Aerial Boundaries wrote:I'm not sure what to say about Interstellar. Contrived? Sloppy plot? Bland cliche characters?
The effects were amazing, but then they would still have been amazing if they were just transplanted into a video on the NASA site or something.
I don't know, it just irritated me more than anything. Seemed like a real missed opportunity.
My preference for scifi is different from yours Jcn, I love talky and techy scifi. Films and series with characters and plot that I care about or are at least interesting. Most importantly is dialogue writing, you need good dialogue writing so that your characters can explain concepts to a viewer in a way which they will understand and find entertaining and intriguing. Otherwise you ARE a kid, sitting there and watching pretty lights and explosions and not learning anything or thinking about the implications of what is on screen. I mean isn't the most amazing thing about scifi that it shows you what hypothetical situations might mean in the real world? The social and philosophical implications? It is for me anyway.
This isn't cynicism I think, it is just disappointment. I find the way the film is made cynical, because it assumes we don't want or need a good plot, or characters, we just need cool visuals.
Pretty effects Interstellar does well, directing my thinking in an interesting way it does not. That is what separates it from 2001.
/rant
Aye, it had it's faults, a bit ham-fisted and over-explained in places and the characters/dialogue average, certainly it would have benefited from being less resolved, like 2001, but actually I thought the plot and overall story excellent and thought-provoking and the soundtrack in particular superb. I'm not really impressed by just flashy effects - for example I thought Gravity was extremely poor, lacking something in comparison to Interstellar - a certain
feel that I can't put my finger on.
For me, big, epic and far-reaching is the hallmark of classic sci-fi, with the benchmark set by 2001. Dialogue and plot holes can be forgiven more than in other genres - I actually think that 2001 would be utterly mauled by mainstream critics were it released now.
Another good example is Sunshine - ludicrous in places but utterly sublime and classic sci-fi, in my opinion, if you are willing to suspend disbelief - which I think all sci-fi requires to some extent.
What would your other sci-fi favourites be?