characters I reckon this would make superb fun lightweight SciFi entertainment.

Over to you…

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  • Public Discussion (89)
Jump to discussion page: 1 2
Vincent Grayson

Jennifer Government would make for a @!$%#ing awesome movie.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 10:38 AM EST
Brad Leclerc

They're making that already hehe.

  • 1 vote
#1.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:02 AM EST
WebWeasel

More information on the Jennifer Government move here.

    #1.2 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:37 AM EST
    Vincent Grayson

    Well @!$%#, that's awesome.

      #1.3 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 1:03 PM EST
      Reply
      Mykola Bilokonsky

      Nice read, thanks. I'm not familiar with any of those except the Bester, which is pretty slick.

      One book I'd suggest is Bruce Sterlings Schismatrix Plus. It's basically about humanity's future across the solar system and beyond, but the scope is amazing - the character is born in an era when people are just startingto artificially increase their lifespans, and so by staying abreast with the technology he is living on the cusp of the transhuman revolution. The result is that the book spans 300+ years of his life, and it really feels that way. It captures so many amazing things, from the implications of solar balkanization to the way a human being would necessarily change over centuries - he essentially has 5 or 6 full lives, and it's really believable.

      The book is filled with all sorts of crazy cool ideas, too - like Space Cockroaches, which are intentionally put aboard ships in order to eat the dead skin that accumulates over years and years in an enclosed spaceship. Clever!

      • 2 votes
      Reply#2 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 10:54 AM EST
      Brad Leclerc

      Trying question.....all the really great scifi I can think of that hasn't been masaquered into a movie already wouldn't really make a good movie I'd say. Once you take the imagination out of the equation and are just watching someone ELSE's visual interpretation of a great scifi (or anything else) story....it really looses a lot the magic for me.

      • 2 votes
      Reply#3 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:04 AM EST
      *wookie

      I think that's a general problem with putting print on screen, a book is much more flexible to individual interpretation. It can be done well but I think you're right, it's hard to capture that 'magic' - although I think this is less of a problem for those who've not read the book in question and are trusting the director's interpretation to tell them a good story.

      Maybe I could re-phrase the question as the somewhat long-winded: "If you knew the audience where never going to read the book but may enjoy the story as a film, which would be most interesting to see translated to screen, assuming the translation was what you considered accurate?"

      • 1 vote
      #3.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:23 AM EST
      Reply
      mer-j

      David Moody - the Autumn series, Trust and Straight To You are all fantastic books that may or may not do well on screen (Mr. Moody would have to oversee production!).

        Reply#4 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:13 AM EST
        ZekeTyler

        I don't think I have much to add here, but I wanted to say thanks for the heads up on a couple of the books you have listed there. I'll be checking them out sooner, or later.

          Reply#5 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:28 AM EST
          *wookie

          Always a pleasure.

            #5.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:55 AM EST
            Reply
            Steve Watts

            This may be dipping more into the fantasy realm, but I've been dying to see them make a movie out of Chuck Palahnuik's "Lullabye." If you're not familiar with him, "Fight Club" was a previous book adapted into a movie. Out of the books I've read by him (I only have one more left), Lullabye is by far the best.

            Basic plot gist, with minor spoilers:

            While researching for a story on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, a reporter named Carl Streator discovers an ancient African culling song in a book of nursery rhymes. It seems many an unsuspecting mother have been reading this translated spell to put their babies to sleep, unintentionally killing them. His research leads him to accidentally memorize the poem, which complicates matters when any angry thought he has towards a person summons the ability to kill them. It's a great reflection on the loss of innocence to knowledge.

            • 2 votes
            Reply#6 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:30 AM EST
            munzilla

            A Canticle for Liebowitz could be a great movie, but I wouldn't trust Hollywood.

            • 1 vote
            Reply#7 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:37 AM EST
            *wookie

            A Bollywood version then?

            ;o)

              #7.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:38 AM EST
              munzilla

              Good idea. Dancing and singing monks are always enjoyable.

              • 2 votes
              #7.2 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 11:59 AM EST
              Reply
              Adam Hobson

              Snow Crash.

