Reviews Archive

Review: Coco and Book of Life

Posted August 26, 2021 By John C Wright

A reader with the chesslike yet faithful name of Pawn4King wrote a brief comparison or review in the comments, which I thought merited emphasis. I reprint it here as a guest post. 

Note that, like all good reviewers, Pawn4King here shows compassion and insight toward the real people whom the fiction being reviewed reflect. His remarks illustrate the difference between an artist who uses a source material for some ulterior purpose, and an artist who loves his source material. 

The words below are his.

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Conan: Man-Eaters of Zamboula

Posted August 12, 2021 By John C Wright

Shadows of Zamboula (originally called Man-Eaters of Zamboula) was first published in Weird Tales magazine November of 1935, coming four months after Beyond the Black River. It is the sixteenth published story in the Conan canon.

Spoilers abound below.

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THE WOKE SUPREMACY by Evan Sayet

Posted May 22, 2021 By John C Wright

The WOKE SUPREMACY by Evan Sayet is as uncompromising, concise, and crucial as was his prior work, THE KINDERGARDEN of EDEN, and something of an informal sequel to it.

The former work explores the aberrant mind-set of the radical progressive; where the latter work explains its history and current consequences, in the form of its most recent manifestation, named Democratic Socialism.

The manifesto and the message are shocking, galvanizing, clear, and clearly overdue. One cannot defeat an enemy who is not named, whose aims and tactics are unknown.

Evan Sayet is perhaps the most insightful political commentor writing today, and it is odd that his fame and background come from his work as a comedy writer. On the other hand, seeing the state of the political landscape today, perhaps only a comedy writer will do.

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Interstellar

Posted April 5, 2021 By John C Wright

I here reprint my original review of INTERSTELLAR, as this film is a masterpiece well worth revisiting.

***

Directed by Christopher Nolan; Written by Jonathan & Christopher Nolan; and starring Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Michael Caine Mackenzie Foy, Jessica Chastain.

INTERSTELLAR by Chris Nolan is certainly the best science fiction film, and is equal to the best films of any genre, I have ever seen. I would list SEVEN SAMURAI by Akira Kurwasawa as superior to it, and CASABLANCA by Michael Curtiz or THE BIG SLEEP by Howard Hawks, but the mere fact that I am making the comparison with these giants among cinematic masterpieces should tell you of the high regard in which I hold this particular work.

interstellar-new-poster-wallpaper

I hold it INTERSTELLAR high regard not just as a film but as a science fiction film; and more than this, as a serious or ‘hard’ science fiction film, not merely a space opera or fantasy. Like grand opera, Hard SF is an exacting and highly disciplined form of storytelling where the slightest deviation from the strictures of audience expectations mars or even ruins the story. Hard SF is hard.

Before speaking of the film itself, let me make a comment about science fiction films in general, so that my high praise will be seen as fair-minded and not flattery.

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Tenet (Part VI)

Posted April 2, 2021 By John C Wright

TENET (Part VI) The Practice of Worldbuilding

Onward to Part V

Time travel is as impossible as an Escher drawing. The staircase going up and going down cannot be the same staircase, nor can the mill wheel raise the water to fill the sluice to create the waterfall to turn the mill wheel. Escher drawings are cunning visual jokes that appeal the mathematically minded.

Despite disliking time paradox stories, there is one thing I like about time travel stories: It is the same thing I like about Escher drawings.

Given the logical constraint that the thing is starkly, simply impossible, what tricks of perspective and aspect can the artist employ to create the plausible illusion of the impossible being possible?

Certain themes and settings make the illusion of the impossible being possible more convincing. Establishing or, more to the point, not establishing the rules of time travel are part of the worldbuilding that can aid or hinder the illusion.

We have discussed the theory and practice of time travel at exhaustive length to show the possible ways the world in a time travel story can be built to attempt the illusion. Let us now, at long last, return to TENET to examine how Christopher Nolan practices his worldbuilding.

In this case, TENET avoids or outwits most of the problems of paradoxes by selecting the spy genre as the jumping off point.

And here I doff my cap in humble salute.

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Tenet (Part V)

Posted April 1, 2021 By John C Wright

TENET (Part V) The Practice of Time Travel Not Explained

Onward to Part IV

We are examining the practice of how to write a time travel story, which is, in theory, a story that should be impossible to write. There are several minor or halfway cheats by which this can be done. These are discussed below. 

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Tenet (Part IV)

Posted March 31, 2021 By John C Wright

TENET (Part IV) The Practice of Time Travel Explained

Onward to Part III

We are examining the practice of how to write a time travel story, which is, in theory, a story that should be impossible to write. There are three major cheats which allow such a story to be written, namely, fatalism, acausality, and myriad worlds theory; there are several minor or halfway cheats; and the biggest cheat of all, which is merely not to bring up the topic. We will discuss each in order. 

