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…



