Friday, January 8, 2010
How It Should Have Ended
Superman: The Movie
In the world of Superman, some make him vulnerable to pain, and cause him to completes great feats with obvious strain. Some make him wildly powerful and (nearly) impenetrable. While the former makes for more interesting (and perhaps easier) story-telling, the latter is fun to watch now and again. Such as this clip:
Terminator/Back to the Future
Doc had no idea what he started...
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Long Live Back to the Future!

All right, I wasn’t going to say anything, but this has become too strange to ignore.
There seem to be an unprecedented number of Back to the Future fans on the internet. Back on November 5, I posted about BTTF because that day happens to be the red-letter date in those movies. Since then, that post has been inundated by web-searches. Over 90% of all web searches that lead people to this blog are related to Back to the Future, such as “Marty McFly,” “Doc,” “Delorean,” “2015 clothing,” “flying car,” “Biff,” “clocktower,” ect… The number of views on that one post have exceeded the views on all other posts combined!
Frankly, I’m shocked! I’ve met a few people who really love the trilogy, but I thought the enthusiasm for the movies was restricted either to the few who grew up on the movies, or to those who really love 80’s movies. Either that perception is wrong, or there are many, many people out there who fall into those two enthusiastic groups.
At any rate, long live Back to the Future! (If you classify yourself as an especially ardent fan of BTTF, you should check out it’s web home: BTTF.com. Enjoy.)
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Are We There Yet? Back to the Future and the year 2015

Back in the mid-80's, a wonderful trilogy of movies was filmed, which is still my favorite set to this day: Back to the Future. There are many aspects of these films that set them firmly on a preferential pedestal. The casting couldn't have been better.


Their travels to 2015 are of interest. When all the problems of the first movie have been resolved, Marty asks Doc where he'll go now. He tells him he'd like to go to the future "to see the progress of mankind." He says he'll go ahead "30 years. It's a nice round number." When Marty goes to the future in Back to the Future II, we get to see this progress.

To name a few of the 'advancements,' there are flying cars which travel"skyways" rather than highways, hoverboards, a controlled weather system, an efficient justice system (which has done away with lawyers), robotic waiters, automated gas stations, holographic advertising signs, video conferencing in place of the phone,


So, are we there yet? We definitely haven't discovered an easy way to make cars fly, or to make skateboards hover. The weather is still as unpredictable as it ever has been. Though some parts of life have become more automated, such as self-serve banking and grocery shopping, or pay-at-the-pump gas stations, we are not yet served by robots. Our clothing is still very non-futuristic compared to that of Back to the Future's 2015. No self-drying, auto-sizing, or power lacing. Retinal scanning might happen in the most advanced corporations, but for now, it remains mostly in the movies. Our justice system is still not very efficient, and still full of lawyers. We do have many fast-convenience food items, though not quite like the hydrated pizza that starts the size of a quarter, and when hydrated, can feed a family of five.
On the other side of things, we've moved beyond the fax machine for the most part. Back to the Future's 2015 saw the fax machine as part of the communication of the future, with Marty's notice of job termination spitting out of almost 10 fax machines around the house. We do have such things as voice activated services, like lighting.

Overall, though, we still have a lot of ground to make up if we are to achieve the vision Back to the Future has set out for 2015. We have six years to go.