What Is Techno Again?

Where fiction collides.

Posts Tagged ‘Isaac Asimov’

Published: Saturday, February 13th, 2010

The 3-Dimensions of Asimov’s Foundation

If you haven’t heard, Asimov fans, there are plans for a 3-D, motion-capture Foundation movie in-the-works. Few details have surfaced as of now, but you can read news of the director, co-producer, and script writer over at RadNerd:

This discussion somehow slipped through my sci-fi clutch, but Roland Emmerich will be directing a three-in-one film adaptation of The Foundation Trilogy, written by science fiction slash professional robot overlord, Isaac Asimov. Under Columbia Pictures’ banner, Michael Wimer (2012 and 10,000 B.C.) joins Emmerich as co-producer.

Good or bad idea? Does Foundation sail for you, or should they be adapting a different Asimov work?

Published: Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Book Review: The Naked Sun

I basically did a one-eighty from fantasy-obsessed to sci-fi-obsessed when I discovered science fiction was more than bumpy-headed aliens and awkward nerds (I’m not dissing either, though!). Even my X-Files poster is finally seeing the light of day again after being locked away in the Warehouse 13 mockery I call my closet. (Now if only I had a poster of Mulder …)

The Naked Sun

I read The Caves of Steel for one of my classes, and even though Isaac Asimov spreads the action pretty thin, I did enjoy the good ol’ detective mystery with robots. Plus, the fact that Elijah Baley’s partner is the humanoid robot R. Daneel Olivaw just makes it even juicer. Goddamn you, positronic brain!

As far as content goes, the Caves of Steel sequel, The Naked Sun, didn’t really step the game up more than a notch. Baley is still a detective (albeit a higher-ranking one), Daneel is still a robot (only this time his Auroran disguise is especially critical), and the book starts (again) with a murder. When someone or something murders Rikainne Delmarre in his own home, the Solarian government requests an Earthman to investigate—and of course, that Earthman turns out to be Plainclothesman Baley.

Like The Caves of Steel, The Naked Sun presents a good mystery and offers solid, interesting ideas and themes, but honestly I thought the first book in the Robot series had a little more bulk to it. Either way, I still like Asimov—even if it felt like he just churned out The Caves of Steel again, but on a different planet and with a different twist. There’s certainly no mistaking Asimov’s style, but I guess I expected more of a complex plot with more characters. The Naked Sun was a good read, so most likely I’ll pick up the third novel.