Maybe a
look into the past will help:
Take “Back
to the Future II” for example. The movie was released in 1989 but parts of it
take place in 2015. Not too far from today.
Hoverboard and automatic shoes |
Or take
e-readers for example. In the movie a salesperson talks about dust jackets. A
thing of the past in the movie, but are there e-readers? No. Instead books have
multi-functional covers.
Let’s take
a look at the movie “2001: A Space Odyssey”. It was released in 1968 and is set
in 2001. The movie predicted space tourism with trips to Jupiter or Mars.
Of course that’s not the case. Only very few, very rich people have got the
chance to join a space crew so far and certainly not for a trip to Jupiter.
Another
wrong prediction of the movie and of many other movies of the time is the
predominance of artificial intelligence in the future. If many movies had been
correct with their predictions, we’d all be using robots for cleaning and
cooking. Alas, sadly that’s not the case.
And what
about laser pistols? When will they come? Never?
But a few
predictions weren’t totally wrong. In “Back to the Future II”, there are flat
screen TVs. And some movies of the past predicted scary reality shows. “The
Running Man” for example, where convicts try to outrun Stalkers who want to
kill them. Though we don’t kill each other on reality TV yet, I think I’m not
the only one who thinks that the majority of reality TV today is what many
people of the past would’ve regarded as a downfall of society, and maybe it's true. Big Brother certainly shows some similarities to the movie “The
Truman Show”.
"The Running Man" - hiding from the Stalkers |
That leads
to one conclusion regarding today’s dystopian literature: though I’m sure 99%
of it is totally off, some things might come true. Probably the things we least
expect!
Scary.
Do you know
any movies that got it wrong when they predicted the future? Or do you know any
movies that got it right?
2 comments:
What an interesting and timely post :) I'm currently writing a story set some time in the future, but I've purposely avoided mentioned what year or even decade it takes place in. I had initially planned on giving a general time period, but I've since decided I'd rather not. It's mostly because of many of the things you list here.
The trick is to make it seem plausible as a futuristic, but not so familiar or so foreign that readers can't buy in. I guess it's all about finding balance, right?
Great post, and thanks for the reminder :)
Jaime - I think not mentioning the year it takes place is a great way to make it easier for readers to suspend their disbelief/suspicion.
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