|
Riverworld: The TV Series
A frank appraisal of the TV series of the Riverworld by Shelby
Peck, who finds a hodgepodge of things that can and can't
be found in the books.
Philip
Jose Farmer (1918-) is a prolific writer who has done many wonderful
things in the field of Science Fiction since he began writing during
the last century.
In 1971, he began a series of five books that had
a cast of characters that included real people like Sir Richard
Francis Burton, explorer, adventurer and translator of 1001 Arabian
Nights, Cyrano de Bergerac, Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) and numerous
real and fictional personae.
The
first in the series was called 'To Your Scattered Bodies Go', the
second, 'The Fabulous Riverboat', then 'The Dark Design', 'The Magic
Labyrinth' and 'Gods Of Riverworld'.
The five books contain one of the biggest ideas in
the history of Science Fiction. Not just a tale of wonder and adventure,
but the exploration of human greatness and human weakness.
I had read the series when the books first came out
but I was again intrigued while reading them over thirty years later.
I've only felt this way about Jack L. Chalker's series of books
that began with 'Midnight At The Well Of Souls'.
First imagine that you and every single person who
ever lived from 100,000 BC to 1983 or the present are reincarnated
- unless you have died before the age of five.
You awake to find yourself on the banks of a river
that stretches round and round from one end of an Earth-like planet
to the other. You are naked, hairless and physically twenty-five
years of age without any previous deformities or disabilities.
You look into the sky at noon and see giant stars
and at night the sky is ablaze with nebulae, all the colours of
the rainbow and thousands of stars. Near you is a stack of towel-like
cloth and attached to one wrist is a canister or grail that can
be inserted into the top of mushroom-shaped stones - grailstones
along both banks of the River that flash like lightning three times
a day and voila.
When you open your grail, you find food, drink and
possibly other goodies that may make your life happier on Riverworld
- a place that seems to have been designed to care for billions
of human beings along the length of one never-ending river valley.
There is vegetation and fish that have been modified
to live on the planet but you are the only mammal life to be found.
Being human, you wonder who or what created this strange world and
if you can, you will try to find out.
That was the premise of the ‘Riverworld’ series.
Among the billions of humans on this world, many individuals from
throughout history, speaking in many tongues, use and adapt what
they have or can find to journey up the River to look for a legendary
and mysterious tower in the center of a fog-shrouded sea, circled
by unscalable mountains, where those that created Riverworld and
called the Ethicals can be found.
On Saturday, March 22nd, the US SciFi Channel presented
a 2-hour adaptation of parts of the first two books in the series
and I understand that it will be shown again on Sunday, April 13th.
They used a hodge-podge of things that can and things
that can't be found in the books. Instead of the protagonist being
an historically interesting Sir Richard Francis Burton, they substituted
a fictional and uninteresting astronaut, Jeff Hale. I missed Sam
Clemen's sub-human companion Joe Miller, the Titanthrop.
Hale and others are restored to life and find themselves
on an ocean beach, when the planet in the series has no oceans,
just a great river. He and others are taken captive by a semi-Roman
legion of Vandals, riding in on horses when the only non-human life
in the books was that of the alien Monat, Ethicals, fish and worms.
Picky? I guess I am and I would assume that in order
to finally get the Riverworld story to film, many of the things
that were adapted from the first two books may have had to be changed
but it still rancored me since they were not true to the books and
to the conception of their author, Philip Jose Farmer.
The lack of publicity didn't help to make a series
possible either.
To put the adaptation into capsule form, I would
give the following outline:
Resurrectees are taken captive by bad guys. Real
Big bad guy kills not so big bad guy. Good guy frees captives. Big
bad guy and his baddies take Big boat away from Good guys. Big bad
guy stakes Good guy to die and starts assault on Good girl. Good
guy escapes and frees captive good guys, then while Good guys retake
Big boat, Good guy fights and kills Bad guy. Big boat continues
up River.
At the end we see Mysterious Stranger speaking to
a large group of Ethicals like himself.
'Their journey has begun. Will it be completed in
time? Will it be completed at all?'
You may enjoy 'Riverworld' as one of the many ordinary
adventure shows to be found on the Telly and it didn't hurt to have
the book finally brought to the attention of this generation but
I do wish that they had really made a movie that would grip a TV
audience as it gripped the reading public.
To me, the movie was ordinary.