              The movie would contain the best opening sequence ever.

              • 5 votes
              Reply#8 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 12:50 PM EST
              Brian White

              The linguistic stuff in the plot probably wouldn't translate to the screen well. The rest would be awesome though.

                #8.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 6:09 PM EST
                grey

                It's funny that you say that 'cause I'm in a class this semester called Psycholinguistics & Science Fiction, and I suggested Snow Crash as possible reading for the course to one of its professors (he was looking to expand the Science Fiction portion of the class), and he read it and said that linguistics doesn't play a big enough role.

                I haven't read it; I just knew that there was a linguistics connection.

                • 1 vote
                #8.2 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 6:19 PM EST
                PJ Davis

                I second snowcrash. It would be especially socially relevant today, both the metaverse (mmo games such as wow, second life, FFXI, everquest and social networks such as myspace, facebook, newsvine and the like) and the megachurch media conglomerate

                • 3 votes
                #8.3 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 9:33 PM EST
                Spacegoat

                I only read the book about a month ago, and I was struck by the Metaverse's similarity to Second Life.

                • 1 vote
                #8.4 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 10:01 PM EST
                TomPitysFools

                Any book with a main character named Hiro Protagonist deserves to be made into a commercial empire the likes of which topples Star Wars.

                • 2 votes
                #8.5 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 8:14 AM EST
                Reply
                ericfive

                Illuminatus! Trilogy

                • 3 votes
                Reply#9 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 1:50 PM EST
                Ty Hatch

                The Recluse Sage by L.E. Modessit has long been a favorite. He started it out as fantasy, but there are great sci-fi elements in the books also.

                • 1 vote
                Reply#10 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 1:58 PM EST
                Thura

                That was an awesome series.

                  #10.1 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 2:56 AM EST
                  Reply
                  David Rosenbaum

                  Ender's Game. Not too many people, not too many places, not too much need for special effects. A great human story. And a great climax. My ex and I used to think its movie should be made and that Spielberg would have loved to make it. Apparently the idea's been had, the rights have been sold, and the thing is in some unknown state.

                  • 6 votes
                  Reply#11 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 2:54 PM EST
                  *wookie

                  It's state is not entirely unknown, but an update is long overdue.

                  • 2 votes
                  #11.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 2:59 PM EST
                  eSantiago

                  I can't believe this wasn't like the first post in here. Ender's Game is one of the most expected Sci-fi films in a long time. (even more so than the freakin star wars prequels).

                  The only more profound movie from a book needed is: FOUNDATION!!! Asimov deserves an epic film for his epic novel.

                  Spielberg is probably the best person for Ender's Game though, I thoroughly agree.

                  • 4 votes
                  #11.2 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 4:52 PM EST
                  Adam Hobson

                  Spielberg would ruin Ender's Game and would never happen because Orson Scott Card has little respect for the recent Spielberg. Seriously, what was Spielberg's last decent original movie? E.T.?

                  Sorry again, but of all of Asimov's works Foundation would by far make the worst movie. It isn't even rally a novel, but a collection of short stories. Besides, Asimov himself admits in his various biographies that his earlier works completely lacked dynamic characters and any character development. If you cannot relate to the main characters and care about them, then the movie is dead from the onset. Now, his later works, the Foundation prequels featuring the life of Hari Seldon would be good, but not exactly blockbuster or epic. Nemesis would be good, as could potentially Nightfall if it was expanded from its short story to add some characters and a plot to what is a great concept story. Regrettably, perhaps Asimov's best novel, The Gods Themselves would make a terrible movie, but we can always read the book again.

                  From the two others in THE BIG THREE, there is little I would want to see from Clarke, while Stranger in a Strange Land or The Moon is a Harsh Mistress would both be amazing from Heinlein. I wouldn't mind a serious attempt at Starship Troopers, but I have a feeling that has already been ruined by the farce of a movie that shares its name but shares little else with the novel.

