Showing posts with label Sci-Fi Hall of Fame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sci-Fi Hall of Fame. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2011

The Darker Side of Speculative Fiction

Horror.  We love it, but oftentimes don't really know why.  It's been suggested before that it really isn't a genre of fiction.  In fact, Douglas E. Winters said exactly that in the introduction of the horror anthology Prime Evil, - "Horror is not a genre...horror is an emotion."  He's right, to a point.  Until Stephen King took it to completely new heights, horror wasn't marketed as such for readers.  It was just literature.

But I think now it's become as much a genre as any of them, and that includes a lot of other genres that haven't been around long either.  Genres are changing.  They have a place, and that is to tell us as readers what kind of story to expect when we read it.  They'll only get more diverse, and that's good for literature.


Scraesdon Fort © Bill Booth, Licensed for further use under Creative Commons License

Good horror often has the fear of the unknown.  Much of what scares us is simply something banal which we do not fully understand.  Looking at a deep, dark set of steps leading down into nothingness sets our imagination on fire, especially if it's in the context of horror.  There's no telling if the stairs lead down to things that go bump in the night, or just a bare room full of cobwebs.


Spooky in Broad Daylight © Jonathan Billinger, Licensed for further use under Creative Commons License

A graveyard is not nearly as unnerving in the daylight, when we know the histories of those entered.  It's a place of history, of silence and solitude.  Of loss and reflection.  Sadness is not the same as horror.  Not by a long shot.


Logie Kirk © Marc Curran, Licensed for further use under Creative Commons License

But add a touch of the unknown, and the possibility of danger and things unnatural, and it becomes an unnerving place.  Make those things a probability, or even an eventuality, and it becomes terrifying.  In fact, it becomes so much so, it has been a staple feature in horror film and literature since horror was first written.

Even a touch of fog changes an old graveyard into something straight out of a horror film.  Just imagine walking through there at night, with nightingales and hoot owls calling in the surrounding trees, and maybe a dog or two snuffling around in the brush, just out of sight.  All harmless creatures, but one certainly wouldn't be assuming they were harmless in such a scenario.

Part of that fear of the unknown includes the supernatural.  Our minds make it morph into something dangerous, deadly.  Even if we've never actually seen ghosts, devils, demons, ghouls, zombies or any other supernatural creature, and even if we truly don't believe they exist, they'll scare the bejesus out of us with the right setting and plot.


West Cemetery Chapel © Hugh Mortimer, Licensed for further use under Creative Commons License

Horror affects us based on what we let our minds get away with.  There's nothing in a book or movie, in spite of what we've been told by writers of the genre, that will hurt us.  We can sit down and read the words of a horror novel off the page as easily as those from any other genre.  Nothing inherent in the movie itself will hurt us watching it in the movies or on our television screens, but we sure jump at the parts the director wants us to.

The topic is certainly worthy of discussion, and is actually one that will be addressed in the new horror exhibit at Seattle's Science Fiction Museum beginning October 2011.  They'll take a look at some of the psychological aspects of horror, according to EMP's Senior Curator, Jacob McMurray, and "why we as a culture are drawn to these macabre narratives, and how fear and horror are a vital component to our human identity."  I'll be visiting that exhibit sometime before the end of the year, and will report back my experiences there, so stay tuned for that.

I have a buddy who says he doesn't like horror at all.  "Not a bit!" he proclaims.  "I hate the way it messes with your mind."  Actually that last part is a G-rated paraphrase of what he said, but the point is the same.  Now he's read several of my horror stories and loved them.  Couldn't put them down.  In fact, I got an awesomely nasty voice mail message one day telling me he hadn't been able to put my novel down until he finished it at three o'clock in the morning, when he had to get up and go to work at six.  Nice.


© Jonathan Dalar

One has to ask, why, besides the fact that he was a very good friend, would he finish a book in a genre he doesn't like?  Or more precisely, why couldn't he put the book down and finish it at a more reasonable hour?  My first reaction was that it was a damn good book.  I'd like to think so anyway.  I'd like to think it was all my writing.  I'd love to believe it was written so well, so gripping, that it's almost impossible for the majority of readers to put down.  And I wish I'd kept that message!

But in spite of my devoted interest to fantasy and things that don't really exist, I'm a realist.  I understand the psychological aspects of it, and I think the horror itself was what contributed largely to his sleepless night with the book.  I think it's personal, and the reason he couldn't put it down lies in the genre.

Horror is an emotion, and it drags us in a little closer than some of the other genres do.  It's more invasive.  It gets all familiar and moves into our head.  How many times have you woken in a cold sweat from reading romance or mystery, after all?  I didn't think so.

From the time we're very small, we're on regular speaking terms with horror.  It's the thing that goes bump in the night.  It's waiting for us under the bed, after our mommy tucks us in.  It lurks just around the corner, waiting for us to drop our guard just a little bit.  It's the embodiment of all the bad that could be, and all that might be.  It calls on our deepest emotions and provokes that instant and primal fight or flight instinct that lies within us.

And it's also a rush of adrenaline and endorphins - our body's own morphine-like substances which dull our pain and make us feel good.  These are the same chemicals we produce during exercise, excitement, love and even orgasm.  It's no wonder we're somewhat attracted to horror, even if we profess we don't like it.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame: Avatar and Battlestar Galactica exhibits

This past Saturday, I took the family down to one of my favorite places, the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame.  Located in the Experience Music Project, a wildly colorful and uniquely designed building, it sits in the shadow of the Space Needle in downtown Seattle.


© Jonathan Dalar

The building was originally built for the Experience Music Project, which was a way for creator Paul Allen to bring something to the local community that wasn't available anywhere else.  His vision was to engage people, inspire them, and get them excited about music, not just show them artifacts in a museum.  He expanded this concept with the addition of the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame in 2004, bringing us exposure to artifacts and unique memorabilia we otherwise wouldn't have been able to see.