Shelby Peck
|
|
OTHER CONTENT - June 2003
Going to Jael At last, the queen of SFF illustration, Jael, comes under the interviewer's spotlight. She explains how she put her personal and inner ambition on hold through most of her extremely busy child-rearing years, and why she just loves Batman, Green Hornet, Captain Marvel and Superman. (INTERVIEWS)
An Allen Key for Science Fiction? Why philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder Paul G. Allen has announced plans for a new cultural project dedicated to science fiction and the ways it captures our imagination. (NEWS)
Adamantium or cement? Shall I count the ways for the Hugo.
The World SF con - Noreascon Four - would like your creative insights and otherworldly
engineering proposals for the perfect base on which to mount their treasured
silver rocket denoting excellence in SFF ... the Hugo awards. How about moon
rock, guys?
(NEWS)
Who will arrange my Separation from this troublesome Priest? Christopher Priest scoops the 2003 Arthur C Clarke Award for his novel 'The Separation', featuring a parallel reality where Britain made peace with Hitler in 1941. Pulp SF it ain't ... but it's a rather good read all the same. (NEWS)
A little Huth and Puff Interview with the author Joe Huth - co-editor of the non-fiction work the 'Knight Rider Legacy'. Joe talks about why, with society's ongoing love affair with the automobile, you can make that car indestructible, sentient and able to perform incredible feats and you've got every young boy's (and many man's) dream. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
The Offworld Report: May 2003 Jeff VanderMeer looks at Robert Freeman Wexler, just about everyone looks at The Matrix Reloaded, the Andromeda season three finale slaps into the small screen, Ted Chiang is interviewed, and President Bush cites the film 'The Last Starfighter' as his inspiration for entering politics (or does he?). (NEW ROUNDUP)
Riverworld: The TV Series
A frank appraisal of the TV series of the Riverworld by Shelby Peck, who finds
a hodge-podge of things that can and can't be found in the books.
(TV REVIEWS)
The Matrix Reloaded: Frank's Take Frank finds the whimsical Wachowski tandem are at it again with the second installment of this frothy film series in the form of the visually vigorous and devoutly exhilarating The Matrix Reloaded. (FILM REVIEWS)
The Matrix Reloaded: Mark's Take The war to release humanity from computer-generated non-reality continues in a pretentious and violent film that nonetheless has a lot of style. (FILM REVIEWS)
More Priestly Mischief Is there no stopping the man? The winners of the British Science Fiction Association Awards were announced on Easter Sunday, at he 54th UK National Science Fiction Convention. The Winner for Best Novel of 2002? None other than Christopher Priest for his 'The Separation', published by Scribner.
(NEWS)
Canamar (Star Trek Enterprise) Archer and Trip, falsely accused of smuggling, find themselves on an Enolian prison ship headed for the dreaded penal colony of Canamar. (TV REVIEWS)
Future Tense (Star Trek Enterprise) The discovery of a wrecked ship, apparently from the future, thrusts Archer and the Enterprise right in the middle of the Temporal Cold War. (TV REVIEWS)
Horizon (Star Trek Enterprise) Travis Mayweather returns home to his parents' ship, the Horizon, only to find that things have changed in his absence. (TV REVIEWS)
Judgment
(Star Trek Enterprise)
Archer is accused of crimes against the Klingon Empire and brought before a tribunal. (TV REVIEWS)
X2: Frank's Thoughts Is everybody ready for a second helping of a particular mutant recipe known as the X-Men? Apparently so since the first taste of this action-packed delicacy mustered up an incredible $157 million at the U.S. box office. (FILM REVIEWS)
X2: Mark's Thoughts This second film based on the X-Men comic book is a better story and a more atmospheric production. I am told it is a better adaptation of the comic book. One does not come to this sort of film for a deep statement of the human condition, but for a summer action film, it is not too bad. (FILM REVIEWS)
2001 and All That Scottish SF author Ken MacLeod argues that much history, including the End of
it, has happened since 2001, and he thinks it is rather important that they should not
be remembered. (COMMENT)
Why Some Things Don't Need To Be Resurrected Geoff asks can, indeed should, Battlestar Galactica be revived in the same way Star Trek was resurrected with the Next Generation? (COMMENT)
|

CHAT
ABOUT THIS STORY
Advertise
Here (More ...)
|