                  • 3 votes
                  #11.3 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:03 PM EST
                  *wookie

                  I have to agree about the Foundation series, I like the books but can't see much to hold the interest of a cinema audience. As for Clarke, perhaps The City and the Stars / Against the Fall of Night would work well - but avoid the Rama series!

                    #11.4 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:18 PM EST
                    eSantiago

                    Adam, I couldn't agree more with the sentiments on Starship Troopers... it needs some serious re-imagination. Something in film format that would be a respectable portrayal of the the story in the books. Its high time... anyone interested in a 3D animation version (Maybe Weinstein Co could do it? They are redoing TMNT, and the previews look like a QUITE promising re-imagination of the sewer turtles). I know there was an animated version series for awhile, but it lacked in quality of acting and animation... It needed SO much more attention to catch on... how sad :-(

                    Foundation would do well with more development placed on Hari Seldon... I agree. There really isn't ONE plot in foundation, that must be why I like it... so much happening all at once, in a huge galaxy, not really following ONE single story, but all of them and how they are inter-related. (its a personal preference in story types) For example, I loved "CRASH", the stories intertwining yet staying quite separate in structure (all surrounding a similar racial conflict). Its my thing... yeah, sorry for the rant, but I like stories like that.

                      #11.5 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:29 PM EST
                      grey

                      Seriously, what was Spielberg's last decent original movie? E.T.?

                      What exactly does original mean here? If it means original as in 'not adapted from a previously published or produced work,' why is that relevant when we're talking about having him helm the adaptation of a short story/novel? And what difference does it make if a movie is adapted from something else anyway?

                      Do you mean movies he's actually written himself? I can't imagine that that's relevant for two reasons: 1. There are only three of those (AI, Poltergeist, and Close Encounters), and 2. E.T. isn't one of them.

                      Maybe you mean non-sequels. Except that the only sequel he's made in the last seventeen years is The Lost World: Jurassic Park.

                      Either way, out of just the last ten years, find me the bad movie out of this group: Munich, Catch Me If You Can, Minority Report, Saving Private Ryan. There aren't a ton of directors who've made four movies of that caliber in the last decade. And if one were to expand that to fifteen years, Jurassic Park and Schindler's List would suddenly count.

                      The whole 'recent Spielberg films are @!$%#' thing is a myth. Sure, he's made a few @!$%#ty movies. But so has mostly everyone else.

                      • 2 votes
                      #11.6 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:42 PM EST
                      Division by Zero

                      I would love to see Ender's Game on the big screen, but I fear it would mainly be a genre film without broad appeal unless a really good trailer was made for it that could draw in the non-scifi fan. In the same way Serenity was a good movie but few outside the Firefly fan base bothered to see it.

                      • 2 votes
                      #11.7 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:45 PM EST
                      ZekeTyler

                      Point and laugh all you like, but I thought that Starship Troopers was an entertaining flick. It's a terrible adaption of the book, I'll give you that, but if you put that aside, and most of your mental reasoning, it's a fun ride.

                      • 1 vote
                      #11.8 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:54 PM EST
                      Adam Hobson

                      Foundation would do well with more development placed on Hari Seldon... I agree. There really isn't ONE plot in foundation, that must be why I like it... so much happening all at once, in a huge galaxy, not really following ONE single story, but all of them and how they are inter-related.

                      But the thing about Foundation was that there was not a bunch of intertwined plot lines as we are used to them, but instead one plot at time a, then jump ahead 50 years to plot at time b, then jump ahead 200 years to plot at time c. The trilogy would fail miserably on the big screen, but perhaps a Sci Fi miniseries is in order. They did as good a job on Dune as can be expected.

                      What exactly does original mean here?

                      I mean Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade doesn't count because it is basically Raiders of the Lost Arc with a new plot line, nothing to really change the directing.

