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Robert J. Sawyer: "A Galaxy Far Far Away" My Ass! (2/3)

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Uploaded by on Jun 2, 2008

Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author Robert J. Sawyer explains how Star Wars has dulled the edge that made science fiction such a pertinent film genre.

Episode 1: Planet of the Apes, Star Trek & Frankenstein
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3s2p05OAmU

Episode 2: H.G. Wells & Jules Verne
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIBaUpwC0ls

Episode 3: Star Wars
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P7zN2Na7bTQ

The audio of the full lecture can be found here:
http://www.sfwriter.com/2008/02/rob-sawyer-sf-lecture-on-tvontario.html

This is a fan-made slideshow. All images belong to the original copyright holders.

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  • @oevega200 Wells a fascist. LOL! Boy, talk about stupid!

    You do know that H. G. Wells presented the United Kingdom's declaration of war against Germany in 1939? For a fascist, he sure hated the Nazi who burned all his book in Berlin years before the war. I much doubt Wells was anything more than a Fabian socialist and supporter of the Labour Party. Fascist, my ass!

  • There's a lot of Starwars fundamentalist here, who i dont think want to hear people blaspheming their sacred text..... How quintessentially religious.

  • Wells was a smart guy, too bad he was so fascist.

    Verne, on the other hand, was the inspiracion for the Space Race. Not too bad.

  • Actually, outdated technology has it's practical aspects. Take for example the double barrelled LeMat revolver. the concept could easily inspire future underslung pistol attatchments.

  • Jules Verne did not invent the idea of the submarine.

    The Nautilus was directly inspired by the French submarine Plongeur, a crewed, compressed air driven submarine that was commissioned until 1935. Jules Verne studied it extensively to design his sub, and invented very little (except the Nautilus was much bigger).

    Robert J. Sawyer has no deep knowledge or understanding of sci-fi. Just more proof that the Hugo Awards mean diddly-shit.

  • i am ofically rocked..................... wow

  • So that would be the H G Wells who believed in eugenics?

  • I once read that Verne was not a sci-fi author,that he wa,s at much, a "tech-fi" author. I don´t agree, let´s take in consderation that technology is apllied science... his novels were fictional, therefore he IS SCI-FI. I also strongly disaegree that Verne´s novels are now obsolete or as said in this video, expired. In schools they will make you read at least, 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea. Both, Wells and Verne are classic reading nowadays, there is no use in trying to discredit any of them.

  • The thing is, though, Welles did it overall better, where I guess Verne could be the father of 'Hard Sci-Fi'. Which tends, in general, to fail at being compelling towards human issues or feeling. Lots of technical specs, though. =P

  • Since the entire lecture is about how Sci-Fi is supposed to involve social commentary, I doubt he believes there was no such aspects in Verne's work.

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