© Jonathan Dalar

The museum has a very large number of artifacts, but shows very few at a time.  Not only is this done to preserve the artifacts, so as to not display them for a long time, it's also to continue to engage a large membership and refresh exhibits with a variety of content.  After all, who wants to go see the same old thing all the time?

The Science Fiction Hall of Fame is currently closed, as it is being renovated along with the rest of the downstairs in preparation for the new horror exhibit opening soon.  That was a disappointment to me, because as a writer of science fiction, it's always an awesome experience to walk along the row of glass-etched tributes to the genre's greatest writers.  Authors like Philip K. Dick, H. G. Wells, Ray Bradbury, Issac Asimov, William Gibson and many others in that Hall of Fame have been a great inspiration.  It opens back up next summer, so I guess I'll just have to wait and visit again then.

The displays exhibited currently are James Cameron's Avatar, and Battlestar Galactica, as well as the Jimi Hendrix and Nirvana exhibits on the EMP side, which I personally found equally fascinating, but a little off topic for the blog.  Avatar runs through September 3, 2011, and Battlestar Galactica through March 4, 2012.



Avatar

To start this part of the discussion, here are Director James Cameron and Actor Giovanni Ribisi talking about the project at the opening of the exhibit in a Seattle Times news video:




Before you even get inside the Avatar exhibit, you're met with a very cool interactive experience.  Floating jellyfish-like creatures from the movie waft around on a large screen at the entrance, and react to the shadow you cast on the screen.  If you stand still long enough, they will land on your hand.


© Jonathan Dalar

Once inside, you find a wonderful array of interactive exhibits, such as one that allows you to digitally design your own plants that might be found on Pandora.


© Jonathan Dalar

Further into the exhibit are memorabilia from the movie such as handmade models of the Na'vi characters...


© Jonathan Dalar

...and the full-sized Armor Mobility Platform (AMP) suit.


© Jonathan Dalar

Definitely the exhibit that garners the most attention, however, was the interactive motion capture 3D studio, where you can create a clip of yourself, digitally reconstructed to one of two scenes in the 3D Avatar world.  It essentially enables you to star in your own 30-second Avatar movie clip...


© Jonathan Dalar

...which of course, I did.  The clip instantly uploads to YouTube, where you can have it e-mailed to yourself and view it later.  This was my experience.




I'm evidently not quite ready for Hollywood, but it was certainly entertaining and educational.



Battlestar Galactica

This exhibit was my son's favorite part of the trip.  He plays the online game, and found it fascinating to see what he was playing "in real life".  The only downside for him was worrying about spoiling the ending for himself, which I found quite amusing.

The exhibit features three full-size prop spaceships, probably the coolest part, in my opinion.  They're all scuffed up, and look like they've seen their share of battle.

The Viper Mk. II:


© Jonathan Dalar

The Viper Mk. VII:


© Jonathan Dalar

And the Cyclon Raider:


© Jonathan Dalar

In addition to the ships, there are a large number of costumes and other props, as well as interactive exhibits that focus on the shows' concepts and conflicts.


© Jonathan Dalar
© Jonathan Dalar

























As an author, another interesting part was the genesis and time lines of the two shows (1978 and 2003).  I find myself drawn to the behind-the-scenes work that goes into a project, and the decisions that help shape them into their final versions.  Comparing the two shows allows a glimpse into that, or at least it does for me.



Coming in October

And now for a sneak peek at the new horror exhibit, Can't Look Away, opening for members on October 1, 2011, and to the general public on October 2.

EMP's senior curator Jacob McMurray has been putting together the new downstairs horror exhibit for more than a year now, and it sounds like a lot of chilling fun!  He's been working with directors Eli Roth (Super 8), John Landis (Animal House, An American Werewolf in London), and Roger Corman (Little Shop of Horrors, Death Race 2000), to curate a selection of films to serve as the launch pad for the exhibition.  The goal is to cover a wide range of the genre, looking at different generations and different kinds of films.  They'll examine the psychological aspects of it, looking at why we as humans are so fascinated with horror, even though it scares us.

Interactive exhibits will include a scream booth, where you can go into a soundproof booth, watch a horror film clip, where hopefully you'll scream on cue.  Your scream will be captured on film and shown on the screen outside the booth.  Is it bad that the first thought that came to me about this exhibit is that it will probably appeal most to the husbands and boyfriends in the crowd?

There will also be a shadow monster interactive, where your shadow is captured and digitized, allowing you to turn different body parts into strange grotesques and create monsters from your own human form.  I can see my kids spending a while at this part of the exhibit.

For the behind-the-scene geeks in the crowd, there will be exhibits on sound in horror movies, focusing on sound effects and music, and how they are layered together to create the desired effect in the movie.  Again, the geek in me comes out.  I'm really looking forward to this one.

In addition to the interactive areas, the exhibit will house a number of iconic artifacts, including one of Freddy Krueger's gloves, one of the Jason Voorhees masks from Friday the 13th, and Jack Torrance's axe from Stephen King's The Shining.  Perhaps the most exciting artifact is an original manuscript from Bram Stoker's Dracula.  Seeing those alone will be worth the price of admission.  I know I'll be one of the first visitors there when it opens.



© Jonathan Dalar

Finally I'd like to extend a special thank you to PR Director Anita Woo and the rest of the staff at the EMP.  They were very knowledgeable, and more importantly, were willing to take the time to answer all of my geeky questions.  For directions to the EMP, tickets and further information, you can visit the EMP's Website.  You can also find them on Facebook and Twitter.