                      Munich and Minority Report were terrible. Catch Me if You Can was okay, and Saving Private Ryan was pretty darn good. But look at his other recent movies, AI was garbage, Hook was one of the worst movies of the '90s, Jurassic Park was okay, but could have been so much better, War of the Worlds was mediocre. The problem with Steven Spielberg movies are that you know they are Spielberg movies. That's not how directing should work. The less you notice the directing in a movie the better a job the director did. It is only when you notice the directing that they have failed at their job of delivering a story that you can get lost in. When their directing pulls you out of the story then they have failed and that is the problem with recent Spielberg movies, he has too many moments where he goes, "hey look at how amazing a director I am, no other director would do this!" and there is a reason no other director would, it's just bad.

                      • 2 votes
                      #11.9 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 6:36 PM EST
                      Standeck

                      Regarding who should direct a film version of Ender's Game, Orson Scott Card had this to say about the movie Serenity and how he would like the movie to feel.

                      The key to this kind of movie is that you create a community that the audience wishes they belonged to, with a leader that even audience members who don't follow anybody would willingly follow. That will be the key to Ender's Game if the movie is ever successfully made; and it is the key to Serenity.

                      • 1 vote
                      #11.10 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 8:56 AM EST
                      Brad Leclerc

                      Ender's game would be SUCH an awesome movie...if done well.

                      • 1 vote
                      #11.11 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 8:58 AM EST
                      Morwynd

                      Nightfall [would be good] if it was expanded from its short story to add some characters and a plot to what is a great concept story.

                      Asimov and Silverberg did exactly that: http://www.amazon.com/Nightfall-Bantam-Spectra-Isaac-Asimov/dp/0553290991

                        #11.12 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 6:07 PM EST
                        Adam Hobson

                        Yeah, but that expansion would make a poor movie. It needs a new, movie specific expansion.

                          #11.13 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 6:14 PM EST
                          Ante

                          Actually..When listening to Ender's Game on me Ipod Mr Card said they had been working on a movie for a couple of years.

                          However, finding a producer that didn't wanted to write in a love story and change the ages to teens...was..virtually impossible.

                          The difficulties are to find lots of good actors around the ages of 7-15.

                          They found a producer after all, and I think we'll see Ender's Game - the Movie within a couple of years ^_^

                            #11.14 - Thu Nov 9, 2006 6:22 AM EST
                            Reply
                            FL Independent

                            A few I would suggest

                            Dragonlance Chronicles trilogy (Autumn Twilight, etc)
                            Icewind Dale Trilogy (Drizzt the dark elf)
                            The Foundation Series by Aasimov
                            Coldfire Trilogy by CS Friedman
                            Everville Trilogy by Clive Barker

                            And generally more Sci-fi fantasy like LOTR but dealt with seriously. Not by Disney to make it kid friendly and like that wretched Dungeons and Dragons movie. We dont want campy, dont use actors like Ben Affleck or people that dont belong, dont use really crappy dialogue or exaggerated acting, etc. Treat it like a real movie, as if you were catching a glimpse of their world.

                            Thats my rant and Im sticking to it.

                              Reply#12 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 4:15 PM EST
                              *wookie

                              Ohh, Dragonlance - that takes me back - I loved that when I was a kid playing Dungeons and Dragons, superb stuff... But I'd not go so far as to call it SciFi - I think Fantasy is a topic all to itself, perhaps someone could start up a Fantasy group and we can have 'favourite fantasy books', 'top 10 fantasy films' and do the whole thing again!

                              Besides, Magician is better than Dragonlance - that would make an amazing film… ;o)

                              • 1 vote
                              #12.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 4:29 PM EST
                              finalcut

                              Pug is would totally dominate Fizban! Too bad I can't stand any of Feists more recent Midkemia novels; they all suck. The Magician series was excellent (as were the stories from the other side of the rift, I can't remember then name of the series; boy has it been a long time).

                                #12.2 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 7:23 PM EST
                                *wookie

                                You mean the Empire series with Janny Wurts, which I thought was second only to the original book, certainly better than Silverthorn & A Darkness at Sethanon (although they are great too). The Krondor series was ok but not particularly inspired, the Serpentwar saga just bored me senseless. The Legends of the Riftwar series has promise (althought strangely it's not listed on the author's website…?) I've read the first, Honoured Enemy, and thought it was a good return to form and I've been told the others are comparable - I'm looking forward to reading the third one, Jimmy the Hand, at some point - he was always one of my favourite characters.