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Tenet (Part III)

Posted March 30, 2021 By John C Wright

TENET (Part III) The Theory of Time Travel

Onward to Part II

With all this in mind, this brings me to my main complaint and main compliment about the film, which regard the worldbuilding.

My main complaint is that it is time travel film. My main compliment is that is a cleverly done time travel film.

Now, be it known that, as an old hand in the science fiction field, as I said, I have read my share of time travel stories, perhaps one too many, and thought out it, or overthought it, and there are certain themes and conceits to which I have learned to take a hearty dislike.

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Tenet (Part II)

Posted March 26, 2021 By John C Wright

TENET (Part II) Theme, Plot. The Theory of Worldbuiling

Onward to Part I

Having said that, the characters are well drawn, but grim and dark and darkgrim grimdark. This is to be expected in the genre: spies and assassins and gunrunners are not a swashbuckling, cheery, upbeat gang, generally speaking. Even a spoof of such a genre is a spoof of what is a grim business, after all.

Despite all this, the theme of this film, while ambiguous (as are all Nolan themes) was not grim and dark, but a paean to the right and duty of every man to make his own fate. Since the background was, of necessity, fatalistic, this is something of a daring choice, and Nolan handles it well.

In less masterful hands, the same theme would have seemed absurd or trite. More on this later.

And, again, as is unusual in time travel films, the victory came at a cost.

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Tenet (Part I)

Posted March 24, 2021 By John C Wright

TENET (Part I) Introductory Remarks. Genre, Style and Character

TENET is a 2020 film, written and directed by Christopher Nolan, starring John David Washington and Elizabeth Debicki. A friend of mine urged me with heartfelt enthusiasm to watch this film, and bought me a copy to ensure that I did. I am grateful, for it was well worth the time, no pun intended.

As is typical with Nolan films, TENET cannot be discussed without enormous and unforgiveable spoilers, and it is film worth not having spoiled, so I suggest only those who have seen it look beneath the fold for my remarks.

The film maker clearly meant for an audience not knowing what to expect to watch it, and, as a courtesy to him, if not for one’s own enjoyment, that is the proper way to see it.

Be warned that what follows is more an essay than a review, or rather, a series of essays, delving, perhaps unwisely, into the philosophy behind the film, and the theory and practice of storytelling in general.

It will be spaced over six parts, including this.

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The Hidden Truth by Hans G. Schantz

Posted September 9, 2020 By John C Wright

In honor of the biggest and best Labor Day booksale of all timespace, I thought it proper to repeat, complete and expand upon my review of the Hans G. Schantz Hidden Truth triology.

Hans G. Schantz’ THE HIDDEN TRUTH is most highly recommended.

It is a gem of a book, a rare find, combining a charming coming of age story, diamond-hard science fiction speculation, a conspiracy thriller, a touch of trenchant political commentary, and, uniquely, a challenge written into a science fiction book of the reigning scientific orthodoxy of the day.

Rarely are science fiction stories written by credentialed scientists. Even more rare is one that proposes a revolutionary theory that questions the historical and theoretical roots of the standard model of modern physics, and no other book does so in the context of an action thriller.

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The Return of Sir Richard Grenville

Posted August 9, 2020 By John C Wright

As previously announced, Jeffro Johnson, author of Appendix N, Zaklog the Great, Nate the Greater, and your truly gather electronically to talk about Robert E. Howard’s verse….

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Conan: Beyond the Black River

Posted July 21, 2020 By John C Wright

Beyond the Black River was first published in Weird Tales magazine, serialized from May to June of 1935, the first part coming three months after Jewels of Gwahlur . It is the fifteenth published story in the Conan canon.

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The Legion of Time by Jack Williamson

Posted May 12, 2020 By John C Wright

This is not a review as much as a rebuttal.

Having a hankering to reread LEGION OF TIME by Jack Williamson, a classic of old timey pulp sci fi, I combed the internet, eventually to find where some good-natured soul had scanned in the pages of Astounding Magazine, which held the original, first-published version of the story.

The link is here: Luminist Archives. The issues are May, June and July of 1938.

During this search, I came across articles or reviews or summaries, at least a few — by my lights, too few, considering the seminal nature of this particular bit of adventure fiction.

What stumped and galled me was that the articles, reviews, and summaries were uniformly wrong.

Before rebutting them, let me describe the yarn the articles were wrong about.

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Non-Review of Magi the Magic Labyrinth

Posted April 30, 2020 By John C Wright

Someone asked me my half baked opinion of the anime MAGI: THE MAGIC LABYRINTH, and, unfortunately, I decided to answer.

I say unfortunately, because it is foolish of me to give an opinion on something I have not finished yet.

So the reader is warned that these opinions are subject to change as I learn more.

Also, spoiler warnings. Some of the plot twists mentioned below are clever, and I do not want anyone who has not seen the show to have them spoiled.

I do not recommend it, but I do not think it is bad. I have not seen enough to say.

So far it has not really grabbed me — but I am entertained and interested enough to keep watching.

Let me mention the good, the bad, and the ugly.

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