Rrose Selavy
Stranded in Sub-Atomica
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- Sep 11, 2004
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It's an interesting post, but not so good that I want to see it four times...
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I have seen Brazil a few times. I don't know which version, but I helped run the students' film society at uni and we put it in the schedule a couple of years running (which meant receiving a delivery of massively heavy 35mm reels and carting them over to our trusty projector in the lecture hall)
I did really struggle with it though. Not that it wasn't a very well done film, but I couldn't personally make dystopia and comedy mix. It actually made me shudder in several parts, right from the opening "arrest" scene of Tuttle/Buttle whomever. So I wouldn't be looking for more of that. But thanks for highlighting it anyway, and returning the memory![]()
Rrose, I was feeling facetious, hope you didn't mind...
Well I enjoyed The Handmaid's Tale, so that other one sounds like a buy. Thanks.Margaret Atwood has done a couple of dystopias. The Handmaid's Tale puts power in the hands of a military theocracy in a time of drastically reduced fertility; Oryx and Crake gives us genetic engineering and giant corporations.
Stanislaw Lem, Memoirs Found in a Bathtub
I'd say Catch-22 is one that hasn't been mentioned. It's pretty grim.
One of my favorites is Earth by David Brin. It is a near-future sci-fi novel that extrapolates a lot of present trends such as global warming and reduced privacy. Still sci-fi, but with a whole lot to chew on.
I'll second you on both of these Atwood books (which I read in the last year). I didn't quite like the ending of Handmaid's Tale, but really enjoyed the story premise and character depth.Margaret Atwood has done a couple of dystopias. The Handmaid's Tale puts power in the hands of a military theocracy in a time of drastically reduced fertility; Oryx and Crake gives us genetic engineering and giant corporations.