                                The most recent stuff, Conclave of Shadows and the new Darkwar saga sound interesting but I know nothing about whether they are any good or not. I have the first in my reading pile somewhere, but it may be a while before I get to it, I'm on a SciFi tip at the moment… :o)

                                But yeah, Pug would kick anyone's ass, including Captain Kirk, Q and the big-headed guys from Talos IV.

                                  #12.3 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 9:41 AM EST
                                  finalcut

                                  Sorry to have gone down this path - I'm not trying to hijack the thread but here's my one last comment:

                                  yes the Empire series - I really liked that one. I thought it was just as good, if not better, than the Magician series.

                                  Silverthorn and Darkness at Sethanon were pretty good too - but in my mind I clump them together with Magician simply because I read them all at pretty much the same time.

                                  I have not read the Legends of Riftwar Series; perhaps I will give it a chance. Maybe I have read some though because I remember the character name "Jimmy the Hand".

                                  Honestly up to this year it had been close to 13 years that I remember reading a Feist book and I choose to read the Conclave of Shadows books about "Talon" or just "Tal" and they were horrible. I was suprised they were written by Feist (based on my memory of Magician and Empire). The plot was weak, the characters fairly shallow, Pug wasn't even well written, and the whole story seemed very cliche'

                                    #12.4 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 10:07 AM EST
                                    Morwynd

                                    Believe it or not, that wretched Dungeons & Dragons movie was originally supposed to be Dragonlance. But then Dragonheart (Sean Connery as the talking dragon) came out and completely flopped, and some genius decided that a movie with a heavy focus on dragons = unprofitable, so we got the cliched crapfest that is Dungeons & Dragons. The irony here is that the only thing even remotely watchable in that movie is the dragon sequence at the end. ;)

                                    HOWEVER... they are now making an animated Dragonlance movie! Some interesting choices for the voices... most notably, Keifer Sutherland is going to be Raistlin. I think he will do Raistlin's rasp proud... picture his scientist from Dark City. Also, having Jack Bauer headlining the cast should give it some much needed publicity. Other voice actors include Lucy Lawless as Goldmoon, Michael Rosenbaum (Smallville's Lex Luthor) as Tanis, Michelle Trachtenberg (Buffy's annoying sister) as Tika, and Phil LaMarr (!) as both Riverwind and Gilthanas.

                                    Weiss and Hickman are both involved as creative consultants too. Looking like it could be pretty sweet.

                                    Official Movie Site

                                    IMDB Page

                                      #12.5 - Fri Nov 10, 2006 12:13 AM EST
                                      *wookie

                                      Sounds promising!

                                        #12.6 - Fri Nov 10, 2006 5:40 AM EST
                                        Reply
                                        FL Independent

                                        Sorry 1 more

                                        Darksword Trilogy

                                          Reply#13 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 4:17 PM EST
                                          small WORLD podcast

                                          Beaten to the punch! Consider Phlebas would make for an awesome scifi flcik. As banks once said, when he wrote Consider Phlebas he wanted to out-Star Wars Star Wars. The mainstream audiences would eat that movie up with a spoon!

                                          Sterling's Schismatrix stories would be a great film but I think it would be difficult to pull all those stories together in one movie. The director would probably have to use one of those all-the-characters-are-connected themes to get the audience to buy it. The other problem is that as fantastic as the stories are, they are awfully clinical. Kind of hard for viewers to identify or sympathize with post humans.

                                          So what does that leave me? Sterling's Heavy Weather? Oh, yeah, they made it into that abortion of a movie, Twister. How about Morrisons' The Invisibles? Damn, the Wachowski brothers already coopted most of the ideas in The Matrix.

                                          I'm gonna have to go with Stephenson's Snow Crash. The timings just about right what with so many people on Second Life. It's got action and adventure, hell, it's even got katanas! It's got pizzas, religion, sex, Japanese hip hop and Russian heavy metal!

