Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Five-FiftySix Meme

Bora tagged me with the 5-56 meme. The idea is pretty simple: take ten books and copy the fifth sentence on page 56.

- You can pick and choose the books to find the most interesting sentences.
- At least five of the books should be fiction.
- Try not to use books that are so obscure no one could guess what they are.
- You can give hints, if you so desire.
- Tag some other bloggers to pass the meme along.

I've selected sentences from 10 SF novels. Here are a few hints:
  • The books are in chronological order by original publication date. The earliest was originally published in 1953. The most recent was first published in 2000.
  • One quote is from a well-known anthology of short stories.
  • Two quotes are from novels that were based on a novella that won a Hugo award
  • Three quotes are from novels that won a Hugo award
  • One quote is from a novel that won a Nebula award
  • Nine of the authors have won Hugo awards
  • Nine of the authors have won Nebula awards
I am actually heading off to New York for the rest of the week, so I'll be posting sporadically if at all until next Monday. That gives you six days to guess the source of the quotes!
  1. And quivering in the air above the base of the fall was the last rainbow left on Earth.

  2. In spite of herself, she noticed the masculine odor of him, compounded not unpleasantly of sweat, leather, and an unusual muskiness that must be from close association with dragons.

  3. Mr. Duckworth rode stroke; the drops fell off his paddle like tears of glass on a smooth mirror of the Isis, and . . .

  4. A god who now sought revenge on the race of Men who had devised machines that would banish them from the real world.

  5. Her thighs soak up the kinetic energy and then release it, and once again she is racing toward us, hair streaming straight out behind her, a broad smile of triumph growing larger in the screen.

  6. No telling what the ship might do to him next.

  7. There would be so many opportunities to miss the obvious, so many chances to misunderstand, so many ways of taking the wrong path.

  8. Matrix gone, a wave of sound and color . . . . She was moving through a crowded street, past stalls vending discount software, prices feltpenned on sheets of plastic, fragments of music from countless speakers.

  9. Hackworth had once taken his family out rowing on the pond in the par, and the ends of the yellow oars spun off compact vortices, and Fiona, who had taught herself the physics of liquids through numerous experimental beverage spills and in the bathtub, demanded an explanation for these holes in the water.

  10. In a thicker, stinking haze just above the rooftops, the detritus from a million low chimneys eddied together.
Edited 12-08: Here are are the answers.

And I tag:
Stephanie Svan
Nina Munteanu
Arvind Mishra
Shaun Duke
Jessie Terwilliger

ETA: I changed #9, because I found the book I wanted to use.
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Monday, December 01, 2008

The Planet of the Apes Movie that Never Was and the Movie that Will Be

Since the first Planet of the Apes movie was released in 1968, there have been four sequels and a short-lived television series. Tim Burton made a reimagined version of the original in 2001. In all of those versions, the intelligent apes that rule the planet turn out to be descendants of present-day Earthly apes.

According to Devin Faraci at Chud.com, there might have been a very different sequel, if Oliver Stone had had his way:
Talking to Entertainment Weekly in 1993, [Stone] said ''My concept is there's a code inscribed in the Bible that predicts all historical events. The apes were there at the beginning and figured it out. I don't want to (say) too much more, except the stars will be hairy.''

The idea was that a disease was wiping out the human race today. Arnold Schwarzenegger would play Will Robinson (I don't think this was meant as a Lost in Space tie-in, but who knows with this batty shit) as a genetic scientist who figures out the cause of the disease is in the distant past and, along with a pregnant colleague, travels back to the Stone Age to discover a world dominated by apes. To stop the plague they save a girl named Aiv. The time-traveling woman has a son named Adam.
That sounds pretty bad - from the Bible Code that's apparently hundreds of thousands of years old and created by apes, to the time traveler who becomes "Adam". It might have been amusing to see Schwarzenegger as a geneticist, but probably not worth sitting through a 3-hour-long Oliver Stone ape epic. We should all be grateful that the movie eventually fell into Tim Burton's creative hands.

It turns out there is Planet of the Apes prequel in the works, and writer/director Scott Frank plans to make it a hard science fiction movie. It will be set in the near future, and tell the story of Caesar, an "uplifted" chimpanzee with genetically enhanced intelligence who will become the ancestor of the apes who will eventually rule the world.
The science that creates a hyper-intelligent chimpanzee is based on current real world research - this film would just take that science one step further. He's also committed to telling a story based on character, not antic ape action. His plan for Caesar is one where you come to really feel for this ape, even as the final act sees him taking actions that may be hard for us to agree with.

[. . .] Since he doesn't want to have people running around in monkey suits, Frank is doing lots of research into the state of effects today - can he create a photoreal chimpanzee (one who is facially modified by the genetic engineering that grants him his intelligence) who will be the main character for this film? Can he create a character who is completely expressive through his face, eyes, and gestures (including sign language) without speaking a word of dialogue?
It sounds like an interesting idea. Lack of dialogue shouldn't be a problem, at least in principal - just look at how successful the robots in WALL-E conveyed emotion, despite their lack of facial features. However, I think a sort of chimp-human hybrid could be tricky to pull off, because it's almost-but-not-quite-human features might land the character deep in the uncanny valley. If Frank is successful, it might open the door to movies set in Brin's Uplift Universe, which I think would be awesome.

As for the science, we really are in the very early stages of understanding how genetics influence intelligence. Since both human and chimpanzee genomes have been sequenced, scientists have started to tease out what the differences in DNA sequence between our species mean at a functional level. Some intriguing possibilities have emerged, but I think we are a long way from being able to genetically engineer enhanced intelligence in either humans or chimps. That's not to say it won't be possible someday, but certainly not in the next couple of years.

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Tomorrow: Sex in Space

The History Channel has an episode of The Universe that takes a (tasteful?) look at sex in space:
As man moves to colonize the cosmos, the realities of sexual relationships and reproduction need to be addressed. Probe the physiological, psychological and cultural challenges of sex in space. From the sex act through birth, look at how the extreme environments of space exploration might effect copulation, conception and developing human tissues, as well as how issues around sex might impact the emotional lives of astronauts. Get to the bottom of the rumors to find out if space sex has already happened, and look at how the burgeoning space tourism business may soon lead to a boom in space sex.
It's showing December 2 at 9pm, December 3rd at 1AM, and December 20 at 3pm. Looks interesting!

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