Woman In The Moon

Woman In The Moon (1929) was the third movie on NASA’s best sci-fi movie list that I hadn’t seen. The other two were Metropolis (1927 ) and The Thing from Another World (1951).

“The Thing from Another World” was a basic “being who is intelligent enough to fly an interstellar space craft crashes in a remote location and acts like a monster” movie.  I *think* it may have been the first of the genre. It was more intelligent than similar movies, but since so many movies have been similar and have built on that theme I found the movie flat. I did find it interesting that the girlfriend of the pilot in the movie had a drinking game where she tied his hands up as part of the game.  I didn’t think people in the 50’s were into “that sort of thing”. Ahem!

“Woman In The Moon”, like “Metropolis” was also a Fritz Lang silent film.  Despite being nearly 3 hours long I found it to be much more interesting than “Metropolis”. The story had more going on.  It was about more than just a ride to the moon. First there is the elderly professor whose career was ruined in his youth ( the 19th century ) by advocating his theory that the moon has large amounts of gold in it. Living in abject poverty, he is visited by a wealthy young friend who comes to tell him that he is going to pilot the almost complete space ship his company is making. A secret consortium of 5 people who control the world’s gold reserves don’t like the idea of this mission.  They like controlling all of the gold reserves in the world.   Interestingly, one of these 5 powerful conspirators is a woman. How progressive for 1929!

What follows is a cloak and dagger story of intrigue eventually ending in blackmail. Helius, the owner of the space ship company, is forced to take a representative of the gold consortium with him on his mission. This story also intersects with the conflict of a love triangle between Helius, his business partner and his best friend’s fiancée. All of these people, plus a stowaway end up on the first mission to the moon.

“Woman In The Moon”, like many science fiction stories has the idea of fantastic technology *just* beyond the grasp of the present day. Over time this sort of device horribly dates a science fiction story with less forgiving sci-fi fans and gives it a campy charm to the forgiving ones.   In Mary Shelly’s “Frankenstein” creating life was just around the corner for 19th century chemistry. In H.G. Wells’ “The Island of Doctor Moreau” 19th century surgical skills, hypnosis and behavioral conditioning were only waiting for a talented scientist to find a way to use them to turn animals into intelligent proto-people. The first moon landing was only 38 years after “Woman In The Moon”, but watching the movie the gulf felt longer. It was another era. World War II hadn’t even happened yet. The characters drove to the rocket in 1930’s style cars. They wore neckties and bulky sweaters as their uniforms.   Yet, these things do not make “Woman In The Moon” feel amusingly dated.

Special effects were not a problem. As the producers of Star Trek and Dr. Who have proved, good stories, good scripts and good acting more than make up for special effects.  In the case of “Woman In The Moon”, these things also make up for a mismatch between the technology required of the story and the of the state of the art technology of the era the story was set in.

“Woman In The Moon” ends up having an extra appeal for being an ancient movie,  a transmission from another time and another world.  The background music also  really helps give the viewer a sense of drama.  The styles of the time were interesting too.   All of the actors wore huge amounts of makeup.  I had trouble deciding if the gauchos that both the villain and the heroine wore were stylish rather than goofy looking.  The same with the men’s haircuts.   There was something  oddly interesting about the villain’s short hair cut with very long, wet-look, slicked backed bangs.   I wouldn’t want to try it myself though :).

 

 

 

Metropolis

A few months back I read an article about people at NASA listing their favorite science fiction movies. Surprisingly, there were 3 that I hadn’t seen. To Netflix! I just watched the first movie, Metropolis. An 85 year old, two and half hour long silent movie. The story is about a super city divided into the elite who live above and the workers who live in an underground city. The son of the head of the city falls in love with a woman, who is a prophet telling the workers that the day will come where there is a mediator between the two classes.

The special effects were not a problem. Something about the black and white made everything blend together really well. I had the near palpable sense of watching something from another time and another world.

It was hard to pay attention due to the length, but the film was also absorbing and in a way peculiar to it being a silent film. The background music conveyed a lot of emotional power combined with the exaggerated physical acting of the actors.

This silent film was more of “moving picture” than a “talkie” movie.

I don’t know if I will be watching many more silent films, but I recommend that everyone see at least one. It is a very different experience.

Change The Adjectives

I recently got finished reading the book “Oryx and Crake” by Margaret Atwood.

Atwood is a feminist novelist who makes occasional and GOOD forays into science fiction. Though her stories are not innovative for the science fiction genre she writes well, and infuses new life into old stories.

In Atwood’s book the main character studies literature while he is in school. He develops an interest in reading very old self help books. When he graduates he ends up getting a job as a promotions person for a company that makes self improvement products. I found this quote from the job interview scene to be provocative:

(approximately page 245, the chapter titled “Vulturing”)

What had impressed them, said the interviewers — there were two of them, a woman and a man — was his senior dissertation on self-help books of the twentieth century. One of their core products, they told him, were the improvement items — not books any more, of course, but the DVDs, the CD-ROMs, the Web sites, and so forth.

(page 246 )

“You showed great insight into the process”, the woman said. “In your dissertation. We found it very mature.”

“If you know one century, you know them all,” said the man.

“But the adjectives change”, said Jimmy. “Nothing’s worse than last year’s adjectives”

“Exactly!” said the man, as if Jimmy had just solved the riddle of the universe in one blinding flashbulb of light.

I have some time management and self improvement books on my book shelf that have really been valuable in my life. I’ve noticed that new books on these subjects come out in regular cycles, but they rarely ever say anything new and sometimes they say the same old thing not as well as earlier books.

Like Atwood’s quote it seems that all these authors do is make new buzz terms and rearrange the content without adding any value. Yes, some of them do add insights or make old content more accessible to contemporary audiences. Beyond this there are two reason I think that drive the perpetual recycling of the self help books:

1. It is hard to make money republishing or using existing works.

2. The consumer wants to believe there is something new and publishers are willing to exploit this.

In regards to #2 one of the things I liked about Stephen Covey’s “7 Habits Of Highly Effective People” is his observation that successful people do things of value, even when they do not feel like it. Covey went on to say that no matter the system, if you want to be successful at your goals sooner or later it will always come back to having to do that.

Having read book reviews of various self help books on Amazon I think people who go self-help book hopping are looking for a way around having to do things when they do not feel like doing them. They are looking for some magical system that will make them always feel enthused about doing what they think they should be doing. When a new book, with the same content, but “new adjectives” comes out it gives them the illusion of a new system that might have away around having to do things without feeling like doing them.