                                          • 2 votes
                                          Reply#14 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 4:45 PM EST
                                          Jeff Doak

                                          Snow Crash without a doubt. If any of you haven't read it yet, go buy it right now.

                                          • 1 vote
                                          Reply#15 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 4:53 PM EST
                                          Old Europe

                                          One of the Riverworld Cycle by Philip Jose Farmer

                                          • 1 vote
                                          Reply#16 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:08 PM EST
                                          Critical

                                          I'd love to see Dean Koontz - Twilight Eyes made into a movie. That'd be rad if done right

                                            Reply#17 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:17 PM EST
                                            ochreous

                                            Here are the top 3 books that haven't already been mentioned that I think would make great movies:

                                            Lord of Light - Zelazny
                                            The Demolished Man - Bester
                                            Harlan Ellison's original script for "City on the Edge of Forever" (as opposed to the version that was filmed for Star Trek 1.0)

                                            • 1 vote
                                            Reply#18 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:42 PM EST
                                            ochreous

                                            These would make good movies with a war commentary subtext:

                                            Bill the Galactic Hero - Harry Harrison
                                            The Forever War - Joe Haldeman (the antidote to Starship Troopers)

                                            • 1 vote
                                            Reply#19 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:46 PM EST
                                            Brian White

                                            Also in the same vein, Armor by John Steakley was excellent. Rather similar to Starship Troopers with the battling the bugs though.

                                            • 1 vote
                                            #19.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 6:12 PM EST
                                            Reply
                                            jimi

                                            Anything by David Gerrold. He is making one already as a matter of fact, "The Martian Child".

                                            • 1 vote
                                            Reply#20 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 5:58 PM EST
                                            Brian White

                                            "A Fire Upon the Deep" by Vernor Vinge. He is truly one of my favorite authors, and this book has it all. There are aliens with middle ages technology (though the aliens though are pack creatures, several dog like beings form one 'person') a crashed ship with two child survivors, first contact, disruption of native tech, and a great backstory where the two kids have the countermeasure to an ancient malevolent being who's conquering societies left and right. Read this book.

                                            • 3 votes
                                            Reply#21 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 6:19 PM EST
                                            small WORLD podcast

                                            I could definitely see Spielbergh directing A Fire Upon the Deep. Totally up his alley what with the Tines and all.

                                              #21.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 7:20 PM EST
                                              Reply
                                              John W

                                              Mike Resnick's Soothsayer Trilogy would make a good series of movies.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              Reply#22 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 7:06 PM EST
                                              finalcut

                                              If you are like me and have trouble remembering some of the book titles you have read - perhaps this list of "top 100" sci-fi books (and movies) will help:
                                              http://home.austarnet.com.au/petersykes/topscifi/

                                              • 3 votes
                                              Reply#23 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 7:29 PM EST
                                              *wookie

                                              That's a great resource, thanks.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              #23.1 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 8:14 PM EST
                                              Reply
                                              Spacegoat

                                              I got one that may be kind of out of left field.

                                              Friday - Robert A Heinlein: It features a sexy genetically engineered gal working as a courier in a secret organization some time in the future. The book has sex, politics, action, global terrorism, and addresses the moral issue of genetic engineering. The book may require a little adaptation, but this could really be the definitive movie of our time.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              Reply#24 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 7:34 PM EST
                                              small WORLD podcast

                                              Which begs the question: who would play Friday?

                                              • 2 votes
                                              #24.1 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 8:20 AM EST
                                              Spacegoat

                                              Whoever it is, she would need to be sexy, athletic, and willing to do nude scenes. Friday, after all, was grown in a test tube to be a concubine before she was bought by Boss, and trained to be a secret agent. Physical perfection is compulsory for whoever takes on the role.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              #24.2 - Wed Nov 8, 2006 10:53 AM EST
                                              Reply
                                              finalcut

                                              I think Tad Williams "Otherland" series would be a great series of movies. A compelling cast of characters mixed into a future that isn't that hard to believe. It would easily capture the mainstream imagination.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              Reply#25 - Tue Nov 7, 2006 7:35 PM EST
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