h a l f b a k e r yReformatted to fit your screen.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
I think that, as far as science fiction films are concerned (in fact film generally), there's an inverse proportional law that can be applied to the relationship between exposed flesh and quality of script (though I excuse The Fifth Element from this). |
|
|
And Barbarella? Or is that the kind of thing you meant? |
|
|
hippo: I've never quite made up my mind about Barbarella. I'm not sure whether it's hilarious satire or just pants. I like the opening titles though. |
|
|
Where does "Planet of the Apes" fall in here? Ben Hur meets Bonanza? I don't remember any particularly "holy" clothes, except for the rags the humans were wearing. |
|
|
Lots of little touches of SFnal fashion creep into everyday life. I see silvery pants and jackets (obviously designed more for the look than for any insulating quality) every now and then on the street. Non-everyday life can have more: raver fashion for example is pretty sfnal. |
|
|
Check out "The Gernsback Continuum," the first (IIRC) story in William Gibson's anthology _Burning Chrome_ for an exploration of this theme. |
|
|
Mephista hit it right. So me and my friends (one of which
is biologist AND sci-fi author Peter Watts) put together a
show called "strange frame" -Like bad jokes that make you
cringe, most sci-fi today is just trite fantasy: worm holes
that don't crush, faster than light travel and, of course,
time travel anytime the writers are in a plot cul-de-sac. As
for style, "strange frame" emerges from the dark
reminiscent of fire lit Balinese puppet dances becoming
hypnotic not through melodramatic, frenetic movement,
but with luscious art, eerie atmosphere and, as per this
discussion, varied fashion. I mean when you walk down
the street does everyone follow a trend? I guess in a
militarized society like Trek everyone has to! |
|
|
Well, we are busy shopping it around- so far the response
from Hollywood has been that it is "too good for
television" and "where are the explosions?" I'm not going
to put the link here so I don't get anti-spam bashed- you
can find it on google or some such thang. |
|
|
"The 5th Element" pulled off what I think was a nice mix of futuristic, reasonably realistic, and totally bizzarre. |
|
|
If you don't think sci fi has regrettable fashion in it, you've obviously never seen battlestar galactica(the old one, not the new miniseries). Sci-fi and... disco. |
|
| |